Jose Mourinho insists his team need to do better than the excellent nine-game run that opened his Tottenham career, if they hope to qualify for the Champions League next season.
Spurs
picked up 16 points from a possible 27 when Mourinho
replaced Mauricio Pochettino
in the Autumn - second only to league-leaders Liverpool in that time - but they
now need to claw back seven in nine games to catch fourth-placed Chelsea.
Fifth in
the Premier League is also expected to qualify for the Champions League due to
Manchester City's European ban, pending appeal, but for that, they need to make
up five points on Manchester United, who they play live on Sky Sports on Friday Night
Football.
"I
don't think a similar run to the first nine games will be enough,"
Mourinho told Sky Sports News.
"At the moment we need more than that because we lost too many points and
put ourselves in a difficult position.
"It's
a difficult fight. I don't think we can lose too many points, unless our four
or five direct opponents lose lots of points."
Spurs endured a poor run before the league was suspended, in part due to a
string of injuries to key players, who have now recovered, and Mourinho
believes three months of lockdown has brought the squad closer together.
"It was a strange opportunity to be close to each
other, and feel empathy," he said. "At that mental level, to be
together, to feel together - it was really nice.
"The
players where phenomenal. We stayed together. The players were always working,
we were always trying to give them something to minimise the problems of the
lockdown, to feel connected with each other to feel connected with the club.
"From
a mental point of view, the boys are fine. Of course, we love football, so we
are so happy to play."
Jose was happy to watch others play again too. So
which sound option did he pick for Wednesday night's matches? Augmented crowd
noise or the natural sound of silence? Neither. He had the volume on mute.
"When
I watch football on TV it's always without sound, so it makes no difference to
me. I want to focus on the game and read the game myself and not to
listen."
Mourinho
looks healthy and fresh for the fight ahead, with his Portuguese tan having
returned: "It's the tan of the workers!" he joked. "Some people
have the tan of the garden or the tan of the beach. This is the tan of the
workers."
A
return to action with a win against his last club would make all that work
worthwhile.
Meanwhile, he will let the Tottenham players decide
whether or not to take a knee before kick-off at the Tottenham Hotspur stadium,
in support of the Black Lives Matter movement.
"You
don't need to take a knee to be completely in solidarity with the movement.
Your heart is much more important," he said. "The players must feel
free to express themselves.
"I
am really proud of my boys, we have an amazing dressing room with amazing
people, with the right principles. People from different backgrounds, race,
religion, living so happily together.
"What
they decide to do before the match is up to them. I know what is in their
hearts."
Mourinho
will come up against his former player Marcus Rashford, who he praised for
showing maturity in leading a campaign to have the government restore the free
school meals voucher scheme across the country throughout the summer.
He
said: "Marcus had this huge social impact, but there are dozens and dozens
of players who showed principles by supporting many different causes during
this period and I think by doing the right things, you show maturity and you
need maturity to play football at the highest level. So I think when you do the
right thing the focus doesn't go".
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