Mourinho makes peace with Charlton on United visit

Sports
By AFP | May 31, 2016

Jose Mourinho made peace with Bobby Charlton as Manchester United's new manager met the Old Trafford icon at the club's Carrington training ground on Monday.

Charlton has previously been a harsh critic of Mourinho and was understood to have objected to his potential appointment when United were looking for a successor to Alex Ferguson in 2013.

The 78-year-old, a member of United's board of directors, also criticised Mourinho in 2012 for poking Barcelona's assistant coach Tito Vilanova in the eye during a heated touchline clash, saying at the time: "A United manager wouldn't do that. Mourinho is a really good coach, but that's as far as I would go really.

"He pontificates too much for my liking. He's a good manager, though."

But, despite Charlton's criticism, United finally turned to Mourinho last week, hiring the former Chelsea manager after the failed regimes of David Moyes and Louis van Gaal.

With Mourinho being taken on a tour of United's training base, it could have been an awkward moment when he met Charlton, but the 53-year-old Portuguese was keen to bury the hatchet.

Mourinho shared a warm embrace with Charlton and, in reference to the United legend's goals in England's semi-final victory over Portugal in the 1966 World Cup jokingly told him: "You killed my country's dream in 1966 but even so, all the best".

Charlton responded by saying: "I am very happy to see you here" before Mourinho told him to save the kind words until he starts winning matches.

The video of the meeting, released on United's official website, will be seen as an attempt by the club to draw a line under Charlton's comments about Mourinho.

Mourinho and long-time assistant Rui Faria joined Charlton, United's executive vice-chairman Ed Woodward and head of elite development John Murtough on a tour of the club's training centre.

The former Real Madrid boss was also photographed by his wife Matilde's Twitter account in an image that showed him standing outside the training ground holding a club shop bag emblazoned with the United badge.

Share this story
Adak wants media to report doping issues with precision
Although the subject is scientifically complex, legally sensitive, and reputationally explosive, the anti-doping body feels journalists have a key role to play.
Liverpool boss Slot says Salah victim of 'his own standards'
Salah may be experiencing the worst goal drought of his Premier League career but Liverpool boss Arne Slot believes the Egypt striker is paying the price for his own high standards.
Real Madrid face Man City, PSG draw Chelsea in Champions League last 16
Real Madrid and Manchester City will face off in a Champions League knockout tie for the fifth season running after being drawn to play each other in the last 16
Arsenal face Chelsea title test, troubled Spurs in spotlight
Premier League leaders Arsenal face a title test from London rivals Chelsea on Sunday. Manchester City can keep the pressure on Arsenal with a win at Leeds
Sacking Amorim could cost Manchester United Sh2.8 billion
Man United's decision to sack Ruben Amorim as their manager could end up costing the Premier League giants almost £16 million ($22 million)
.
RECOMMENDED NEWS