Jose Mourinho signs new Manchester United contract and celebrates with night out at Juan Mata's restaurant

Man United manager Jose Mourinho celebrated signing his contract
Man United manager Jose Mourinho celebrated signing his contract extension by having a meal with his backroom staff at Tapeo & Wine Restaurant in Manchester city centre on Thursday night. Tapeo & Wine Restaurant is owned by Juan Mata and his father Credit: Eamonn and James Clarke

Jose Mourinho claims he is the “privileged one” after he signed a contract extension with Manchester United until 2020, with the ­option of a further year.

The manager’s previous deal ­expired in 2019, but the Portuguese has increased his commitment to the club and suggested he could stay at Old Trafford even longer.

Mourinho, who turns 55 today, has at times cut a disconsolate ­figure off the pitch this season and continues to live in a hotel and travel to London to see his family, rather than fully commit to life in Manchester.

That has not affected the esteem within which he is held in the United boardroom and Mourinho said the assurance he felt from the owners played a part in his decision to agree fresh terms, as did the chance to work with a talented group of players.

“I feel a privileged one to work with such a fantastic group of boys,” Mourinho said. “That was my initial contract, for three years. Now we made the decision to make it clear for everyone: it’s not for three, it’s for four or five and, who knows, [maybe] more.

Ed Woodward and Jose Mourinho
Mourinho will be at Old Trafford for at least another year, according to his new deal. Credit: Getty images

“I don’t sign contracts if I am not happy so I am really happy with the trust, with the empathy. I did new contracts with Chelsea after being champion, in Inter after winning the Scudetto, Real Madrid after winning La Liga. Here it’s just a consequence of my work, and we believe in each other, we are happy with each other.

“I think I am doing the things that the owners and the board feel are the right things to do for the ­future of the club and they are showing me also their ambition, their commitment, their desire to go in the right direction.” 

Mourinho said he was still ­motivated, hungry for success and relished the challenge of restoring United to the status they enjoyed under Sir Alex Ferguson.

United won the Europa League and League Cup in the first season after Mourinho succeeded Louis van Gaal in May 2016.

Jose Mourinho gestures on the sidelines
Mourinho described himself as 'honoured' to be United's manager Credit: AFP

However, they have struggled to compete with rivals Manchester City in the Premier League this season and trail the leaders by 12 points, while at times there has been some disgruntlement among fans with the style of football.

“That’s just the way I am,” Mourinho said of his thirst for management. “I am just turning 55, but I feel myself very young, especially as a manager I feel very young. I want to work 10 or 15 more years because I like to do it and I don’t see myself doing anything else.

“The tradition and history of Manchester United and the ambitions every fan has to go back to that level. 

“But since day one I felt that the owners felt that, shared that ambition with the fans, the board working hard and I have the clear feeling that they will never stop until they reach what they want to reach, which is to go back to ­success.” 

Meanwhile, Mourinho has accused Pep Guardiola of sour grapes over Alexis Sanchez – except the ­Portuguese used a ­metaphor involving oranges instead.

United beat City to the signing of forward Sanchez after they agreed a swap deal with Arsenal in which Henrikh Mkhitaryan moved in the opposite ­direction.

Jose Mourinho celebrates winning the Europa League
Mourinho led United to Europa League glory last season Credit: AP

Guardiola had long admired Sanchez, but said City withdrew from the race to sign the Chile international ­because they did not want to break the wage structure at the Etihad Stadium.

Sanchez had only six months left on his deal at Arsenal and signed a 4½-year contract at Old Trafford, worth more than £300,000 a week which, with image rights and bonuses, rose above £500,000.

By comparison, the biggest earners at City are on around £220,000 a week, and Guardiola felt offering a significantly higher wage to a new signing could upset the harmony within his squad.

His attempts to take the moral high ground did not wash with Mourinho, though.

“I think Alexis reminds me a little bit of a metaphor – when you see the tree with amazing oranges at the top of the tree and cannot get there,” Mourinho said.

“You say, ‘Oh, I got the lower ones because I don’t like the ones at the top’.

“You like the ones at the top. They are so nice, so orange, so round, so full of juice but you cannot get there so you say, ‘I don’t want to go there’ or ‘I didn’t like it, I prefer the other ones’. It reminds me of that story.” 

Mourinho went on to justify Sanchez’s earnings on the ­basis that, if his contract at Arsenal had not been up at the end of the ­season, his value would have been astronomical.

“We have to put things in perspective,” Mourinho ­explained. 

“How much would Alexis Sanchez cost in a normal transfer, club to club, as a player with two or three years of contract?

“We look to the numbers now and I would say roughly between £100-150 million. So, you put things in perspective: you go to the numbers that the club didn’t pay on the ­transfer.

“You go to the numbers that the club pays in salaries, which are obviously higher than others, but you put things in perspective. 

“You get a calculator and you arrive into different conclusions.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

                                                                                                    

I wonder what the fans think

Generally, I think United fans like and support Mourinho, but there are certainly a fair few that are fed up with his sometimes negative tactics and often dreary football. 

Yes, they have blown teams away from time to time this season, but they can also be extremely dull to watch, just as they were under Louis van Gaal before Mourinho. 

Paul Pogba makes them more exciting and Alexis Sanchez will unquestionably only help matters, but now that the manager has spent big on those two as well as Lukaku, there isn't really any excuse going forwards. 

Alexis Sanchez will help Mourinho's cause Credit: Getty images

United want Mourinho to build a dynasty, but that probably isn't going to happen, so the next best thing is a return to something resembling the attack-minded football of the Fergie days. If he doesn't bring that, it is hard to see him lasting until 2020.

Can't argue with that

Ed Woodward's thoughts on the deal

Jose has already achieved a great deal as Manchester United manager and I am delighted that he has agreed to extend his commitment until at least 2020. His work rate and professionalism are exceptional and he has embraced the club’s desire to promote top quality young players to the first team. He has brought an energy and a sense of purpose to everything that he does and I am sure that will continue to bring results for the fans and the club.

Can Mourinho add more silverware to United's trophy cabinet? Credit: AFP

An end to the speculation

Much has been made of Mourinho's decision to live in a hotel in Manchester rather than settle down by buying a house, but this should at least suggest he is happy at United for the time being.

As my colleague Ben Curtis points out, the Lowry hotel will be delighted with the news. At £816 a night, an extra year of Mourinho will see the hotel pocket a cool £297,840. 

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