Manchester United manager Jose Mourinho claims club haven’t spent enough money to compete with Man City despite spending £300MILLION since taking charge
The 54-year-old insists the Red Devils are still in the rebuilding process after dropping more points in the Premier League
JOSE MOURINHO has sensationally claimed that Manchester United have not spent enough to money compete with Manchester City after losing more ground on their local rivals.
It might even have been worse for Mourinho's men had Jesse Lingard not come off the bench to score twice, including a stoppage-time equaliser, after the visitors had opened up a 2-0 lead against the Clarets.
Responding to a question that such a gap might be unacceptable for a club of United's stature, the 54-year-old said in his press conference: "One thing is a big club and another thing is a big football team. They are two different things.
"We are in the second year of trying to rebuild a football team that is not one of the best teams in the world.
"Manchester City buy full-backs for the price of strikers. When you speak about big football clubs, you are speaking about the history of the club."
United signed Romelu Lukaku from Everton in the summer for £75m and Paul Pogba last year for a world record £89m fee.
When it was pointed out United have spent heavily - roughly £300million - since Mourinho took charge in 2016, the Portuguese boss said: "OK, (but) it is not enough. The price for the big clubs is different than for the other clubs.
Prior to that, he bemoaned his side's defending. United conceded within three minutes to Ashley Barnes after failing to clear a free-kick into the box.
After being unhappy with the goals conceded in Saturday's 2-2 draw with Leicester, he said such defending should be described with a word beginning with S. He left the actual word to the imagination of those present.
He said: "Another 's' goal. I don't need to say the other letters of the word. That is what we are having now, lots of 's' goals against so that has an impact in the game."
But after admitting Steven Defour's goal, putting Burnley 2-0 up, was an "amazing free-kick", Mourinho hailed the character of his players for recovering.
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He said: "The boys do what they can. They are trying hard with the problems we have, with the injuries we have."I am not happy with the result, I was not happy with the result against Leicester, but I am happy with my players. No critics to my players."
Burnley boss Sean Dyche was not downhearted, despite being moments away from a famous victory, and focused on the positives coming after Saturday's 3-0 loss to Tottenham.
Dyche said: "Overall, to come here and get a point is very pleasing, especially when the squad is stretched. It's a very tough place to come.
"I'm really pleased. The good thing is the mentality coming off a tough one the other day. Sometimes fear can creep into players but it wasn't there.
"There was a nice assuredness about the way we went about it."
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