Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:29):
In two thousand and eight, Christopher Nolan flipped the script
on superhero movies with The Dark Night, the sequel to
Batman Begins, doubled down on the gritty tone of the
first film and proved to Hollywood studios that audiences were
ready for serious, layered superhero movies. Christian Bale was the
ever scowling Batman, yet the true star of the movie
(00:52):
was Heath Ledger as the Joker. He tragically passed away
before the film premiered, but his Joker performance is still
hailed as one of the greatest in movie history. Leger
posthumously won every major award for the role, and people
are still talking about his iconic depiction of that creepy
clown to this day. I'll avoid going down the extremely
(01:14):
deep rabbit hole of Heath Ledger Joker stories by mentioning
just one. Michael Caine, who played the butler Alfred Penniworth
and who happens to be one of the most decorated
and accomplished actors of his generation, famously forgot his lines
the first time he saw Ledger in full Joker makeup
during a penthouse party crashing scene. Only part of the
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Joker's staying power is due to how terrifying he looked.
The other is due to how quotable the Joker became.
Villains are remembered as much for their words as their actions,
and the Joker has an entire dexworth of quotes. The
movie's most famous line is undoubtedly why So Serious. Interestingly,
(01:59):
that line was the first time the Joker, who was
first created as a character in nineteen forty, actually used
that phrase, which has to be in the running for
the most tattooed movie quote of the last fifty years,
although it might be second to not all those who
wander are lost from the Lord of the Rings. Sports
have their villains too, but usually it's players who are
(02:22):
prone to outrageous antics and trash talk because their on
field talent gives them some leeway to act that way.
Think Terrell Owens, Chad Ocho Cinco, or Antonio Brown. Coaches
don't have that luxury. They're paid millions not just to win,
but to be the spokesperson and culture centers for their teams.
(02:42):
That's why so many of them sound like robots programmed
to only say cliches on repeat, one more game at
a time. It was a tough loss, but that builds strength.
In short, coaches give boring answers because they want to
keep their jobs. Every once in a while a which
breaks that mold, turning press conferences into must watch theater
(03:04):
and embracing the role of the bad guy. Most don't last,
as that type of attitude has to be backed up
with results on the field. And of the last two decades,
no coach has played the role of villain more brilliantly, boldly,
or longer than Jose Mourinho, an arrogant, genius, magnetic Portuguese
(03:26):
coach that has won everything under the sun and then some.
Mourinho could have walked out of a Disney villain storyboard. Instead,
he walked into the world of football aka soccer and
became its biggest villain. His words have fueled more conflict
than some world leaders, inspired teams to unprecedented success, and
(03:48):
created more memes than a middle schooler who just learned photoshop.
On today's episode of Sports Dot MP three, we're diving
into the legacy of the self appointed special one. I
think I'm a special and not through his tactics, but
through his greatest quotes, sharpest digs, and most outrageous one liners.
So sit back, relax, and let's get into it. Jose
(04:35):
Mourinho grew up in Portugal with football in his blood,
as his father was a goalkeeper turned manager. Mourinho never
reached the top tier as a player and retired at
twenty four years old, admitting that he lacked the power
and pace to make it. Instead, he chased coaching. Despite
his mother enrolling him in business school, Mourinho dropped out
(04:56):
on day one, joined a physical education program, took some
footb ball coaching courses, and soon started hustling through any
job he could find, youth coach, assistant in the lower
leagues scout it didn't matter. His big break came in
nineteen ninety two, and it sounds like the premise of
a somewhat funny Hallmark sports comedy more than it does
(05:17):
a villain's origin story. A translator position had opened up
for famous English manager Bobby Robson, who had just joined
Portuguese team Sporting CP. Mourinho instantly took up the opportunity,
but he wasn't just translating. He was also analyzing, and
soon elevated himself as not just a translator but an
(05:39):
assistant manager. Before long, he had become an integral part
of Robson's coaching staff, and that's because, to quote Robson himself,
Marino scouting reports were quote as good as anything I'd
receive end quote. When Robson moved to Porto, then to Barcelona,
Mourinho followed. At Barsa, he built his reputation as both
(06:00):
a tactical genius and a provocateur, not always giving direct
translations and instead sometimes slipping in his own opinions to
players and the press. When Louis van Gaal replaced Robson
as manager, Mourinho stayed on, helping win two La Liga
titles and even coaching Barsa's B team. Not long after,
(06:20):
the big clubs came calling. After a short Messi stint
at Portuguese side Benfica, Mourinho took over their rival FC
Porto in the middle of the season in two thousand
and two, improving Porto's position from fifth to third place
by the time that season concluded. That offseason, he kept
(06:40):
a core group of players, shipped away the rest and
replaced them with a trove of talented newcomers. Then he
gave the world a glimpse of his patented arrogance backed
with results. During a press conference in two thousand and three,
he said, quote, in normal conditions, we are the best
team in Portugal and we will be champions, and in
(07:02):
abnormal conditions we will also be champions. End quote. Porto
won the league, a domestic cup, and the UEFA Cup,
Europe's second most prestigious international competition after the Champions League.
The next year, they won the league again and stunned
everyone by also winning the Champions League, becoming the first
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team outside of Europe's top five leagues to do so
in the competition's entire history. Some of the best managers
in football history have never won a Champions League, so
the stunning accomplishment of Marinho winning it with such an
underdog team so early in his career cannot be stressed enough.
It was downright unbelievable. On the touch line, Mourinho was
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already showing flashes of the villain he'd become, sprinting down
the sideline to celebrate a victory in front of Manchester
United fans, taunting legendary rival Sir Alex Ferguson, and just
generally pissing off other teams, players and referees. It's safe
to say his name was definitely on the map, and
just as quickly as he took the world by storm
(08:09):
with Porto, Mourinho left the club that offseason and joined
Chelsea in the English Premier League. In his first press
conference there, he uttered an unforgettable phrase that would come
to define him.
Speaker 2 (08:21):
I have to I have to say this. We have
top players and I'm sorry, I'm a bit arrogant. We
have a top manager. Again. Don't please don't call me
arrogant because what I'm saying is true. I'm European champion,
so I'm not one of of the bottle I must.
(08:41):
I think I'm a special one.
Speaker 1 (09:04):
Those few sentences perfectly encapsulate why he's so iconic. It's
dripping with arrogance, yet grounded in truth, a Marinho mixture
of braggadocious self assuredness paired with the natural ability to
actually back it up. Today he's known as the special One,
though it's worth pointing out that he actually said a
(09:26):
special one, a slightly less cocky version, but still classic
Mourinho one way or another. At Chelsea, his arrogance and
tactical brilliance were the perfect fit for the club's new owner,
a billionaire named Roman Abramovich, who was willing and ready
to spend bucket loads of money on new transfers. Mourinho
(09:47):
took that to heart, bringing in several world class players
and molding the new look squad into a ruthless defensive machine.
In the first season, Chelsea won the league while setting
two Premier League records. They conceded just fifteen goals across
the thirty eight game season, the fewest ever, and finished
with an at the time record of ninety five points.
(10:09):
One thing about Mourinho is that he never just won
or lost or drew. He won, lost or drew loudly well,
also complaining a few months into his time at Chelsea,
directly after losing two to one against Barcelona in a
Champions League match, he chalked the loss up to collusion
(10:31):
between the referee and the opposing team's head coach, Frank Reichard,
saying in a press conference quote, when I saw Frank
Reichard entering the referees dressing room, I couldn't believe it.
When Didier Dragma was sent off, I wasn't surprised. End quote.
Drogba was one of Chelsea's star players who was sent
off during the game. In response, the head of yuefa's
(10:54):
referee committee called Mourinho an enemy of football, find Mourinho
nine hundred pounds and gave him a two match touch
line ban for the comment. Not one to give in easily.
Mourinho followed that up by successfully pulling off a Mission
impossible esque plan. Chelsea entered their second Champions League match
against Barcelona down two to one on aggregate, and pulled
(11:17):
off a stunning four to two victory that moved them
through to the next round, where they would face the
German Giants Byron Munich. The touchline ban meant that the
Portuguese coach wasn't allowed to attend Chelsea's first game against
Bayron Munich. To counteract this, Mourinho apparently donned disguise and
entered the Chelsea locker room seven hours before the match
(11:40):
was set to take place, hiding there the entire time
and giving his team tactical advice before the match and
during halftime. When the game ended, he was smuggled out
by I kid, you not hiding in a laundry basket.
Chelsea won the game four to two. He shortly taught
that off by coining the now famous phrase park the bus,
(12:04):
which is used to describe a team that plays extremely
defensively and boringly, essentially parking the bus in front of
their goal. After drawing zero zero against Tottenham, he said.
Speaker 2 (12:17):
I'm frustrated because there is only one team who played
to win, and the other team played just too. Don't
conceal goals. They didn't play football, They just defend, defend, defend,
and as we say now in my country, they brought
the bus and they left the bus in front of
the goal because everybody was there. We played.
Speaker 1 (12:53):
Detailing. Mourinho's entire career would take ages. When he left Chelsea,
he coached at Inter Milan, Real, Madrid, Chelsea again, Manchester United,
Tottenham as Roma, and most recently Turkish club Vanerbache. Of
the nine clubs he's managed, starting with Porto, he's won
at least one major trophy for seven of them, leaving
(13:16):
behind silverware, splintered locker rooms, and scorched earth rivalries in
his wake. A typical Marinho stint actually follows a somewhat
predictable arc. Number one, hit the ground running and win
a domestic cup, the league or a European competition. Maybe
all three. Number two develop instant rivalries with opposing managers
(13:38):
and fan bases. Number three divide the locker room with
his demanding us against the world style. Number four pump
out dozens of quotes and sound bites throughout the time.
Speaker 2 (13:50):
I'm not feeling the pressure, though, you cannot put pressure
on me. No chance, no chance. I read a lot
of times during this week that I have to prove
a lot in English football. Sir alex is the only
one European champion in this country, nobody else.
Speaker 1 (14:06):
So I have to prove what bonus points for calling
out rival coaches or the attitude of one of his
own star players.
Speaker 2 (14:14):
The worst managers are in the history of the Premier League.
Frank de Bour seven matches, seven defeat, zero goals. But
the reality is that this especialist because eight tiers without
a piece of silverware, that's failure. And if I do
(14:34):
that in Chelsea eight tiers, I leave London. I don't
come back.
Speaker 1 (14:41):
Number five shush opposing fans, thereat referees and pick fights
with players, staff and even ball boys. Number six suddenly
depart the team, almost always after clashing with ownership or
burning through the patients of everyone around him. Number seven,
join a new team and repeat while he turns out
(15:02):
quotes at a pace similar to Stephen King. There are
a few standouts I have to dive into. In twenty ten,
Mourinho had just finished conquering Italy at Inter Milan by
winning a treble, the Siria Coppa Italia and the Champions League.
His next stop was Real Madrid, which meant stepping into
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football's most heated rivalry, l Classico between Madrid and Barcelona,
who were redefining football with their tiki taka style and
corps of Messi, Chavi and Iniesta at the time, Mourinho's
Madrid were their ultimate foils, physical, defensive and combative. During
(15:43):
a Supercopa match that erupted into chaos on the sidelines,
Mourinho marched right up to Barcelona assistant coach Tito Villanova
and poked him in the eye. Although he was caught
on camera during the incident, Mourinho was asked about it
by the press and not only denied it, but purposefully
used the wrong word for the assistant coach's name, a
(16:05):
word that can be used to describe the male anatomy
in Spanish slang. He said quote, Pito Villanova. I don't
know who Pito Villanova is. End quote. It was petty,
insulting and villainous, a classic Mourinho triumvirent. The moment also
defines Mourinho at his Madrid peak, antagonizing Barcelona, baiting the press,
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and making sure every Classico was a war on and
off the pitch. Fast forward to twenty fourteen, during his
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second Chelsea stint, after a heated loss to aston Villa
that included two Chelsea players receiving red cards, Mourinho sat
down in front of the eagerly awaiting press, who were
surely salivating over the tirade that he was about to
unleash on the referee who had made some pretty questionable calls.
The Special One had something else in store. He sat there,
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stone faced and muted. When he finally did speak, he
produced one of the most infamous audio clips and biggest
memes in all of football.
Speaker 2 (17:24):
I prefer really not to not to speak. If I speak,
I am in big trouble, in big trouble, and I
don't want to be in big trouble.
Speaker 1 (17:33):
It was as if he was daring everyone to imagine
the tirade he was suppressing. The clip instantly went viral,
outliving the match itself, and to this day it's still
shorthand and sports and pop culture for holding back a
brutally honest truth. By twenty eighteen, Mourinho was in charge
of Manchester United and the pressure was suffocating. United were
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long past their glory days under manager Sir Alex Ferguson,
who he had beefed with at the time, and had
just been knocked out of the Champions League by Sevilla.
The critics and press were sharpening their knives, and Maurinho
met them by delivering a twelve minute monologue bordering on
egotistical rant. The entire thing is worth a listen, but
(18:18):
my personal favorite part is when he gets under the
topic of heritage, specifically how he himself is responsible for
bringing heritage back to United.
Speaker 2 (18:28):
I'll give you a couple more real In the last
seven years, the worst position of Manchester City in the
Premier League was fourth. In the last seven years, Manchester
City was championed twice and if you want to say
three times, because they will be in one more week, two,
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three or four, and there were second twice. That's heritage.
Speaker 1 (19:00):
It was classic late stage Mourinho defensive, combative, and maybe
a little bit desperate, but not entirely wrong. He reframed
his tenure as the cure to the club's long term
illness of mediocrity. His arrogance and ability have not diminished
since his earlier days. Yet this quote does feel a
(19:21):
bit different than earlier ones. Those earlier statements came across
like bold proclamations of his ability and future accomplishments, while
these later ones are more like the frustrated musings of
a man who knows he has nothing left to prove
and is tired of having to prove it. And from
Porto to Madrid, to Manchester and now Fenerbache, Mourinho's story
(19:45):
is always the same, success, chaos, unforgettable quotes, and an
exit as dramatic as any of his entrances. Jose Mourinho
is proof that in sports, how you carry yourself and
what you say can be just as important as what
you accomplish. Plenty of managers win, plenty lose. But how
(20:09):
many can turn a postgame presser into ageless art. How
many can be so hated and so loved by so
many people. How many can call themself a special one
and two decades later have lived up to that label.
Whether you're a lover, hater or honestly don't really care,
(20:29):
you've probably encountered a Mourinho quote or saying in your lifetime.
The larger than life character has provoked, antagonized, and demanded
attention every time he steps on a football pitch. It
would be impossible to talk about the past twenty years
of football without mentioning his name. Even if you removed
his two Champions Leagues, eight domestic leagues, three European Cups
(20:52):
and thirteen domestic Cups in that timeframe, his words alone
would stand the test of time. And that's all for
(21:14):
today's episode of Sports Dot MP three. If you enjoyed
this dive into Maurinho's legacy, make sure to follow us
on Instagram, TikTok, and x at Sports Underscore MP three
and subscribe to our YouTube channel for more legendary sounds
and sports I'll see you next week.
Speaker 2 (21:32):
Peace that they.
Speaker 1 (22:00):
Don't don't, but it's not about the thing.
Speaker 2 (22:10):
You didn't have. The aftern