
Jose
Mourinho was quick to turn his attention to Premier League matters after
Chelsea's Capital One Cup final victory.
Mourinho revealed he banned television from the team's hotel and bus journey
to Wembley, with main title rivals Manchester City playing Liverpool before
their date with Tottenham, although one member of his backroom staff did
manage to give the game away.
But Mourinho says City's 2-1 defeat at Anfield does not mean the end of
their title hopes and he is not ruling out a late run from Manchester United
either.
"It's in the hands of everyone," Mourinho said after the 2-0 win that keeps
the club's hopes of a treble this season alive.
"We have lots of difficult matches to play. City have difficult matches.
"United are third, right? Nine points (behind)? They are in the title race
too. Liverpool (beating Manchester City), I predicted that."
"I knew that was an impossible mission, but I didn't want the television on
in the hotel or on the bus.
"I told them (the players) I didn't want any kind of manifestation or
disappointment if City scored in the last minute, or Liverpool won. I wanted
complete silence.
"We were successful on that. But one member of my staff jumped up in the
bus. Silvino (Louro, an assistant first-team coach). I wanted to kill the
guy. He broke the rule."
Mourinho was able to celebrate his 21st trophy in 15 years as a manager, and
he admits it is the thrill of lifting more silverware that keeps him going.
"It's difficult for me to live without titles," Mourinho said. "I need to
feed myself with titles. This is important for me and the boys. For the club
it's one more cup, but it's the first one of a new team.
"You have Petr Cech, John Terry, Didier Drogba and, after that, everybody
belongs to a new generation of players. So, as a team, very, very
important."