
Two
of the contrasting characters of the Premier League have had very different
seasons so far. Claudio Ranieri deserves the praise that is coming his way
for offering an alternative to the Jose Mourinho approach, writes Adam Bate
as we recall their rivalry in quotes…
The two men go back a long way. Perhaps the only surprise is that Claudio
Ranieri more than held his own in those early exchanges. Most memorably for
the Italian, there was the fortnight in early 1999 when the Barcelona of
Louis van Gaal and Jose Mourinho was vanquished again and again by Ranieri's
Valencia.
"I remember it well," he told Gazzetta dello Sport recently. And well he
might. First up there was a 3-2 away win in the first leg of their Copa del
Rey quarter-final. The following week, Valencia won the return 4-2 at
Mestalla. Three days later, they returned to the Nou Camp to beat Barcelona
4-2 in La Liga.
Mourinho was a mere assistant back then but their careers have been
intertwined ever since. The Portuguese inherited Ranieri's job at Chelsea in
2004 and proceeded to become a managerial icon. They've since faced each
other in Italy and now in England but have rarely seen eye to eye. Why would
they? They're two men with very different outlooks.
While Mourinho is frequently cast in the role of antagonist, he had not even
taken charge of his first match as Inter boss when Ranieri offered up a
comparison when his own Juventus side were beaten 3-0 by Hamburg in the 2008
Emirates Cup. "I am not like Mourinho," he told reporters. "I don't have to
win things to be sure of myself."
Never one to knowingly allow perceived criticism to pass without comment,
Mourinho responded in typical fashion. "I guess he's right with what he said
I am very demanding of myself and I have to win to be sure of things," he
said. "This is why I have won so many trophies in my career. Ranieri on the
other hand has the mentality of someone who doesn't need to win.
"He is almost 70 years old. He has won a Super Cup and another small trophy
and he is too old to change his mentality. He's old and he hasn't won
anything. I studied Italian five hours a day for many months to ensure I
could communicate with the players, media and fans. Ranieri had been in
England for five years and still struggled to say 'good morning' and 'good
afternoon'."
Raising the stakes is a trademark Mourinho trait. If he feels slighted,
things can escalate. Arsene Wenger has found that out over the past decade
and, much like with Ranieri, the animosity is best propagated when the two
men involved clearly hold different values. That was most apparent when
Mourinho's Inter and Ranieri's Roma battled for the Scudetto in 2010.
Inter beat Roma 1-0 in that season's Coppa Italia final, and the title race
was just as close. Ranieri's team took four points off Inter, enough to take
it to the final day, so when Mourinho suggested Roma might offer a financial
incentive for Siena to beat his side, his opposite number took offence.
"This is not the kind of football I like," said Ranieri. "I'm different as I
like respect and I give respect.
"It's too easy to motivate a squad by creating a siege mentality and feeling
under attack from everyone. Sport is an important vehicle for Italian
society. Behaving like this is launching ticking time bombs. I am a man of
sport and I like football. Is Mourinho a phenomenon? It is the media that
gives him that aura. For me he is a good coach and I won't add anything
more."
Ranieri's confusion is understandable. He's a man more likely to use pizza
to incentivise his players than money. This is a man who reportedly geed up
his Roma team for the aforementioned Italian cup final by encouraging them
to watch Gladiator together. For all Mourinho's showmanship, at his best he
prefers detail to drama and could barely conceal his contempt.
"Before the final, I watched six Roma games to find their weak points,
spending three hours on each at the computer, running programmes that help
my work," said Mourinho. "Of course, it's easier to just watch a movie, but
Ranieri has forgotten his players are champions and not children. If before
a match I made my team watch Gladiator, they'd start laughing or call the
doctor asking if I was ill."
He continued: "It's certainly not my fault if, in 2004 after coming to
Chelsea and asking why Ranieri was replaced, I was told they wanted to win
and it was never going to happen with him. It is really not my fault if he
was considered a loser at Chelsea." Given these comments in May 2010, it's
easy to imagine what Mourinho made of Inter appointing Ranieri just 16
months later.
However, Ranieri's recollections of that time suggest all might not be as it
seems. Upon his arrival at Leicester in 2015, he said: "When I came back,
Mourinho was the first one to send me a message saying 'welcome back'. We
clashed in Italy but that was good for everybody. When I was in Inter every
week he sent me a message, he's a nice boy."
Speaking in October, Ranieri reiterated that any issues between the two men
were "ancient history" and perhaps that's the picture that will emerge on
Monday Night Football. It would certainly be a reflection of their shifting
statuses right now in light of Leicester's improbable rise to the top of the
table and Chelsea's equally unlikely struggles that have left them
languishing in the bottom half.
For the best part of a decade, the contrast in the characteristics of the
two has reflected badly on Ranieri the coach if not the human being. While
former Chelsea hero Frank Lampard spoke of Mourinho being "tactically
fantastic" and "very astute" his thoughts on Ranieri were best summed up by
one simple phrase. "I love the man," he said.
It brings to mind the old Jack Charlton line about his younger brother Bobby
being the better player but him being the better man. And yet, Mourinho's
recent problems have put a different spin on these things. Faced with
adversity, he has struggled to get a response from his team. Is there more
merit in the methods of his Chelsea predecessor than Mourinho might have
thought?
Of course, Ranieri's time at the top may well prove to be fleeting. But it's
a reminder at least that while he's come out second best for much of their
careers, his virtues should not be dismissed. Ranieri is a man of integrity
who deserves respect. When Leicester take on Chelsea on Monday, people need
only look at the Premier League table to see why he should get it.