Jose Mourinho accused his Manchester United players of disrespecting Basel in the latter parts of Tuesday’s Champions League win at Old Trafford.
Goals from Marouane Fellaini, Romelu Lukaku, and Marcus Rashford set up a comfortable 3-0 victory in the end, but that didn’t suffice for the Portuguese manager.
Mourinho lamented United’s laissez-faire approach in the second half, reminding his team that no lead is safe in Europe’s premier competition.
“Until 2-0, we were very stable, we played with confidence, with patience, with good choices. We played quite well. After 2-0, everything changed,” the 54-year-old told BT Sport. “We stopped playing seriously, we stopped making the right decisions on the pitch. We could have put ourselves in trouble.
“Fantasy football, PlayStation football, tricks … I don’t like it. You gamble a little bit. Probably the players thought the game was under control at 2-0, but football is football. You have to respect the opponent.”
Basel troubled United in the past, eliminating the Red Devils from the Champions League group stage in 2011, but couldn’t make them pay this time around.
Related: Fellaini gets Manchester United off mark in Champions League
Mourinho did shower individual praise on Fellaini, who’s become a super sub of sorts for United.
“I keep saying the same, the same, the same. He’s a player with special qualities. He gives me multiple areas of action. He is one of my most important players,” Mourinho added.
In the past five editions of the Champions League, England has produced just two semi-finalists: Jose Mourinho’s Chelsea in 2013-14 and Manuel Pellegrini’s Manchester City in 2015-16.
It seems money can’t buy success. The Premier League’s lucrative television deals grant its clubs huge purses in the transfer market, but there hasn’t been an English winner since Chelsea beat Bayern Munich in the 2011-12 final.
So, with five English teams joining the group stages for the first time – Manchester United was granted entry through its procurement of the 2016-17 Europa League title – the country’s governing body will hope that strength in numbers will help stage an assault in the Champions League’s later rounds.
Here are each of the five teams’ chances of success in Europe’s elite club competition rated:
Chelsea
Group opponents: Atletico Madrid, Qarabag, Roma
A popular criticism of Antonio Conte’s managerial credentials is to highlight his record in European club competitions, and on paper his three years at Juventus didn’t exactly see the Italian outfit inflict damage on its continental rivals:
Season
Champions League exit
2011-12
N/A
2012-13
Quarter-final
2013-14
Group stage
But when you delve deeper you can see that using these finishes for evidence is a tad unfair. Luigi Delneri’s seventh-placed finish in the 2010-11 Serie A term meant that there was no European tour in Conte’s inaugural season, and the following two campaigns saw elimination at the hands of eventual winner Bayern Munich, and an exit from a group featuring champion elect Real Madrid and a Galatasaray side which scored late goals against Juve in both meetings.
Despite his previous disappointments, Conte could prioritise the Champions League after claiming last season’s English crown. The Italian has successfully bulked up his squad with know-how in all of Europe’s top leagues in Alvaro Morata, Tiemoue Bakayoko, Antonio Rudiger, and Andreas Christensen, who returned after two years on loan at Borussia Monchengladbach. That added depth can help the Blues take top spot in Group C and test their continental playing style beyond the Round of 16.
Chances of reaching quarter-final stage or later: 8/10
Tottenham Hotspur
Group opponents: APOEL Nicosia, Borussia Dortmund, Real Madrid
There’s no such thing as the Wembley curse, but in England there is a case for teams circling a trip to Tottenham Hotspur’s temporary home as a rare opportunity to claim a result at the historic ground. Teams on the continent shouldn’t share that level of motivation, but Borussia Dortmund and Real Madrid will be comfortable playing in a packed, huge venue.
It’s a very tough quartet for Spurs, and there was nothing from last season’s efforts – elimination from both the Champions League group stage and Europa League Round of 32 – and their transfer business that indicates Mauricio Pochettino’s ranks are equipped for a European surge.
It appears to be a transition year for Spurs as they prepare to move into their new White Hart Lane abode, so their focus should lie in consolidating their place in England’s top four as they cover high costs for that stadium project.
Chances of reaching quarter-final stage or later: 3/10
Manchester City
Group opponents: Feyenoord, Napoli, Shakhtar Donetsk
Manchester City fans’ difficult relationship with UEFA means that winning the Premier League is their priority but, after an outlay that has given Pep Guardiola the most expensively assembled squad in history, the club’s hierarchy will insist on a strong European showing. The CIES Football Observatory found the Spaniard’s throng to be worth €853 million – up €242 million from last year.
City’s deepest run in the tournament in 2015-16 was helped by a kind draw against Dynamo Kyiv and some odd tactical decisions by Laurent Blanc when he was in charge of Paris Saint-Germain. However, the upgrades since then – Fernando has given way to Ilkay Gundogan, Leroy Sane and Bernardo Silva were brought in while Jesus Navas returned to Sevilla, and Gabriel Jesus takes Wilfried Bony’s spot – suggest a forceful rush into the knockout rounds is nigh.
The Achilles heel in Guardiola’s side is well-documented: The defence. Napoli has a strong chance of taking first place in Group F, with Maurizio Sarri’s pacey attack capable of ravaging Nicolas Otamendi and Vincent Kompany.
Chances of reaching quarter-final stage or later: 6/10
Liverpool
Group opponents: Maribor, Sevilla, Spartak Moscow
The most entertaining show in England will leave the European crowds gasping – particularly when Sevilla is lining up on the other side of the halfway line.
Liverpool’s start to the season has delivered everything that was anticipated – absenteeism in defence, and lunacy in attack – which should set up appetising meetings against Sevilla’s flowing forays. Besides that, the Reds have been handed a group where they will have no excuses if they don’t finish in the top two.
Unfortunately for Jurgen Klopp, there’s still an unfinished look to his squad. Simon Mignolet and Loris Karius aren’t dependable between the sticks; raw youngster Trent Alexander-Arnold, Dejan Lovren, Ragnar Klavan, and Alberto Moreno should be defensive backups and no more; and returning star Philippe Coutinho will likely learn the ropes in a new(ish) role behind the front three, whether the Barcelona target likes it or not.
Liverpool appears to be a work-in-progress and too thin to sufficiently challenge both domestically and continentally.
Chances of reaching quarter-final stage or later: 5/10
Manchester United
Group opponents: FC Basel, Benfica, CSKA Moscow
Mourinho electing to field David De Gea in the Champions League after Sergio Romero’s residency in last season’s Europa League XI suggests the Portuguese manager is going all out in Manchester United’s English title pursuit and in Europe.
The experience gained in that successful Europa League venture could be priceless – Chelsea and Atletico Madrid both followed recent victories in that tournament with strong Champions League runs a season or two later – and the quick work in the summer transfer window has resulted in a team that is already gelling in domestic play.
Like many Premier League outfits, United’s vulnerability lies in defence. Phil Jones was bullied and Eric Bailly was clearly rattled in Saturday’s 2-2 draw in Stoke City, and in reserve is Chris Smalling and Victor Lindelof, both of whom are trying to win the trust of Mourinho. The left side of the backline isn’t inspiring either, with the sluggish Daley Blind and oft-unfit Luke Shaw vying for minutes.
Chances of reaching quarter-final stage or later: 8/10
Diego Costa was not included in Chelsea’s Champions League squad which was submitted on Monday, despite being named among his club’s 25-man throng for the current Premier League campaign.
Chelsea manager Antonio Conte infamously informed Costa via text message that he wasn’t part of his plans at Stamford Bridge earlier this summer, but the striker’s desired return to Atletico Madrid failed to materialise before the transfer window slammed shut on Aug. 31. This is despite Atleti president Enrique Cerezo declaring himself “optimistic” that a deal could be struck last week.
The biggest snag in negotiations was Chelsea refusing to lower its asking price, according to the Spanish international.
There was brief indication that Costa could possibly reconcile with Conte and win his place back in the starting lineup when he was included in the club’s 2017-18 Premier League squad. Those hopes now appear to be quashed after he was left off the Champions League roster.
That would leave Costa available for Chelsea, Atleti, or another club when three changes can be made to Champions League squads before the knockout rounds. With Chelsea not competing in Europe during the 2016-17 campaign, Costa has now been denied continental football since Feb. 2016.
The 28-year-old last played for Chelsea on May 27, when the Blues lost to London rival Arsenal in the FA Cup final at Wembley. Costa didn’t participate in Chelsea’s pre-season programme, and was reportedly fined £300,000 for his unauthorised four-week absence in mid-August.
Fernando Llorente’s deadline day arrival at Tottenham Hotspur has shunted Vincent Janssen out of the north London outfit’s Champions League squad.
Janssen, 23, endured a difficult debut season with Spurs, scoring just twice in 33 appearances in the Premier League, Europa League and Champions League.
Now Llorente, a £12-million signing from Swansea City, will likely represent Mauricio Pochettino’s plan B up front behind crowd favourite Harry Kane.
Another notable absentee is Erik Lamela, who has been blighted with injuries over the past year. The Argentinian last appeared for Tottenham as a substitute in a 2-1 League Cup loss in Liverpool in October 2016, and recent accounts optimistically predict a September return for the midfielder.
Teams competing in the Champions League can make three changes to their squad after the group stages.