Cobham (United Kingdom) (AFP) - Jose
Mourinho was on the verge of storming out of a media briefing on Friday after
the Chelsea manager lost his
cool during a grilling over his criticism of the club's medical staff.
With Chelsea already down to 10 men after Thibaut Courtois's red card, Mourinho, who said he could tell Hazard wasn't seriously injured, was infuriated that Carneiro and Fearn's decision briefly left his team without another player as the Belgian waited to return to action.
Subsequent reports that the duo's roles would be significantly changed led to condemnation from a variety of medical organisations and football personalities, with some accusing Mourinho of risking the health of his players.
When Mourinho confirmed at a packed press conference on Friday that Carneiro and Fearn wouldn't be on the bench with him when Chelsea face Manchester City at Eastlands on Sunday, he must have hoped that would be the end of the matter.
But in a separate briefing for English national newspapers later on Friday, he was subjected to more searching questions and this time lost his patience.
He refused to answer the first seven questions on the issue, with a Chelsea press officer interjecting in a bid to smooth over the situation as Mourinho became increasingly irate.
Pressed further by one journalist, Mourinho responded by saying: "Don't make me another question or I go. Think twice before you ask the question. Think twice."
When the reporter then posed a question to the Chelsea press officer, Mourinho appeared ready to walk out.
"Now I go, have a good weekend," he said,
before the overworked press officer finally persuaded him to stay.
"Okay. We have Man City. Let's talk about
that or I go," Mourinho said.
In between that spat, Mourinho had answered
one question, making it clear he would never risk the health of his players.
"The first thing I said to my medical
department, the thing I repeated one, two and three times, is that the player is
more important than the manager, than the referee, than the result," he
said.
"And if the referee does not give you
permission to go onto the pitch, you (still) go. It does not matter if the
referee is not happy with that. It does not matter if the manager is not happy
with that.
"If you know (the player is injured), if
you feel, and it is easy to know when to feel because there are many examples of
it, you go (on to the pitch) and you don't think twice."
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