Manchester United manager
Jose Mourinho said Sunday he was ready to go home as the club's pre-season tour
of China threatened to descend into farce.
AFP
report continues:
The
final match of their China tour is first Manchester derby outside the UK
against City on Monday and Mourinho suggested he couldn't wait for it to be
over.
"It
is almost the end and we can go home and train in conditions where the players
are safe," said Mourinho after a wild couple of days for his squad after
they lost 4-1 to Borussia Dortmund in Shanghai on Friday.
Half
of Mourinho's players were caught on a plane Saturday which had to make a
forced landing between Shanghai and Beijing because of a violent storm in the
capital.
Striker
Memphis Depay tweeted a video of himself outside the plane in Tianjin, saying
they were "lost in China".
"We
were supposed to fly in two different planes," Mourinho confirmed to
reporters.
"The
second group was unlucky as they had a storm and had to land somewhere else for
a couple of hours.
"They
then arrived at the hotel for dinner at 1:00 am. The players are good and
arrived with a smile."
Doubts
over the state of the Bird's Nest Stadium turf for the friendly against City
after days of heavy rain meant a hasty switch of training venues Sunday to the
nearby Olympic Sports Centre to protect the match pitch.
And
with more storms forecast for Sunday night and Monday, the match itself could
be in the balance.
"It
has been really bad," said International Champions Cup China spokesman Ben
Xiaozheng. "We are hopeful the game will go ahead."
Meanwhile
the smaller venue struggled to cope with the invasion of hundreds of reporters,
photographers and TV crews to cover United's every move.
- No animosity -
Mourinho
arrived but refused to attend a news conference in an overcrowded and stifling
press room in the bowels of the inadequate facility.
"It
was too small, too full and too hot," said a spokeswoman for Manchester
United's media department.
Finally
the Portuguese former Chelsea and Real Madrid boss did agree to answer
questions -- on the stadium's running track surrounded by a vast media scrum.
Then
he comically struggled to be heard among as a few hundred fans chanted from the
stands.
Earlier
City boss Pep Guardiola had told reporters his number one priority was to avoid
any injuries and what could be a treacherous pitch. Mourinho, raising his voice
above the melee, agreed.
"I
think Beijing is unlucky because the pitch is bad and condition of the players
is more important than pre-season," said Mourinho.
"I
have one objective for tomorrow, take the players home safe and without
injury."
He
also played down any simmering animosity between him and Guardiola, following
their stints as rivals in Madrid and Barcelona respectively.
"Of
course I will shake his hand. Why wouldn't I?" said Mourinho when asked if
he would offer his hand to Guardiola.
"We worked together for three years (at Barcelona), we were opponents but we are professionals. I don't see why I wouldn't shake his hand."
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