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Jose Mourinho Reveals Five Benfica Stars In ‘Self-Esteem Crisis’ After Pragmatic Draw With Porto
Jose Mourinho has admitted that five of his Benfica players were struggling with a “self-esteem crisis” ahead of their crucial clash against Porto, prompting him to deploy a pragmatic, risk-free approach in the goalless draw.
The stalemate at the Estadio do Dragao kept Benfica within touching distance of the league leaders, who remain four points clear at the top. For Mourinho, the priority was simple: avoid defeat and ensure Porto didn’t widen the gap.
Mourinho’s Man-Management Put To The Test
Returning to familiar territory in Portugal, the 62-year-old manager leaned on his trademark defensive resilience and psychological acumen. Mourinho, who launched his career in Lisbon before making history with Porto, explained that confidence issues within his squad influenced his tactical choices.
“I found three, four, five players with a self-esteem crisis,” Mourinho revealed. “It’s one thing to need tactical concentration, another to need inspiration for something more. I told the players that we want to win, but we can’t lose.”
Why He Chose Pragmatism
Mourinho argued that Benfica’s profile is different from Porto’s, highlighting the latter’s pace and directness in attack. “FC Porto has players with a lot of horsepower, with the ability to attack space. We don’t have that type of player,” he said.
Instead, Benfica frustrated their rivals with disciplined defensive organization, limiting Porto’s attacking opportunities and leaving with a clean sheet.
A Battle Of Emotions
The Portuguese coach, celebrating his 1,200th game in charge, admitted that the mental strain of potentially falling seven points behind weighed heavily. “Even with all my experience, I was thinking about the consequences of losing. We couldn’t leave here with seven points [difference]. It’s not the result we wanted, but it’s a good situation.”
While Mourinho acknowledged the frustration of waiting 15 days before working with his players again, he took pride in Benfica’s grit and in stabilizing a squad battling internal doubts.
For the “Special One,” it was another reminder that sometimes football’s biggest victories are psychological.