Jose Mourinho demands Scott Parker apology if he names strong Fulham side vs Tottenham

Spurs will play the Cottagers on short notice after their game with Aston Villa was called off at short notice due to a Covid-19 outbreak

Jonathan Veal
Wednesday 13 January 2021 03:25 EST
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Tottenham manager Jose Mourinho
Tottenham manager Jose Mourinho (PA)

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Jose Mourinho has called on Scott Parker’s Fulham to apologise if he fields a strong side against Tottenham on Wednesday night after complaining about the short notice for their rearranged fixture.

Parker labelled the decision to force the Cottagers to play the Premier League game on 48 hours notice as "scandalous", but Mourinho has zero sympathy for the struggling Londoners.

With the match initially scheduled to take place on 30 December, it was scrapped with less than three hours before kick-off due to Fulham suffering from a coronavirus outbreak.

And after Spurs' scheduled game at Aston Villa on Wednesday was called off for the same reason, the Premier League moved quickly.

READ MORE: Premier League fixtures and table — all matches by date and kick-off time

Mourinho said: "In relation to Fulham, I think we should wait for tomorrow. We should see their team, their starting line-up, their bench, the players that start, the players on the bench, and the players not involved in the game.

"And after that we can all feel sorry for them. Or we can all think that they shouldn't speak.

"My feeling is just my feeling. It's that they will play with everybody. Maybe one player out. Maximum two.

"That's just my guess because all this is confidential information and we don't have access to any of this. It's just a feeling that I have, the best Fulham will be here, so when we see the best Fulham, then you realise lots of things don't make sense.

"We played, if I'm not wrong, 10 more matches than Fulham since the beginning of the season.

"We played every week, three matches a week. We played, in one week, four matches. They played Saturday against QPR. In London.

"They have Sunday, Monday and Tuesday to prepare for the game. If they come with half of the team, I will be the first one to apologise to them. And I will be the first one to say we played this game with an advantage.

"If they come with their best, I think they should apologise to all of us. Come on, let's play football."

Mourinho says the Premier League has moved the goalposts by allowing games to be postponed when it was agreed at the start of the season that they would go ahead if sides had 14 players available.

With a congested schedule for most teams in the second half of the season, he says there is no room for manoeuvre, which will leave some teams unhappier than others.

READ MORE: Inside Mauricio Pochettino’s PSG as new boss eyes first trophy

He said: "Look, since the pre-season when I was told that if you have 14 players available, you play football. Since that moment, I thought, 'We are going to play, we are going to end the season and we are not going to have problems'.

"That rule, if we can call it a rule, for some reason changed. We had some matches postponed. And since that moment, the situation became a little bit more difficult.

"Then, we needed leadership. We needed decisions to be made. And if we all are very selfish, or if you all want the perfect situation for ourselves, it is going to be very, very difficult for the Premier League to make it amazing for everyone.

READ MORE: ‘Morally wrong’ or the right thing to do? The questions facing football as they play on through coronavirus

"That's obvious. I can also ask why Aston Villa played against Liverpool in the FA Cup. But Aston Villa doesn't play against me tomorrow.

"Of course, Aston Villa have very good young players and they played beautiful game against Liverpool. But I would love to play tomorrow against that Aston Villa.

"Why am I not playing them? And you want me now to be crying about that. I'm not crying about that. I'm crying about that fact that we cannot have more matches postponed. We can't."

PA

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