Mourinho calls on players to seal Champions League knockout place

‘Only the brave can survive’ says Chelsea boss as club enters pivotal spell

Chelsea head coach Jose Mourinho smiles during a press conference at the St Jakob-Park stadium in Basel ahead of the Champions League Group E match. Photograph: Georgios Kefalas/AP/Keystone

Jose Mourinho has called on Chelsea to secure their passage into the knockout phase of the Champions League with victory at Basel as his players enter a cluttered and pivotal period of the season where “only the brave can survive”.

A victory at St Jakob-Park will claim Group E for the Europa League holders and allow Mourinho to rest key personnel for the final group game against Steaua Bucharest.

Chelsea have nine fixtures in all competitions in December, with Mourinho, sporting a repeat of his self-styled “going to war” crewcut from 2006, urging his players to prove their quality and stamp their authority on the campaign.

"This is a period I like, a period where the squad can play a role, not just the team," the manager said. "It's a period where I think only the brave can survive because it's so hard. We go into the Christmas period and the accumulation of matches is so high.

Special group
"We don't do it as a normal thing . . . we do it as a special group with a special mentality, enjoying the situation and forgetting we don't have a Christmas like the Spanish, Italian and German players. But we have the pleasure of playing a period that's only for the brave.

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“I always enjoyed this part of the year when I was in England, and I missed it when I was in Spain and Italy.

“ We need a special mentality to cope with that situation. Nine matches, and one of them is the match against Steaua. Finish the job against Basel and we would ensure that, instead of having nine competitive matches, we only have eight.

“That would be important. That’s our motivation, to kill the situation in the group stage and give us a bit of space in December.”

Mourinho, who has Fernando Torres available after a groin injury but has lost David Luiz to a bruised knee, admitted he had cut his own hair at the training ground last week.

The cropped style is similar to that sported seven years ago when he had embarked on his third and ultimately tempestuous campaign at the club by declaring: “Look at my haircut – I am ready for war”.

This time the crop may more have reflected the tedium of the international window.

'I did it myself'
"I did it myself down at the training ground," he said. "I asked Fernando to give me his machine [clippers], and I did it myself in front of the mirror.

“It’s nice and cheap. Some people can’t do what I did. In a couple of months, I’ll have hair again. Some other people wouldn’t . . . I did send a picture of it to my wife before I arrived home to see if I’d be allowed in, and yes, there was no problem.”

The desire to win the group should see Torres restored having missed three matches with a groin injury, though Juan Mata may once again be left on the bench.

“That’s a consequence of the squad we have because Juan deserves to play given the way he works and behaves,” he added. “It’s hard for them when they’re not playing, and it’s hard for me. ”

Basel, top of the Swiss league and unbeaten domestically since mid-August, won the group’s opening fixture at Stamford Bridge only to struggle in the months since.

There was an admission from their midfielder, Fabian Frei, they would welcome even a point against the Londoners with one eye on securing Europa League qualification.

"If somebody tomorrow has to feel the pressure, it's not us," Mourinho said. "It's Basel."
– Guardian Service