Arsène Wenger accuses José Mourinho of disrespecting managers

Arenal manager has sympathy for Leicester City’s Nigel Pearson

Arsène Wenger has accused José Mourinho of disrespecting his fellow managers. The Arsenal manager did not take kindly to his Chelsea counterpart pulling no punches after their goalless draw last weekend, when Mourinho quipped it was boring to go 10 years without a title.

“I think I just told you that the biggest thing for a manager is to respect other managers. Some people have to improve on that,” said Wenger.

Mourinho was responding to chanting from Arsenal’s crowd but Wenger was disappointed the Portuguese felt the need to turn that into a dig at his record.

“Look, everybody lives with his own internal problems and I live with mine. That’s enough,” he said. “You can have incidents with other managers sometimes. It gets a bit heated when you fight directly with them but in the end I believe time heals and the important thing is to respect each other as much as you can.”

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Mourinho was asked about Wenger’s comments in his pre-match media briefing at Cobham but declined to respond. However, it is understood he was unimpressed that Arsenal’s manager had not shaken hands with him before or after the teams’ meeting at the Emirates Stadium.

Never the best of friends, the antipathy between the two managers was very much in evidence earlier in the season at Stamford Bridge when Wenger pushed Mourinho.

The Frenchman did not apologise for that.

On the subject of managerial conduct, Wenger empathised with Leicester City manager Nigel Pearson, who evidently struggled to control his emotions during his media duties this week.

“I have sympathy of course. He apologised and he knows he was wrong but it is not always easy to deal with these kinds of situations. We are all human beings,” Wenger said.

‘Huge pressure’

Wenger's focus is on their final few games of the season, starting with a trip to Hull on Monday night and ending with the FA Cup final against Aston Villa.

The target to finish in the top three, and thus avoid a Champions League pre-qualifier, is paramount. Finishing fourth, and squeezing two must-win European matches into the Premier League season, brings “huge pressure” according to Wenger. “You have to qualify and these kinds of games become more and more difficult,” he said. Guardian Service