Mourinho's Inter look ready for his second coming at Chelsea

If Hollywood ever comes calling on football, Jose Mourinho will be ready, collar up, lines prepared, loaded with ambiguity. He is, beyond argument, the most self-conscious performer in the game, a shameless salesman of a unique brand: manager as messiah.

Tonight in the fevered surroundings of the Giuseppe Meazza Stadium, he starred in The Italian Job, coolly accepting the theft of a goal in the third minute by his diligent striker, Diego Milito, that caught his old ally at Stamford Bridge, John Terry, swivelling on the wrong spot to leave Petr Cech helpless on the near post.

Why Terry had left his mark on the other side of the stage was more than likely down to the panic induced by excellent lead-up work by Wesley Sneijder, although it was difficult to excuse the Chelsea captain's ultimate clumsiness.

Editor's Comment
Child protection needs more than prevailing laws

The rise in defilement and missing persons cases, particularly over the recent festive period, points not merely to a failure of policing, but to a profound and widespread societal crisis. Whilst the Police chief’s plea is rightly directed at parents, the root of this emergency runs deeper, demanding a collective response from every corner of our community. Marathe’s observations paint a picture of neglect with children left alone for...

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