|
![]() |
|||
|
||||
OverviewJose Mourinho's life could hardly be bettered if it had been written as a film script. A football crazy youngster from the outskirts of Lisbon dreams of becoming a great footballer and outperforming his father who had been a professional goalkeeper and coach The young Jose showed a rebelliousness against authority, walking out after one day of the business studies course planned for him, in order to study the principles of sports science. He was a lightening quick learner and was also gifted linguistically. He was also smart enough to realize he could go much further as a coach than as a player. His judgement was quickly confirmed as it propelled him into a career that was to bring success for his teams and give him the glamorous life of an international celebrity. He was helped by his charm which he could use to great effect to win allies and mentors. While still making his way as a young manager he drew attention to his exceptional talents by transforming the fortunes of Porto, astonishing the football world by winning the European Champions cup. When asked in a Radio interview what he believed God thought about him, Jose replied: 'He must really think I'm a great guy because otherwise He would not have given me so much. I have a great family. I work in a place where I've always dreamt of working. He has helped me out so much that He must have a very high opinion of me.' If God has a pretty high opinion of Jose, why shouldn't Jose have a pretty high opinion of himself as well? His spectacular mid-career progress continued with successes at Chelsea, Inter Milan and Real Madrid. At the heart of the story is the relationship between Mourinho and Chelsea's billionaire owner Roman Abramovich . But the relationship was to become a complex one as Jose failed to deliver the dearest of Abramovich's dreams for Chelsea, the European Cup Jose which had won for Porto and for Inter-Milan. The author traces out the inter-related themes of the story drawing on a deep knowledge of the nature of charismatic leadership as well as its dark side which emerges in Jose's outbursts against authority. He reveals the signs that led him to anticipate Jose' ultimate fate at Chelsea and to collect information to support his theory on a daily basis. Mourinho Matters is written as a series of forty episodic stories from Jose's early days to the managerial roundabout set in motion at the time of his second departure from Chelsea. The material includes TV and book reviews, and the headline events reported in the media, during his career. Special reference sources and index have been provided for students of sports management and leadership. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Tudor RickardsPublisher: Createspace Independent Publishing Platform Imprint: Createspace Independent Publishing Platform Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.00cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.249kg ISBN: 9781519485809ISBN 10: 1519485808 Pages: 182 Publication Date: 11 February 2016 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationTudor Rickards is an author on creativity and leadership in business and management. He has published over twenty books on these subjects including Dilemmas of Leadership (3rd edition, 2015). He writes for business and professional audiences as a former Professor at the Manchester Business School. He is a pioneer and advocate of experiential learning which combines study and practice. The influences on his writing are diverse, and include chess, poetry, sport and politics. He is developing the use of non-traditional fictional modes such as story-telling for exploring issues in leadership theory. The world of nature has also been a powerful source of inspiration, with well-publicised work on intelligent horsemanship and the bullying style of leadership that he calls Mandrill Management Tudor was educated at Pontypridd Boys' Grammar School and went on to study chemistry and radiation chemistry at The University of Wales at Cardiff (now Cardiff University) and post-doctoral research at New York Medical College. He returned to the UK to work in the R&D department of Unilever Laboratories] It was there that he became interested in creativity and its role in structured problem-solving systems, which he developed at The University of Manchester. His recent media contributions include the BBC Radio 4 documentary Oblique Strategies. He founded the journal, Creativity and Innovation Management, and is Alex Osborn Visiting Professor at State University of New York, Buffalo His self-publishing draws on over a thousand posts originally published on his blog, Leaders We Deserve, over the period 2006-2015. Tudor is a self-confessed couch potato sports commentator and a near lifetime follower of Rugby (Wales, Ospreys, Canterbury Crusaders, Pontypridd, Manchester Business School ladies), Football (one of the Manchester clubs, including U21s, and U18s), and assorted baseball and NFL teams watched from bars in various American cities. He is an avid tennis player slightly handicapped by inherent weaknesses in his forehand which reveal themselves in play, and sometimes in print. He is a more competent chess player, a sport (not a 'game', he insists) at which he represented Wales as a junior, and now completes in the middle reaches of the Stockpost league. He lives a life rescued from irredeemable chaos by the uncomplaining (mostly) efforts of Susan, in a mythical region where the Cheshire plains meets Hogwarts Academy. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |