Jose Mourinho desperately wanted to replace Sir Alex Ferguson when he
retired in 2013 and thought he was getting the job. Three years later,
he is about to be given control while Manchester United are in disarray.
Executive vice-chairman Ed Woodward has built up an undeniable
partnership with Mendes that will endure for however long Mourinho
stays. The club needs a strategy and is placing its future in the hands
of the Portuguese power couple.
Mendes has been deeply embedded at Manchester United for a long time.
He was the man who brought Cristiano Ronaldo to Old Trafford in 2003 -
his most important transfer - and was also involved in the deals which
saw Anderson, Nani, David de Gea, Falcao, Angel Di Maria and Victor
Valdes arrive at the club.
The playing staff will be overhauled and we should expect players
with ties to Mendes to pitch up at Old Trafford. United fans would argue
that if more players the quality of Anthony Martial arrive, then there
will be no problem.
There have, of course, been difficulties for some of those Mendes
clients under previous management but it is unlikely that under Mourinho
the likes of De Gea or Di Maria would have been treated as they were
under Louis van Gaal.
Overall, Mendes is more interested in the best for his players and
not necessarily the club at which they play. Despite Ronaldo's success
in Manchester, he had no qualms about moving him on to Madrid. The city
has been good to De Gea but Mendes was ready to whip him away to the
Santiago Bernabeu last summer.
United may have done Mendes a favour in the Bebe deal - where he
cashed in for about €3.5 million of a €9m fee - but when push comes to
shove, Mendes is in the business of moving players in... and out.
That will not stop him or Mourinho building their own extensive power base at the club for the duration of the manager's tenure.
In the book The Special One by Diego Torres, it was revealed
that Mendes practically kept an office at Real Madrid's Valdebebas
training ground, moving freely around the gym and canteen, unencumbered
by the restrictions Mourinho placed even on the players' families.
He sat in Mourinho's chair and conducted business meetings in his office. Some of the players referred to him as "the boss".
Mourinho took on the might of Real Madrid, even if he ultimately
lost. His grand ambition was to be the king of the Bernabeu. He aimed
for total control; not only as first-team coach but contract
facilitator, the man responsible for signing players, the man
responsible for who in the press wrote what about his team.
If anyone doubted the ability of Mourinho - and his agent - to get
out in front of a story then witness the pace at which news of Van
Gaal's sacking followed the FA Cup win on Saturday.
Madrid became too institutionally hostile for him to continue and so
Mourinho had to leave. There were deep divisions between the 'Spanish'
and 'Portuguese' players during Mourinho's time there.
There was a perception - most keenly expressed by Iker Casillas -
that the mostly Portuguese-speaking Mendes stable was given favourable
treatment by the manager when it came to first-team minutes, contract
renewals and portrayals through the media.
Not only that, but they heard first-hand from Mendes exactly what the
manager had in store. They were close to decision-making processes. It
was in a player's interests to align himself with Mendes or face the
consequences.
At the time that Jorge Valdano left his role as sporting director in
the summer of 2011 it appeared the coast was clear for Mourinho to rule
for decades at Spain's most famous club.
He would have done so alongside his agent, friend and confidant,
Mendes. He is arguably the most powerful man in football now,
controlling the destiny of not only Mourinho but also players such as
Ronaldo, Di Maria and James Rodriguez.
Scarcely a big deal goes by without Mendes having something to do
with it and at one stage Mourinho's Real Madrid team featured not only
Ronaldo and Di Maria but Pepe, Ricardo Carvalho and Fabio Coentrao. It
would have been more, too, had Mourinho got his way and Hugo Almeida
arrived from Werder Bremen.
Ferguson did not want Mourinho in charge when he left and that
sentiment broadly holds. However, Ferguson, former chief executive David
Gill and the United board are less involved in the decision making at
Old Trafford these days. It could be the start of a new dynasty not only
for Mourinho but also for Mendes.

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