
Jose Mourinho Reportedly Shouted 'Son of a B---H' Amid Eva Carneiro Chelsea Row
Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho reportedly shouted "son of a b---h" during his angry exchange with the club's medical staff after they treated Eden Hazard late in last Saturday's 2-2 draw with Swansea City at Stamford Bridge.
Mourinho criticised his staff for being "impulsive and naive" for rushing on to treat Hazard, which left Chelsea temporarily down to nine men—Thibaut Courtois had been sent off—as the winger had to leave the pitch, per Sky Sports.
Club doctor Eva Carneiro is now set to lose her place on the Chelsea bench as a result of her actions on Saturday and the perceived negative impact it had on the side, per Matt Law in the Telegraph.
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Footage released by Sky Sports has now reportedly revealed the extent of Mourinho's anger, per the Daily Mail's Matt Lawton:
"Video footage released by Sky Sports shows a visibly angry Mourinho shouting the Portuguese term "filho da puta" (which translates as son of a b---h) as Carneiro treated a stricken Eden Hazard against the manager's wishes...Deciphered by a lip reader working for Sportsmail, Mourinho was seen shouting: "Hey! Hey! Get off the pitch now. F-----g hell."
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The Portuguese manager has come under fire for his criticism of his medical staff with Liverpool's former head of medicine, Peter Brukner, demanding Mourinho apologise, per BBC Sport.

It seems Mourinho was out of line in accusing his medical team of impulsiveness, as it has been revealed that referee Michael Oliver in fact summoned Carneiro and head physio Jon Fearn onto the pitch to treat Hazard, per the Independent's Sam Wallace.
Wallace revealed that had the medical team not obliged Oliver—no matter the orders of the manager—they would have been "in breach of one of the General Medical Council’s first tenets under the 'safety and quality' responsibilities."
As the Mail on Sunday's Sam Peters noted, player welfare should hardly be a responsibility of the coaching staff given their lack of medical training:
Though Mourinho stressed in his post-match comments that he "was sure Eden didn’t have a serious problem," Oliver clearly felt there was enough of an issue to call the medical staff into action, per Sky Sports.
Friday's press conference ahead of Sunday's key Premier League clash against Manchester City will be the first time Mourinho has faced the media since he made his controversial comments.
In light of the latest reported revelations of his outburst, it is likely to be a tricky episode for the Blues boss, with questions concerning the upcoming match sure to be limited.



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