Yudster wrote: I reckon he'd be more likely to take on Spurs if and when Harry takes the England job. It would be far more like the kind of challenge he would be up for, going by the precedents he has already set.
I don't think you're right here.
Jose is a brilliant manager, and has a huge amount of ability and arrogance. When he took the Chelsea job, he knew he'd get the backing to buy any player he needed. He set them up for immediate success, knowing that when he left that there wouldn't be any vision for the future and whoever succeeded him would have a very difficult time moulding those players into a successful unit - then when he took over at Inter he had a squad of players who were in their prime and added to them to make his treble winning team.
At Real he moved to a club with great players - but most importantly he's been a massive dick while being there. Acting (as he always does)contentiously and bringing the team into disrepute, turning it into the Jose show. He's taken one of the greatest clubs in the world and made it about him. He's a one man machine, who wants to show that he is the most important manager in modern day football - and that he's bigger than any club or player in the world.
He took on Sir Alex, Wenger and Benitez in wars of words - and usually came off looking something of a victor. At Spurs he wouldn't have the wage structure or budget that he would need to get the team he wanted, at Arsenal he wouldn't either. At City he would have the money, but I don't think a club like that would appeal to him in England because of their dominant position in a very tough league.But Spurs aren't a sure thing by any stretch of the imagination. There's too much risk for them to just be a gap in his CV. I could be wrong, but they don't seem to fit his type as they're unable to guarantee success.
Man Utd is the job that I think he wants - but I don't think that the top brass at Utd want him for the club (quite rightly). He wouldn't stay for 5 years, let alone 10, and the board would probably be loathe to be at odds with such a megalomaniac.
A return to Chelsea would complete his fairytale in my opinion. He takes them over in 2004, wins their first league title in 50 years, does it again the next season and wins over most of the fans in England. He's indulged by the unique (being nice there...) English media - revered by the fans who demand results as opposed to a 'footballing philosophy' - which is the most important thing. Results are the one thing that he can deliver easily. I think he fell in love with Chelsea as a club - but things blew up with Roman, and someone as arrogant as Jose doesn't like to lose power plays.
He left, won it all with Inter, is on course to win the league with Real - and then if he tops it by beating Abramovich by forcing him to admit defeat and becoming a resurgent hero back at the club where he excelled, he'll bring to a close the first part of what will be an incredibly long story for a great manager.
The only thing the owner should worry about, is that if he goes back to Chelsea, he'll be unsackable in the eyes of the fans in an age where protests are commonplace.