
Roy
Keane has branded Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho 'a disgrace' for the manner
in which he conducts himself on the touchline.
The Irishman, who is now assistant manager to Paul Lambert at Aston Villa,
was left incensed by Mourinho during a recent Premier League fixture at
Stamford Bridge.
Villa trailed 3-0 in west London late in the game and were resigned to
heading home empty-handed.
With the final minutes being played out, Mourinho approached the Villa bench
in an effort to shake hands with Lambert and his staff before the final
whistle sounded.
Keane considers that gesture to have been a mark of disrespect, with the
Portuguese tactician pushing the boundaries of acceptability with his
off-field antics.
He said at the launch of his new autobiography: "I don’t mind all that (mind
games) but the game was still going on. It’s disgraceful. I’ve seen him
doing it to other managers, it is a disgrace.
"You wouldn’t do that on a Sunday morning, you would get knocked out."
Keane, who has spent time as a manager in his own right at Sunderland and
Ipswich Town, has also revealed that he has learned not to get too settled
in coaching posts, with a short-term approach being taken at Villa and with
the Republic of Ireland national side.
He said: "At Villa now, I never look beyond the next week. People say you
have a game in three weeks but, to me, it’s about getting through this week.
"Have I reflected more, been a bit more harsh on myself in this book?
Probably so.
"The position I was playing in for (Manchester) United in the middle of the
park, you have to express strength all the time and you had no weaknesses.
But this is a chance for me to look back. There was fear, there is fear.
"I think the most natural thing in the world is to worry about contracts,
injuries and, when you become a manager, your staff.
"But don’t get the impression that I was going into work every day shaking
in my boots."