
Jose
Mourinho has rubbished "a very sad accusation" that some Chelsea players are
not trying for him.
Cesc Fabregas on Tuesday responded to suggestions he is at the heart of a
revolt against Mourinho, blaming "individuals on the outside trying to
destabilise the club".
And on the eve of his side's Champions League game against Dynamo Kiev the
Chelsea manager said his players were "giving their best in every minute of
every session" to turn around a run of one win in eight games.
"You are accusing the players of dishonesty," he said. "If i accuse you of
being a dishonest journalist I think you'd be very upset and probably you'd
take legal action. I think it's a question for the players, not for me.
"[They are] giving their best in every minute of every session, giving
solidarity between all of us. [They have] fantastic personal relationships,
very good professional relationships, and are training...always with a
strong desire to win the next match."
Mourinho refused to say whether he had met Roman Abramovich since a 3-1
defeat to Liverpool on Saturday that left the champions 14 points behind
Premier League leaders Manchester City after six defeats in 11 games.
Sky sources say the Portuguese's job is not currently under threat, and when
he was asked how long he thought he had to improve results Mourinho said, in
reference to his contract: "Four years, or three years and seven months."
He also referred to an interview given in the wake of a 2004 Champions
League triumph with Porto in which he predicted "one day the bad results
will come".
"I resisted well to the nature of football," he said. "[I was] 11 years
waiting for this. It took time, but I'm calm in the moment, stable and
strong to face it."
Asked if he knew the reason for this season's poor results he said: "Yes. I
know. It's a combination of factors, some of them I don't want even to
touch. Yes, I know."
When John Terry was then asked the same question he laid the blame for
results squarely at the feet of the players, including himself.
The captain said: "First and foremost, the players will stand up and say -
and I will personally - that we've not been good enough. We've not played
well enough, and we take that on the shoulders.
"What we've seen in the last two or three days, ridiculous stories about
what's happening within the club and the dressing room. I can assure you the
players are 100 per cent behind the manager.
"He's under pressure because of the way we're performing. He can do all the
work he can in the training field and team meetings, but once we step over
the white line it's on us. We know we need to be better, collectively, for
this club and for him.
"He will take a lot of the responsibility on his shoulders, and that's
unfair. It's on all of us collectively, not just on him.
"It's not going to come to [him leaving]. The club have shown faith in the
best manager with the best history at this club. In all aspects, of all the
managers I've worked with, he's by far and a long, long way, the best I've
worked with. We are going to turn it around. No ifs, no buts.
"I'm sure, and I'm adamant, that we'll turn this around and he'll be in
charge for the rest of the season and long after I've finished playing for
this club. He is the man to take this club forward to where we want to be."