Mourinho attacks Solskjaer of being a bad father

The manager of Spurs believes Ole Gunnar Solskjaer's comments against Son Heung-min is unhealthy.

Mourinho attacks Solskjaer of being a bad father
Ole Gunnar Solskjaer

Jose Mourinho has bemoaned Ole Gunnar Solskjaer’s comments about Son Heung-min during Manchester United’s 3-1 away victory over Tottenham Hotspurs on Sunday.

Solskjaer was concerned about the South Korean’s attitude after been fended off by McTominay in the build-up to Cavani’s opener which was ruled out by the VAR before Spurs took the lead later.

Fred, Cavani and Greenwood gave the Red Devils the deserving scoreline on the afternoon but comments made by the Norwegian manager for United seems not to have gone well with Mourinho.

“We shouldn't be conned. If my son stayed down for three minutes and needed 10 mates to help him up, he wouldn't get any food,” Ole Gunnar Solskjaer said after the game sited on talkSPORTS.

The Portuguese brought up the matter and ill-defined the father responsibilities of Ole Gunnar Solskjaer unfolding that Son’s “father is a better person than Ole.”

“First of all, let me tell you something. I'm very, very surprised that after the comments that Ole made on Sonny, you don't ask me about it.

“Because – and I told Ole already this because I met him just a few minutes ago – if it's me, telling that player A, B or C from another club if it was my son I wouldn't give him dinner tonight, what would be the reaction of that?

“It's very, very sad. I think it's really sad that you don't ask me about that. It's sad you don't have the moral honesty to treat me the same way as you treat others.

“In relation to that, I just want to say that Sonny is very lucky that his father is a better person than Ole. I am a father. I think as a father you have always to feed your kids. Doesn't matter what they do. If you have to steal to feed your kids, you steal.

“I'm very, very disappointed. As we say in Portugal, bread is bread and cheese is cheese. I told Ole already what I think about his comments and I'm very disappointed that in five, six, seven questions you ignore the dimensions of that comment.”