The return of the king is all but finalized. According to an explosive report from AS, José Mourinho and Real Madrid have reached a formal verbal agreement for the Portuguese tactician to become the club’s next first-team manager.
“The Special One” is set to sign a two-year contract that will tie him to the Santiago Bernabéu until June 2028. However, Madridistas will have to exercise a bit of patience, as the report notes that the official announcement will not be made until at least May 24th—following the conclusion of the domestic season and Florentino Pérez’s upcoming presidential elections.
Total Power to Fix a Broken Culture
This isn’t just a standard coaching appointment; it is an institutional restructuring. A parallel report from MARCA confirms that Real Madrid is giving Mourinho unprecedented authority to handle the heavy baggage currently weighing down the club.
- Transfer Veto: Unlike recent managerial tenures, Mourinho will have a massive, direct say in all incoming and outgoing transfer decisions. As previously reported by The Athletic, he has already demanded immediate defensive reinforcements to fix a backline crippled by Ferland Mendy’s long-term injury and David Alaba’s impending exit.
- His Own Inner Circle: Mourinho will bring his entire trusted coaching staff with him to Valdebebas. The board explicitly wants his signature “siege mentality” and strict disciplinary code to wipe out the toxic ego struggles that have plagued the dressing room, most recently highlighted by the Mbappé-Arbeloa clash and the Valverde-Tchouaméni training ground fallout.
The Blueprint of His First Era
This marks Mourinho’s highly anticipated second tenure in the Spanish capital. His first stint (2010–2013) remains legendary for fracturing Pep Guardiola’s dominant Barcelona era:
- The Centurions: He won the historic 2011/12 La Liga title with a record-shattering 100 points and 121 goals scored.
- The Foundation: He claimed a Copa del Rey and a Supercopa de España while breaking Madrid’s notorious “round of 16 curse” in Europe, building the tactical blueprint that allowed Carlo Ancelotti to capture La Décima the very next year.
RMxtra Verdict: The Alpha Has Returned
Florentino Pérez has realized that tactical drills aren’t enough to save this squad—they need a cultural purge. By granting Mourinho control over recruitment and bringing in a entirely new staff, the message from the hierarchy is crystal clear: The players are no longer in charge.
Álvaro Arbeloa will still lead the team out tomorrow at the Ramón Sánchez-Pizjuán against Sevilla, but the entire squad now knows that the architect of the new era has already signed on the dotted line. The summer clearance is about to begin, and nobody’s spot is safe.
