Home
FM Discord
YouTube Channel
FM24 Data Update
FM26 Data Update
FM26 OOP Player Roles
Downloads
Graphics
Challenges
Blog
Forums
Videos
Tactics
FM26
FM26 Real Name Fix
FM26 Shortlists
FM26 DB
FM26 Men's Wonderkids
FM26 Women's Wonderkids
FM26 Men's Club Finances
FM26 Women's Club Finances
FM24 Update
FM24
FM23
FM Saves
FM Database
FM Guides
Installation Guides
Records
Search
#813870 Blaugrana Betrayal: Mourinho At Barca
joshr977
Blaugrana Betrayal: The Unthinkable One
This is a short story using Mr Tini's 2013/14 FM 24 database. In a parallel universe, Mourinho takes over at Barcelona.
June 3rd 2015: Breaking News - José Mourinho Appointed Barcelona Manager
In a move that has sent shockwaves through world football, FC Barcelona have officially announced José Mourinho as their new head coach. The man who once waged war on the club as Real Madrid’s leader, the architect of El Clásico’s most bitter battles, now takes charge at the Camp Nou. Just months after guiding Chelsea to a historic Premier League and Champions League double, Mourinho has accepted a role that seemed unthinkable—a direct contradiction to the club’s philosophy, history, and identity. The decision has already sparked outrage among Barcelona purists, while the footballing world watches in stunned disbelief. How did this happen? And what does this mean for the future of the Blaugrana?
Barcelona: Two Years of Failure, One Desperate Gamble
FC Barcelona do not tolerate mediocrity. But as the 2015/16 season approaches, the club finds itself in an unthinkable position—two full seasons without a single trophy. No league title. No Copa del Rey. No Champions League triumph. A club built on success has been forced to watch from the shadows as their greatest rivals, Real Madrid, and their former mastermind, Pep Guardiola, dominate European football.
Another second-place finish in La Liga, this time without ever truly challenging Madrid. Knocked out early in domestic cups. And in Europe? A semi-final defeat to Pep Guardiola’s Manchester City. The man who once built Barcelona’s greatest dynasty had now outclassed them on the European stage, exposing their stagnation.
Gerardo Martino, tasked with leading the transition after Tito Vilanova’s departure, never looked like the right fit. His tactical approach felt like a diluted version of the past, lacking both the control of Guardiola’s era and the steel needed to survive at the top. His dismissal was inevitable. But the bigger issue remained—Barcelona had lost their identity, their edge, their ability to dominate on their own terms.
The board needed a response. They needed a winner. Someone who could take Barcelona back to the top, no matter how painful or controversial the solution. That desperation led them to the unlikeliest of names: José Mourinho.
José Mourinho: A Return To The Top Of European Football
José Mourinho’s time at Real Madrid (2010-2013) was as volatile as it was successful. He arrived with one goal—to dethrone Pep Guardiola’s Barcelona—and by 2011/12, he had done exactly that. Madrid stormed to the La Liga title with a record 100 points, playing a ruthless counter-attacking style that overwhelmed even the great Barcelona side of Messi, Xavi, and Iniesta. The rivalry was so intense that many believed Guardiola stepped away from Barca because of it.
But 2012/13 was a different story. The cracks started to show. Madrid finished second to Barcelona in La Liga, and a golden chance at Champions League glory slipped away when Dortmund humiliated them in the semi-finals. Mourinho’s cycle had run its course. He left at the end of the season, his relationship with key players fractured.
He returned to Chelsea in 2013, stepping back into the club where he had first built his legend. The first season (2013/14) wasn’t vintage Mourinho—Chelsea finished fourth in the league, lost the FA Cup final to Manchester United, and were eliminated in the Champions League semi-finals by Napoli. But there were glimpses of what was to come. He was rebuilding. He was waiting.
And when 2014/15 arrived, Mourinho struck gold. Chelsea reinforced smartly, bringing in Edinson Cavani, Ilkay Gündogan, and Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang—a balance of power, control, and speed. The result? A Premier League title, dominating England once again. But his real triumph came on the biggest stage—the Champions League final. A battle against his old rival, Pep Guardiola’s Manchester City. The narrative was perfect.
He had conquered England and reclaimed Europe, but what next? Where do you go when you've won it all? The answer, for Mourinho, was as surprising as it was inevitable. Barcelona needed a savior. Mourinho needed a new war. And so, the impossible became reality.
------------------------------------------------------
Next part: Mourinho's First Press Conference, Reaction From Around The World, Tactics, & Transfers. Let me know if this is a story you guys want to hear!