The thread title is not important, not to be taken literally - read it as clickbait if you will.
the intention of the thread is to adopt a doping perspective to explain recent events and sporting results. In opposition as to what is proposed by the mainstream media, things like:
"
a manager having lost his mojo": makes no sense,
mojo is not a rational concept. that's not how the world works
"
a manager stops being able to build relations of trust with his players": a person's personality doesn't change. that's an explanation for people that imagine the world is like a soap opera: now I run for you, not I don't run for you, something you said/did made me upset. No, people serve first and foremost their self interest: a player won't put his career on hold just to "get even" with a manager. A collective of players doing that is just absurd.
The facts are that Chelsea did not improve after Mourinho leaving with a caretaker from the club. They seem to be improving this season that a new technical staff, successful, has arrived straight from Italy. Still not running enough, though.
What also seems clear is that Mourinho has been overtaken in doping knowledge by his competitors. Is it new knowledge being applied he hasn't been unable to access, or he has just lost his contacts from the past? Maybe he just adjusted his ethics after learning something new? (he always struck me as a man of consequence, that would act on principles). But just looking at the data, in his new team:
http://www.mirror.co.uk/sport/row-zed/lazy-man-united-jose-mourinhos-8867582
Nº20 in the Premier League, TOTAL DISTANCE COVERED (KM):
Manchester United.
As expected, Liverpool and Manchester City "lead the way"
Not even a *** person would claim he already "lost the locker room" two months in. We're looking for a serious discussion here, with proper thinking, not conspiracies theories to explain the world.
From an earlier link, in another thread, I've also noticed Man City is the team (amongst 32) that run the most in the Champions League midweek clashes. That's impressive, considering they played with pratically the same players.
Looking at smaller clubs (not european giants) that performed well in the CL: Sporting Lisbon had an impressive game against Real Madrid, even though, in the end, they were unable to get the victory (suffered 2 goals in the last 5 minutes, to lose). They were unable to get a result in the weekend against a mid table team. They were 3-0 down after 45 minutes. I watched the highlights closely: quite clearly, the full-back that repeated the game was unable to recover back, when defending, and they were crushed with quick counters from that side. The full-back would run, but was unable to sprint.
http://videos.sapo.pt/U35O0c1zmmHDWTNYuzEe
(nº11, in the left side)
My suggestion is that clubs not at the top in doping technologies are able to buy themselves a boost for a midweek CL match, but will pay the price in the weekend, even if in a lower league. Guardiola/Man City, or Bayern, Dortmund, Barça, RM, AM, have the doping technology to recover the players, inclusively playing the same 11 (or practically) 2 or 3 days later. Mourinho seems to have stopped doing any of it: the players don't even looked charged in the initial 1 game per week period.
(P.S. the full-back is the position that requires more stamina as they are constantly sprinting up and down the field: they both attack and defend close to the goal line.)