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    Pressure is mounting on Alvaro Arbeloa at Real Madrid, and familiar names are resurfacing as the club evaluates its next managerial move – none more intriguing than Jose Mourinho.

    Madrid’s season has fallen below internal benchmarks. Eliminated from Europe and trailing Barcelona in La Liga, the club’s hierarchy is already mapping out contingency plans despite Arbeloa having a year left on his contract.

    Performance decline fuels uncertainty

    Arbeloa’s tenure has struggled to match the standards set by his predecessor Xabi Alonso. While Alonso posted a 74% win rate before departing in January, Arbeloa’s return has dropped to 64%, with more defeats despite managing fewer league games.

    A shock Copa del Rey exit to second-tier Albacete early in his reign further weakened his position, even if it came just days into the job. Results, rather than long-term planning, continue to dictate decision-making at the Bernabéu.

    Mourinho favourite for Real Madrid job - report
    Jose Mourinho – Getty image 

    Club president Florentino Perez is known to prioritise control and dressing-room authority over tactical ideology.

    The profile he favours is not necessarily a system-driven coach, but a manager capable of handling elite personalities and maintaining internal balance.

    Why Mourinho fits Perez blueprint

    That preference explains why Mourinho has re-emerged as a credible – if unlikely option. Currently managing Benfica, the Portuguese coach remains under contract until 2027 but is understood to be open to a return.

    Mourinho’s previous spell in Madrid (2010–2013) delivered La Liga, Copa del Rey and Super Cup titles, but more importantly, established him as a figure capable of imposing authority in a high-pressure environment.

    His appeal lies in familiarity and presence. For Perez, Mourinho represents a known quantity – a manager who can command respect instantly and stabilise a volatile dressing room. That makes him the “ultimate wildcard” in the current succession planning, suggests BBC.

    However, internal sources indicate that his return would only materialise if primary targets prove unattainable.

    Names such as Mauricio Pochettino, Didier Deschamps and Massimiliano Allegri are all under consideration, each fitting the club’s preference for experienced, authority-driven leadership.

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