I'm not sure the sporting director's words hold that much weight. Kinnear is basically there to keep things ticking along but if the Friedkins decide something different then there's not much he can say to change that.
I'll take some snippets from this article when they sacked Mourinho
https://www.espn.com/soccer/story/_/id/ ... ts-opinion
Roma's decision to sack Jose Mourinho was taken by club owners the Friedkin family late Monday and communicated to the manager -- and the world, which had turned a far greater spotlight on the club since his arrival in 2021 -- before training on Tuesday morning.
His contract was expiring in June and, while he had repeatedly indicated that he was happy to extend it, the club had put all discussion on hold until the end of the season. That's the sort of timing that makes you wonder why they couldn't have waited, and leaves you to conclude there must have been a reason to act now.
Mourinho wasn't sacked because he had lost the dressing room or because fans were calling for his head: while support for him had cooled among portions of the fan base, especially on social media and Rome's omnipresent sports radio stations, the match-going supporters squarely (and noisily) continued to back him.
Rather, he's gone because the Friedkins are businessmen, and they made a business decision.
According to Swiss Ramble, Roma lost €184 million ($200m) in 2020-21 and €219m ($238.1m) the following year, Mourinho's first at the club. The record losses in 2021-22, when they were among the biggest net spenders on transfers in Europe, meant they breached UEFA's Financial Fair Play regulations and were put under a settlement agreement, which restricted their spending.
To salvage this campaign Roma need to qualify for the Champions League.
Maybe Mourinho could have gotten it done, but then that would have presented a different issue. Since his contract was expiring and they weren't going to discuss a new one until the end of the season, it would have meant negotiating a new deal with Mourinho enjoying all the leverage of Champions League qualification. And that would have meant either an even-more onerous contract (both in terms of wages and power to the manager) or Mourinho going elsewhere, leaving behind him no compensation and an enraged fan base.
Best to play the percentages, then, and make a clean break. Club legend Daniele De Rossi steps in as interim replacement and, given his relationship with the fan base, you would assume he will get their support.
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Does that sound like a group of owners that are happy to have a £100m net spend last summer and finish 1-4 points greater off in the table without qualifying for Europe?
Could they invest in Moyes again and potentially get Europe next season? Maybe. Is the percentage play to sack him and get Iraola in now? Probably.
Moyes is in trouble I think.