Football can be very tense for players, manager, and fans. And when we reach our limits, we sometimes release it in unpredictable ways.

Jose Mourinho slammed a crate of bottles. Source: The Sun

In recent days we have witnessed goal celebrations by two Premier League managers; Jose Mourinho and Jurgen Klopp, that can be considered excessive.

Jose Mourinho did it on a match against Young Boys in the Champions League. After going through a goalless 90 minutes, Marouane Fellaini finally broke the deadlock and scored for United in the final minutes of the match.

The goal was celebrated by United, even the manager's expression could be said to be excessive. Mourinho kicked and slammed the drink bottle on the sidelines as an expression of celebrating Fellaini's late goal.

Mourinho walked to the sideline, kicked a crate of bottles, and slammed another one. He seemed so emotional to see the goal.

Meanwhile, Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp did it on a match in the English Premier League during the derby against Everton. Divock Origi turned the blunder by Everton goalkeeper Jordan Pickford to a goal in the 95th minute.

Klopp who has always been expressive immediately exploded to see Origi scored a goal, he ran into the pitch and celebrated the goal by hugging Liverpool goalkeeper Alisson Becker. The late goal ensured Liverpool's 1-0 win over Everton. This victory is important for Liverpool who is in the title race with Manchester City at the top of the table.

Late goals in football are usually celebrated excessively, especially if the goals determine the final result of the match.

Football is originally a fun game, but when the stake is high and it's your day job then the stress can be high as well. We sometimes release our stress at work, and football club managers also do the same thing.

But some celebration was just too much. Just like what Chelsea coach assistant Marco Ianni did to Mourinho when his team score equalizer goal at last minutes of the match in the Premier League.

Not sure whether he was celebrating it with Chelsea fans behind Mourinho or was trying to provoke him, though. But Mourinho's expression was priceless. Haha.

Anyway, celebrating a goal is part of the game. You score a goal, you celebrate it. Nothing's wrong with it. Just remember not to violate any rules and sportsmanship value. Celebrate your success without hurting others. It's unwritten rules in life, not just in football.