ROBERTO Mancini lost his temper as he felt the need to defend his commitment to Manchester City ahead of this evening’s crucial meeting with Ajax.

The City boss feels he deserves more respect from the media for his achievements at the club rather than continual speculation about his future.

Mancini reacted angrily when asked a further question about claims from last week that he spoke to wealthy Ligue 2 club Monaco before the end of the last season.

The Italian neither confirmed nor denied the reports were true last Friday when he ambiguously said that he had been ‘‘close to seven or eight teams’’.

Those remarks have been interpreted in different ways, either as a flippant response to speculation linking him with other jobs or as confirmation he really did speak to several other clubs.

But when asked for clarification as he met media to preview the Ajax game, he said: ‘‘I don’t understand why you continue to ask me [about] last year, last month. This is finished.

‘‘Why? Why, for which reason?

Why do you continue to ask me, ‘Last year you had a chance to go’?

‘‘I stay here because my work is here. I worked for two years. I built with the chairman and the owner, this team.

We won three trophies in two years. For 50 years we didn’t win. Never.’’ The reports claimed Mancini was offered a big-money contract by Monaco but he opted to stay at the Etihad Stadium.

He went on to guide City to the Premier League crown – their first title in 44 years – and was rewarded with a new five-year contract.

That success followed FA Cup triumph in 2011 and with the Community Shield since added, Mancini, appointed three years ago next month, wants people to recognise he is in it for the long haul.

With the conjecture over his future having dominated the build-up to Saturday’s game against West Ham – further questions have arisen following the appointment of new director of football Txiki Begiristain – Mancini is clearly getting irritated.

Continuing his outburst, the 47-year-old said: ‘‘You need to have respect for the people sometimes.

‘‘I don’t understand why you continue to ask me this.

Why?

‘‘You asked me one question.

I am polite because I answered your question and the other questions.

‘‘But I also didn’t answer because I was there to talk about West Ham. I am polite because I answered, I said it is true – every year I can have two or three new situations where I can go (but) I want to stay here.

‘‘I decided to stay here because I worked for two-and-ahalf years, I worked hard.

‘‘The future will be easy because when you have a new team the strong work is the first few years when you need to build your team.

‘‘But we won three trophies in two years. I think you should have respect for this, for me, for the club, for the players. I don’t understand why every time we talk about this.’’ The heat has also been turned up on Mancini because of his side’s underwhelming start in the Champions League.

City have collected just one point from their opening three games in Group D and are in danger of early elimination for a second successive season.

Mancini’s team must beat Ajax at Eastlands to retain any hope of reaching the knockout stages but the task is made even harder by a host of injuries.

Joleon Lescott and James Milner are the latest additions to a casualty list that already includes David Silva, Maicon, Jack Rodwell and Micah Richards.