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Spurs pre-season friendly preview

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After what seems an eternity in the thrall of Sky Sports News and their incessant pimping of Modric across London, it’s finally time for the boys to pull on their new shirts (they’ll be wearing the more appealing Investec sponsored ones for this competition) and get on the pitch.

The squad have had a fantastic reception arriving in South Africa for the Vodacom Challenge which starts this Saturday, 16th July, when we play Kaizer Chiefs. ESPN are showing the game which kicks off at 2pm. Our second game is on Tuesday 19th against the current South African champions, Orlando Pirates. That game kicks off at 7.15pm and is again on ESPN. The two South African teams will then play each other on Thursday for the right to face us in the final. You’ll be surprised to learn that ESPN are also showing this game and its at 2pm on Saturday 23rd.

Obviously the media focus of this tour, as it’s been all summer, will be on Luka Modric. Will we play? Will he do so happily? Has Dawson been giving him lessons in loyalty? It’s anyone’s guess as to what’s going to happen and it seems unlikely we’ll be hearing from the Croatian himself.

One person it was pleasing to see in South Africa was club ambassador and legend Gary Mabbutt. Mabbsy was part of South Africa’s bid team for the 2010 World Cup and spoke of how pleased he was to be back in the country with Spurs. Fans should be pleased that there are still some respectful and honourable men representing the club.

Kevin Bond will be in charge of the team for the first game, with Harry Redknapp joining up with the squad on Sunday. With us yet to really trouble the transfer market almost all the faces will be familiar. Brad Friedel will undoubtedly make his first appearance for Spurs and we are guaranteed to see more of Bongani Khumalo in his home country. Steven Pienaar will also be given plenty of opportunities to show us what it is he actually does and why he’s paid so much.

The first teams next fixture will be back in England. We will be helping Brighton celebrate the opening of their new American Express Community Stadium. Catchy name. It’s sure to be a great day for fans of both clubs and hopefully Spurs will be able to showcase some new talent by this point. Please.

The final friendly for the first team is Athletic Club Bilbao’s visit to White Hart Lane on Saturday 6th August, kick off at 5.15pm. ITV4 are covering the game which is great news for many fans. Not so much the ones who bought tickets for a 3pm kick off. Not that anyone gave them a second thought in making the decision to switch the time. Bilbao should provide a good test in the final warm up before the real action kicks off. Javi Martinez who was most people’s man of the tournament in the Euro Under 21′s is one player to look out for. Another is perennial Spurs target, Fernando Llorente.

There are also a number of Spurs XI friendlies taking place over the next three weeks. Two games in Portugal in the next few days get things underway. Saturday 23rd July the XI are away to Barnet, kick off at Underhill is 3pm. On Tuesday 26th the team travel to Stadium MK to play the Dons with a 7.30pm kick off. On Friday 29th Leyton Orient play host, kick off at 7.30pm at Brisbane Road.

Friendlies are never a great guide to how seasons are going to turn out, if they were Giovani Dos Santos would now be double World Player of the Year. They should however be a chance for the squad to find fitness whilst bonding with any new team mates. It’s the last part of this that Spurs have seemed to struggle with for a number of years. With many added distractions,  this summer is even more disjointed. Perhaps it could be that this will create a siege mentality among the players and help them pull together to prove that our appearance in the Champions League wasn’t an Everton like one-off.

At least it’s some football. Nearly the real thing.

COYS

Stuart Watts

@Studub on Twitter

 

 

It’s time for Spurs to move on and focus!

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Focus being the key word right now as we are in a pivotal period for the club.

We know what happened last season and what we didn’t achieve;  now is the time to focus on our future direction.

In order to do this, tough decisions will need to be made in the next few weeks.   The club is currently involved in many trying situations,  namely the ongoing Olympic Stadium issue along with Northumberland Park Development project, plus the Luka saga that, seemingly, will not go away even with the clear stance Daniel Levy has taken on it.  We are also in the midst of the summer transfer window, where little business has been concluded by us even though there has been much speculation in the press as always.

So where does our focus need to be?

I believe these are the key areas our efforts should be concentrated on:

Focus 1
Decide what a suitable price for Luka Modric is, inform his suitors and give a clear deadline for a deal to be done. This then gives us the time to either replace him or know that he is in our plans for the forthcoming season.  I realise that the club issued statements that he is not for sale at any price but I believe that if enough pound notes are waved in our direction he will be sold.

Focus 2
Identify where we need to strengthen (yes, I am laughing whilst writing this!). Obvious I know, but since a lot of teams are making moves earlier in this window we need to spring into action or face the prospect of the top talent no longer being available.  However both Harry Redknapp and Daniel Levy have said though ‘we need to sell before we can buy’, which leaves us in somewhat of a Catch 22 situation.  Perhaps the club needs to rethink their Modric stance and lower their fringe player prices?

Focus 3
Preseason friendlies are just about to start and Harry Redknapp won’t be with the team in South Africa due to his impending court appearance next week .  Whilst I don’t expect ‘Arry to be staying at Her Majesty’s pleasure , I am sure the club must have thought of every possible scenario and the ‘what if’ as the possible consequences are huge and preseason is the crucial time for plans and tactics to be made not ripped apart.

Focus 4
The Olympic Stadium issue and Northumberland Park Development project.  Levy is progressing with both and almost playing one off against the other now. This will continue for the foreseeable future as all avenues will be explored; one thing is for sure we need a larger capacity stadium.

With so much going on in the next month we need to be strong, have direction and get the business done so Spurs can have a great season and look to a fantastic future.

I am now just hoping that, our transfer business is done way before the last week in August, we sell off our ‘surplus to requirements’ players quickly enabling Luka to stay, and the NPD project gets the funding we are looking for to proceed.  Obviously,  this is Tottenham we are talking about so everything will be prolonged and drawn out for as long as possible until the last minute. After all, we all love the roller coaster ride,  right?

COYS

Rob

Get your perfect Spurs XI in print!

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Calling all Spurs fans!!

My Twittermate Norman Giller is writing a history of Tottenham managers. It is a book of two halves, with the second section being filled by Spurs supporters, playing the manager and picking their dream Tottenham team from when they first started supporting the club.

Norman knows what he’s talking about. This is his 89th book, and 20 of them have been written in harness with Lane legend Jimmy Greaves.

If you want to have your team in the book, hurry and email 11 players and 5 subs to select@normangillerbooks.co.uk Add a brief comment on your team and give your age and location. Norman will personally reply to anybody who contacts him.

Time is running out. The book is going to press as soon as Harry Redknapp’s upcoming court case is settled. This is your chance to pay homage to your personal heroes.

Check out Norman’s website

COYS

Stuart Watts

(@Studub on Twitter)

Luka Modric tells Croatian paper he wants out of Spurs!

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As we’ve all known the Luka Modric to leave story is continuing at pace. This morning a Croatian sports paper ran an interview they did with Luka yesterday.

This is the interview. You’ll obviously need to translate it from Croatian.

This is the general tone of the interview(bear in mind the potential vagaries & loss of subtlety of Google translate)
- Luka feels he has been treated poorly & spoken to in a disrespectful way by Daniel Levy. He was apparently told to basically sit down & shut up while Levy told him he was going nowhere.
- Luka’s main point of contention is the agreement he made with Levy last year when signing a new contract. He alleges that the club have to listen and negotiate if a big club come in for him. (You can all insert your own comment on Chelsea’s status as a big club here)
- Luka alleges he’s been threatened with the bench or a seat in the stands if he doesn’t play ball.
- Modric is still hoping that an agreement can be reached and an amicable departure can be arranged.

Let’s look at that last point first. Any chance of an amicable departure has been pretty much blown out of the water already. If it was Barcelona he was desperate to join, most fans would begrudgingly accept that I should imagine. Chelsea are no Barca though. Whilst even the most blinkered Spurs fans must admit that Chelsea occupy a higher station than us currently, that gap is closing, thanks in no small part to the likes of Luka Modric. To sell to one of our rivals would see that gap widen again & would see us branded a selling club for sure.

I’m still fully behind Luka at the moment but this interview on the back of the one for the Mail a couple of weeks back do not help my resolve. If these interviews are legit then it’s concerning that all the noises he is making are about going to Chelsea.

What next then? It seems certain Chelsea will bid again. For all Levy’s admirable posturing it’s obvious that there is a price that will force the board to accept. I’d hope that amount was in excess of £40m but it’s probably closer to £35m.

One thing that Daniel Levy needs to take a look at is this alleged agreement to let Luka talk to ‘big clubs that make a bid’. It all seems rather vague and asking for trouble. It must be assumed this is a verbal agreement rather than anything contractual. Whatever though it must be hoped there are no more of these agreements at our club.

Modric is, if these interviews are legit, clearly unhappy and wanting the move. Spurs are not alone in having dealt with unhappy players before. History suggests these instances rarely end happily for the fans. It’s been suggested all along that Luka is no Berbatov and that if he stays he won’t sulk but just get on with it. Whilst it’s hoped that this is very much the case until we see Luka on the pitch in a Spurs shirt we just won’t know.

This battle of wills between chairman and player will run and run. Luka Modric will need to show an as yet unseen ruthless & mercenary streak if he is to best Daniel Levy at this game.

COYS

Stuart Watts
(@Studub on Twitter)

Daniel Levy tells Luka Modric ‘he ain’t going nowhere, he’s Spurs boy for life*’

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Last night Daniel Levy once more reitirated his stance on Luka Modric leaving Spurs. He’s not. He’s not going anywhere for any amount of money. Simple. All done and dusted then? No of course it isn’t, to believe that is the end of it would be to display an embarassing amount of naievety.

Daniel has of course, basically just said to Modric and any potential suitors that we want to keep him and if he wants out then he is going to have to fight his way out. It won’t be pretty and it would need to be accompanied by an unfeasibly large bag of cash. In making this statement again Levy has been lauded and praised to the heavens by Spurs fans everywhere. Yes, the same Levy who a couple of weeks ago was being derided by the same fans for chasing his Olympic dream. It’s okay though, Spurs fans aren’t fickle. Honest.

Not that Luka Modric would believe that. Our ‘irreplaceable little genius’ dubbed by many as ‘Moddle’ – you can’t get a much higher honour than that as a Spurs midfielder – has been turned upon by many. He’s been labelled, ‘scum’, a ‘traitor’ and that old favourite of the outraged, ‘judas’. Perhaps its not crossed their minds that what he might need is a reminder of how much he’s loved and appreciated at The Lane. Or perhaps they are actually more realistic than others in accepting that like most modern footballers, he doesn’t really care about the fans or what they think. I couldn’t turn on him but to those that have, as Voltaire didn’t say, ‘I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it’.

Supporting a team, any team, is an emotional thing so snap reactions are to be expected. It’s not as if Spurs fans are the only ones guilty, it’s a football thing, everyone does it. Wayne Rooney was blasted by the vocal minority of United fans when he decided they weren’t ambitious enough. Over the last few summers Fabregas has taken it in the neck from a small but growing group from down the road for his annual Barca flirtation. Once they have been convinced of their respective clubs ‘ambition’ they have been welcomed back into the fold no questions asked. Undoubtedly some of the fans will lose a bit of love for one of their heroes but when they deliver on the pitch it becomes almost impossible to keep resenting. This will be the case with Luka too, if he leads us back to the Champions League or helps us to a trophy this season, the current media driven frenzy will be all but forgotten as his name is sung loud.

The role played by the media in this is of course the reason for much of the bad feeling from fans. Most of the major media outlets have played a part in pushing this story and twisting it to their own agenda, Sky Sports News however have firmly led the way. ‘Sky Sports News understands….’ is a phrase that is now guaranteed to raise the ire of most Spurs fans. Levy, Redknapp and the rest of our PR and media team need to look at this very closely. Let’s not forget that recently we’ve been good enough to allow SSN exclusive access to Jermain Defoe for a half hour special feature and also let Harry Redknapp sit in their studio for 30 minutes earlier in the week. Not to mention Redknapps almost constant presence on the channel during the season of course. Unrivalled access that no other club of our level seems to offer up. It might be wise to make them think again by playing our cards closer to our chest in the future. Although it’s important to remember that we also use them for our own purposes and getting our ‘message’ out. Anyway, stopping Harry talking to them could prove nigh on impossible.

This saga is going to run and run. Luka is due to meet Harry Redknapp later today to discuss his future while Modric’s agent is now being quoted as saying that he won’t be requesting a transfer, which is great to hear. It would be nice to hear something encouraging from the little man himself, his silence doesn’t really help promote positive thoughts and it would be good for him to clear up that Mail interview from a couple of weeks ago. Even so, you still get the feeling he’s not the type to throw his toys out the pram. *cough* Berbatov *cough*. Chelsea won’t take this lying down, it seems inconceivable that they won’t test the chairmans resolve again. It’s also impossible to rule out late moves by either of the Manchester clubs who are both admirers of Modric, but then again, who isn’t an admirer?

Personally I still feel, he’ll get a pay rise, get his head down and be told to help us back into the Champions League next year. If we don’t get that he will then be allowed to move on and with there still being 4 years left on his contract at that point, Levy will still be able to make a stunning profit on the deal. Hopefully he’ll use some of that pay rise to buy himself some new shorts, the Wham look should have stayed in the 80′s.

Just like our chairman, I’ll reiterate this, Luka Modric is going nowhere, he’s a Spurs player and we won’t be selling our best players. It’s time for Levy to stick to his word, for once it’s clear his words aren’t those of a negotiator, and tell Roman or anyone else where to stick their chequebook.

COYS

Stuart Watts

(@Studub on Twitter)

* well a year at least anyway

The real reason Spurs came fifth?

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There has been many a discussion post season as to why we finished in fifth spot in the league last season, when many, myself included, thought that fourth should have been a definite and maybe even second or third was a real possibility.

Some of the post mortem debates have been;

Was it the lack of goals from the strikeforce and the fact we didn’t strengthen this area in the January transfer window? At the start of the season most would have said it was good enough to compete.

Was it that our success in the CL had a negative and tiring effect on our league form as we all know about the 2 points from 8 games fact, plus the seeming inability to defeat the so called inferior teams?

Is that I and many others are just wrong and we really aren’t as good as we had hoped and believed and we are in the right place for the level we are at?

All the above points have merit to some degree.

We know that our strikeforce of JD, Pav, Crouchy and Keano should have been capable of firing in the goals as they had plenty of imagination, flair and talent behind them creating the chances for them. But ,for various reasons, it didn’t happen for them last season and when we desperately needed to strengthen and had the opportunity this failed to materialise also.

The inability to defeat lesser teams was the most frustrating fact from last season for me. I can hear you saying now to yourself ‘why would this be?’, as Spurs have a history of doing such things and you would be correct in that thought. The previous season we were much better at getting the points when we struggled and played the bottom half of the table teams and maybe I just expected the team to carry on in the same vein. Of course the CL exertions had an effect but we have a quality and large enough squad that should have been used to its maximum to prevent such a dire return at the tail end of the season.

After reflecting on the last season I truly believe that it really was a superb opportunity for us to finish anywhere from second to fourth in the league as we had the talent to have done this. Especially as Manchester City, Chelsea, Arsenal, Liverpool and even Manchester United struggled for large parts of the season, so a real opportunity lost in my eyes. On the where we really are front and compared to the other teams mentioned I think we can honestly seriously compete with City, Liverpool and Arsenal now.

But, after reading a very good article in the latest edition of FourFourTwo Magazine (@FourFourTwo on Twitter) I put forward this reason: Injuries and specifically injury to Ledley King!

According to said article Spurs had 61 different injuries during the last season, the most in the PL, the least were BLackpool with 20. Spurs as a whole lost 1528 days to injuries, the 4th most, Sunderland were top with 2001 days. I know our squad should be big enough and have enough depth within it to cope with such issues as every team has them, but 61! That seems a hell of a lot of injuries and days lost, I wonder how many times that specific ones occurred? Maybe the club should analyse what they were, how many times they occurred and how they could possibly change the training routine to prevent some of them. Yes, some were obviously match related injuries that you cannot do anything about as it is a contact sport after all and also injuries occurred to players whilst playing for the their countries rather then us (Dawson and JD’s for England being 2). Still, injuries on this scale must have an effect on the team with consistency, gelling with and understanding team mates, fitness levels and possibly psychologically as well. With the amount of games we played I am not saying this was the only reason but it may have been a real factor and taken its toll on the team.

My second point on the injury front issue is our leader, Mr Cool himself, Ledley King. I firmly believe he is the best centre back in the country bar none and it’s a crying shame what has happened to him due to his dodgy knees mainly, amongst other related issues. I have some interesting facts for you:

Last season LK missed 197 days of a 282 day PL season (the previous season 101). He was included in 10 squads throughout the last season, starting 9 times and being an unused sub once, 6 starts were in the PL (previous season 21 starts, 20 in PL). This related to a total of 764 minutes of competitive football played last season and 1637 minutes the season before. Our win percentage with him in the team last season was 75% (PL games only and yes I know only 6 of them!), and without 58%, over a much longer period it has to be said. I can counter this though with the stat that over the last 7 seasons we are at a win percentage of 59% with him in the team and 50% when he isn’t. How many points this relates to last season if he played even 10 more league games of the 32 that he missed is anyone’s guess but if we used a win percentage of only 50% and converted some of the draws into wins, it would be anywhere from 10-15 points I reckon and second place in the league! Wishful thinking I know.

Obviously this is all theoretical and stats can be twisted to suit but I do honestly believe we are a much calmer, better team with LK in it that wins more. It also would have helped if we could have had available our first choice XI much more often (obviously with squad rotation being taken into account) without the deluge of injuries and last season could have been even better than it was.

Hopefully next season we won’t have so many injuries, especially to our top players, Ledley will play some more games and our strikers will be firing.

Top four here we come!

COYS

Rob

All facts and figures taken from myfootballstats.com and FourFourTwo Magazine

Don’t cha wish your left back was BAE?

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Every club has players who polarise opinions. We’ve had and still have our share. Those players who are loved and loathed in almost equal numbers. For years Jermaine Jenas was the ultimate ‘marmite’ player, though it now appears most agree he’s more ‘arsenic’ than a harmless yet disgusting yeast based spread.

Into the void steps a new object of affection and disaffection. Who better than the superbly coiffed and equally superbly monikered, Benoit Assou-Ekotto. He stands accused of concentration lapses, showboating in danger areas and not caring enough.

For me - and this will undoubtedly lead to some of you stopping reading now – Benny is the 3rd or 4th best left back in the Premier League. I firmly believe that he’s been our most consistent player for the last 18 months, being a constant reference in an ever changing back four. Like I say for some, they’ll stop reading now, probably in favour of reading about Lionel Messi arriving for a medical at Spurs Lodge. For the rest here’s why.

Let’s look at Benoit’s attitude first. This appears to be the main reason why people get on his back. I thought it was refreshingly honest to hear him say that he see’s football in London for Spurs as a job. As fans we would all like every single player to show Steve Perryman levels of dedication to the club and shirt in everything they do. That however is very much a vestige of a bygone age, it is a plain and simple fact these days that most footballers see things like Benny does, they just aren’t honest enough to come out and say it. This isn’t to say that loyal, die for the club footballers don’t exist anymore, they do, Michael Dawson is proof of that. This raises another interesting point about his attitude. Surely a team of XI emotionally driven warriors would be terrifying to face but it also stands to reason that they would also make mistakes because of a lack of logical thought, something else that Dawson illustrates a few times a season. Every team, be it a footballing one or in your workplace needs a balance of personalities and whilst Benny’s approach may not be your own or one you particularly like, that calm detachment is every bit as vital. Besides, being detached isn’t the same as not caring. He does care, players who don’t care won’t pull a hamstring sprinting 30 yards to try and rescue a team mates mistake – as he did in the home game against West Brom at the end of the season.

A few times in every game Benny will do his trademark move that exhilarates and infuriates in equal measure. You know what I mean, he’ll rob an opponent of the ball, then seemingly taking too long will perform a drag back or an ‘Ekotto-turn’, calmly beat his man and emerge to rapturous applause. Having not seen Cyril Knowles live due to age limitations I have to rely on footage and speaking to older fans but I understand he was lauded for two things, being a proper hard man from when football was played by real men. Secondly and more relevantly, Cyril was famed for his showboating in and around his own area to the refrains of ‘Nice one Cyril’. So really BAE is just following in his footsteps, besides we’re Spurs, we’re supposed to love the sexy football. Perhaps more pertinently, I struggle to recall a time recently when he’s actually been caught out. Keep entertaining Benny, it’s what football’s all about.

One criticism of Assou-Ekotto that I will relate to is a lack of concentration particularly against the smaller teams, although a number of his team mates also suffer from this, so it seems harsh to single him out, especially as he has evidently improved in this over the last couple of years. The flip side to this is that Benoit is never better than when put up against the big boys. Even in his early days when I had my doubts about him I recall him coming up against Cristiano Ronaldo and keeping him quiet every time. Considering the only other left back who can be reliably counted on to stifle the Portugese winker is Ashley Cole, I think it’s churlish to deny that Benny is a good player.

Distribution is one area of his game that cries out for consistency. He can at times hit crossfield balls or crosses with pinpoint accuracy to devastating effect, but occasionally  he plays balls that have you questioning which sport he thinks he’s playing. I’ve never pretended he was perfect. I’m sure this is one area that Redknapp and the coaching staff continue to work with him on. Redknapp it appears is a firm fan of Benoit Assou-Ekotto. I don’t recall the last time we were linked with a left back, that suggests that Harry is happy with the man with the hair. Going back to Benny’s attitude, I think it’s telling that Redknapp clearly rates him. Harry is well known to like his solid pro’s who get their heads down and get their job done. I’d suggest that no matter how Benny approaches his job, he gets it done.

Gareth Bale’s emergence as a left wing force appears to have helped Benoit improve his game also. Previously playing behind Modric or Kranjcar who drift inside, Assou-Ekotto was often relied upon to offer width adding more responsibility and of course frequently leaving our left side vulnerable to counter attack. Bale can more often be found hugging the touchline meaning that BAE is not required to push up the pitch so often, this has allowed him to concentrate on the defensive side of his game and maintain positional discipline. The breakthrough of Danny Rose at the end of the last season can also only be a good thing for Benny. One thing that he’s really missed is strong competition. He’s pretty much figured whenever fit for almost two years, testament to his physical conditioning and mentality but a seeming guaranteed slot can lead to complacency. Benoit will now know that Rose is on his tail and will push him all the way to keep his starting spot. It may be just a job but he’s a professional and will want to maintain superiority over the young upstart. Our Cameroonian left back could be about to go from strength to strength.

Much of the criticism of Benoit appears to stem from the Alan Hansen led media belief that he’s not all that. Sir Alex Ferguson and his kids will tell you how much Hansen knows. In my opinion only Manchester United, Chelsea and maybe Newcastle don’t wish that their left back was BAE. Or as good as him at least.

 

COYS

Stuart Watts

(@Studub on Twitter)