Sunday 7 August 2016

Roll up Roll up! The Premier League circus is back in town



With a brand new logo that looks like Simba's passport photo the Premier League is back and with it the circus beginsThe narrative has already been decided - this season's trophy is going to one of the Manchester clubs, and the mainstream media are going to make damn well sure of it.



The love-in has already begun and Jose Mourinho has returned to Demi God status despite overseeing Chelsea's worst season start since the Premier League began.

Since the Luis van Gaal era Manchester United have usurped Chelsea and become the Premier League equivalent of the Galacticos. With the 100 million pound spend on Pogba on the horizon potentially taking their total spend to £170 million it's fair to say that United's modus operandi has become spendus maximus. Yet the vast amount of money spent has yielded just one FA Cup. Jose Mourinho might be "the special one" but throwing money at the league will not necessarily bring instant success, as Luis van Gaal will testify.  

If Jose Mourinho is a Demi God then Pep Guardiola has been hailed as a Messiah, and on the face of it his CV matches the hype. But at Barcelona he inherited and maintained a system that was already in place, and at Bayern he inherited a team of superstars that had already won the treble. Manchester City are a different beast; the previous manager did well to win the Premier League and the capital one cup during his time there, but the squad Pep has inherited are older. Not to mention the serious questions about their keeper Joe Hart after his abysmal display in the European Cup.

Meanwhile Leicester, Tottenham and West Ham all had their best seasons last year and have kept hold of key players, their managers, and most importantly their philosophies. Leicester and Tottenham have the league's top scoring strikers in Harry Kane and Jamie Vardy; and West Ham have arguably last season's best player in Dimitri Payet. Although the coming season will be a tougher prospect, another fairytale from any one of these teams shouldn't be discounted.

Tuesday 2 August 2016

Follow the Leader?

Follow the Leader?

 This is an article I wrote back in November 2015 after Tottenham's defeat against Newcastle and what a terrific season Moussa Dembele and Eric Dier had for Spurs. In Eric Dier I really believe that Tottenham have a future England capitain in their midst. Enjoy the read.

 Newcastle for the last few seasons have become our bogey team whenever we play them at home; so it could be said that Sunday’s result was on the cards. It also ended a run of 14 games undefeated, in which time we had only conceded 5 goals and had a goal difference of 13. This is testament to Pochettino, who in his 18 months at Spurs has toughened us up somewhat. Teams who play us know that they are in for a full BMF style workout. Pochettino ‘philosophy football’ is in full swing at Spurs and the game against West Ham is where we saw it executed superbly.

Since that glorious game under lights I have noticed that some teams are getting wise to this philosophy and are playing a smarter game. Chelsea, in their managers own words, ‘parked the bus’, West Brom kicked lumps out of us, and Newcastle executed a brilliant game plan.

So what do we need to beat teams like this and break our top four hoodoo? One word - Leadership: Hugo ‘the saviour’ Lloris is our deserved captain, leading by example in a similar vein to Ledley King. But I feel we need someone to take control of the middle park when teams prevent us from playing; someone with a little more experience who can calm down Dele Alli when he gets wound up (have you noticed how frequent this is becoming?), who can guide Carroll (or another academy graduate) through the match, and principally let others in the team know that the opposition have got our number.

So who can do this? In my opinion there are two contenders for this role:

Moussa Dembele An older respected member of the team who has come from the fringes to the forefront. His presence is highly valued by the team, feared by the opponent and adored by the faithful. He has cult hero status; strong, physical, and intelligent in how he reads the game. If he could be more vocal then I believe we would have a midfield General on our hands. His match winning strike against Anderlecht sums up how he can kill a team off when the pressure is on.

Eric Dier The story of how Eric Dier has risen from an underused central defender to defensive midfielder is one to behold, although not entirely unexpected. A graduate from the Sporting Lisbon academy, among alumni Nani, Cristiano Ronaldo, and Luis Figo (to name but a few), he has big game experience and great positional sense due to training in every position throughout his time there. He has passion, hunger and is the engine room of the centre of the park. His powerful strike to level us on the stroke of halftime was fundamental in our 4-1 victory over Man City.

 Pochettino’s Spurs have come a long way in such a short space of time, and I feel that we are on the brink of something special. Come match day, Pochettino can only stand in the technical area and for us to really push on, a leader is required on the pitch so we can finish the job.