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BAE: 'What sort of mercenary stays for seven years?'

Mr Pink

SC Supporter
Aug 25, 2010
55,138
100,266
Thought this line was great lol

'It is impossible to talk to Assou-Ekotto without being assaulted by his frankness.'
 

Sandro30

Well-Known Member
Jul 7, 2011
2,855
12,322
Some very good quotes from Benny in this article.

"I phoned Harry straight away. I liked working with him, he has a cool attitude. With AVB, it's more tactical, in terms of understanding your different team-mates and the opposition. He changes his teams more, moves them around. Some players will play two or three different positions in a single match.

"The one thing that I can say with certainty is the chairman has the club moving in the right direction. I have a tremendous amount of respect for the difficulty of his work and his business decisions might make people sad. But I've seen the growth, first-hand, over seven years. You have to respect that."

"In England, it's more objective. People are more cool about players earning millions. It's also not whether they agree with what I say, it's that there is a respect for the fact I was man enough to say it. I must say, as well, that I have seen quite a few Spurs players kiss the badge and then fuck off. I am still here."

If it were up to him, he would stay for longer than the remaining two years on his contract and he notes the irony of the length of his service. "What sort of mercenary stays for seven years?" he asks.

Tottenham and life in London have got under his skin. "There is a part of me now that has a strong bond with the club," Assou-Ekotto continues. "I would be quite happy to see out my playing career here, although I know that it's not my call to make. I have every desire to see out my contractual obligations and, if possible, extend so that I can be here for long enough to play at the new stadium."

"During my four months out injured at the beginning of the season, I attended every game at White Hart Lane and I would sit in with the Tottenham fans but with my hoodie up so nobody could recognise me," Assou-Ekotto says. "I now feel I have a better understanding of what it is to be a supporter and, for me, there are two types.

"There are the fans who pass judgement quickly, who say, from the comfort of their seats, how they would have cut the ball on the inside, swung the ball around or brought it down. It was like I was sitting with Messi, Ronaldo and Maradona. Then you have the other supporter, who understands the technical things a bit more and is patient. They are smaller in number but they do exist."
 

punky

Gone
Sep 23, 2008
7,485
5,403
I don't have much time for the Grauniad's political coverage but it's football coverage is excellent. I can imagie hoe The Sun would have covered it: "ASSOU-EKOTTO DOESN'T KNOW ABOUT SUAREZ BITE" followed by a few 2 line paragraphs with occasional capitalised words.

I love Benny's candour though. Far from prentenious I think it's really decent compared to those that just make up quotes that sound good from a PR perspective
 

Zammo

Well-Known Member
Aug 19, 2005
994
281
Best left back we've had for a long time in my opinion. There are better out there, but I'm in no rush to move him on without the guarantee that we have better lined up and for me that isn't Rose.
 

sloth

Well-Known Member
Mar 7, 2005
9,018
6,900

Maybe it's just me, but I always prefer it when the article's posted in full with the link at the bottom, because it makes it easier to quote the bits you like etc. Like I say though that might just me:

"Benoît Assou-Ekotto first met Steve The Visionist in his early days in London. He had dropped into a barber's shop off the Tottenham High Road, looking for someone to do his shape and he liked what he saw. The Tottenham Hotspur full-back has stayed with Steve ever since, following him when he has moved shops. Their partnership and friendship, they guesstimate, spans six or seven years. "The thing about Ben," Steve says, "is that he is loyal. And real. Forget his hair. The thing that makes Ben famous is his realness."
Steve ought to be famous, too. Never mind the self-styled moniker, there is a charisma and largesse about the Liverpool-supporting Jamaican who, out of respect to Assou-Ekotto and his shop's proximity to White Hart Lane, also looks out for Tottenham. Steve loves to talk about football, Assou-Ekotto does not and so when the latter sits down in the chair, the conversation is one-sided.
"It's always, 'What do you think? Ronaldo or Messi?'" Assou-Ekotto says, blowing out his cheeks and scarcely concealing the boredom. "Or maybe, because he is a Liverpool fan, 'Torres was good' ... blah, blah, blah. I don't particularly like talking about football. I don't immerse myself in it."
As if to illustrate the point, Assou-Ekotto looks blank when Luis Suárez's biting of Branislav Ivanovic comes up. "He did what?" he asks. "Il a mangé?" If he is joking, the deadpan expression is inscrutable. "Surely, Benoît ... come on." But no, it is plain. He has no idea. Assou-Ekotto has never got the fuss about football and footballers.
He returns to the barber's shop small talk. "I put myself in their place," he says. "Perhaps it's quite cool to have a player come in for his haircut and be able to speak about football. So I speak a little bit about it. But really, it's just 'Cut the hair'."
Assou-Ekotto always tries to see the other side. He feels compelled to mine deeper and arrive at a broader understanding. He puts himself, variously, in the shoes of his manager, André Villas-Boas, the chairman, Daniel Levy, and the rank-and-file Tottenham supporter. He is provocative and challenging of stereotypes, particularly that of the modern footballer but, at the same time, he is grounded, consistent, funny and disarmingly honest. It is part of what makes him arguably the most interesting Premier League player in London.
"During my four months out injured at the beginning of the season, I attended every game at White Hart Lane and I would sit in with the Tottenham fans but with my hoodie up so nobody could recognise me," Assou-Ekotto says. "I now feel I have a better understanding of what it is to be a supporter and, for me, there are two types.
"There are the fans who pass judgement quickly, who say, from the comfort of their seats, how they would have cut the ball on the inside, swung the ball around or brought it down. It was like I was sitting with Messi, Ronaldo and Maradona. Then you have the other supporter, who understands the technical things a bit more and is patient. They are smaller in number but they do exist."
Assou-Ekotto discusses his own situation this season and the difficulties that he has faced, which stem from the injury to his left knee that ruled him out from early September and left him playing catch-up in terms of match fitness but, also, include the transition to a new manager's methods and the style of new team-mates. The left-back has found a new player to his immediate right in the shape of the summer central defensive signing Jan Vertonghen and a new midfielder in front of him, with Gareth Bale having been moved to a more central attacking role.
"Maybe you had a little head movement that you used to do with a guy," Assou-Ekotto says. "You have to find these things again. It's new partnerships, maybe new languages and it takes some time."
The bottom line is that there is no spell to accelerate the re-assimilation of a player in the second-half of a season. If there were, Assou-Ekotto might have been spared the insistent speculation about his future. Since his return to first-team contention in January, he has started 12 of the club's 21 matches and the related theory goes that Villas-Boas does not rate him sufficiently and is open to selling him.
There have also been rumours that Assou-Ekotto's preference to avoid knee surgery in favour of a longer, more thorough rehabilitation programme was badly received and, even, that he has clashed with Villas-Boas. Assou-Ekotto confronts each notion and dismantles it.
"The manager recommended the specialist that I went to see in Barcelona," he says. "And when the specialist recommended the programme to strengthen the muscle around the knee, rather than go for the quick-fix operation, the manager and the chairman were fully supportive of the decision.
"With AVB, if I had a problem with him, I would tell you immediately. If I don't like the guy, I would tell you: "I don't like the guy." But that is not the case. I have no issues with him. So as far as I'm concerned, nothing is afoot. I understand why I have played the number of games that I have played. Everybody is entitled to an opinion but I don't think that anybody has had a conversation with me or with AVB."
It is impossible to talk to Assou-Ekotto without being assaulted by his frankness. In February 2007, in his first season at Tottenham, he heard his left knee click and was told, during an absence of 18 months, that he would never play again. So when it is put to him that this season's lay-off might have been difficult, he laughs. "Four months out … don't care, it's so small," he says. "I knew why I was out this time and I could see when I would get back. The body said, 'Stop,' and you have to stop. You can cry, be sad, whatever. It changes nothing."
Above all, though, there is Assou-Ekotto's notorious candour about his profession, which has reinforced his cult status in some quarters but fired indignation in others. He told the Guardian in May 2010 that he considered football to be little more than a job, in which money was the driving force and, as such, he had to be viewed as a type of mercenary.
"The reaction persists and, in France, it has been predominantly negative to the point where I find it almost pretentious," he says, of the country of his birth. "To say that players should not appreciate the context in which they operate is stupid. Football is like a business now.
"In England, it's more objective. People are more cool about players earning millions. It's also not whether they agree with what I say, it's that there is a respect for the fact I was man enough to say it. I must say, as well, that I have seen quite a few Spurs players kiss the badge and then fuck off. I am still here."
If it were up to him, he would stay for longer than the remaining two years on his contract and he notes the irony of the length of his service. "What sort of mercenary stays for seven years?" he asks.
Tottenham and life in London have got under his skin. "There is a part of me now that has a strong bond with the club," Assou-Ekotto continues. "I would be quite happy to see out my playing career here, although I know that it's not my call to make. I have every desire to see out my contractual obligations and, if possible, extend so that I can be here for long enough to play at the new stadium."
Assou-Ekotto does not like change and he was initially unnerved by Levy's decision to sack Harry Redknapp last June. He heard the news as he attended the Africa 2.0 conference in Nigeria, which aimed to find solutions to the continent's problems. "It was hosted by [the former Nigeria] President [Olusegun] Obasanjo and I remember him asking me what on earth I was doing there," Assou-Ekotto says. "I was the only footballer.
"I phoned Harry straight away. I liked working with him, he has a cool attitude. With AVB, it's more tactical, in terms of understanding your different team-mates and the opposition. He changes his teams more, moves them around. Some players will play two or three different positions in a single match.
"The one thing that I can say with certainty is the chairman has the club moving in the right direction. I have a tremendous amount of respect for the difficulty of his work and his business decisions might make people sad. But I've seen the growth, first-hand, over seven years. You have to respect that."
Assou-Ekotto intends to remain a part of it for years to come."
 

ThorntonSpur

every away game is a home game
Jan 21, 2011
2,440
645
with his attitude I would not be surprised if he would accept being the number two left back if we signed a world class LB like Cointreau from Madrid.
 

E17yid

Well-Known Member
Jan 21, 2013
17,088
30,881
To the people saying we should cash in:

Do you realise we only have 1 genuine LB at the club?. Rose will come back next year but that still only leaves 2, plus Rose is not a Benny's level yet. I'm very happy to give Benny another year of fighting for his place. He was out for 4 months and is adapting to a new team/style.
 

Shanks

Kinda not anymore....
May 11, 2005
31,192
19,077
Who called him a mercenary?
He admitted himself he saw football as his job that pays well - thats a given.

For me though, he has been one of our best left backs in an aweful long time. Whilst I don't necessarily rate him or see him as this absolutel legend, he has been decent for us. I'd only like to see someone better come in - sounds obvious I know, but someone just that little bit more consistant. Other than that, happy to keep him until we find someone that good.
 

Donki

Has a "Massive Member" Member
May 14, 2007
14,455
18,975
To the people saying we should cash in:

Do you realise we only have 1 genuine LB at the club?. Rose will come back next year but that still only leaves 2, plus Rose is not a Benny's level yet. I'm very happy to give Benny another year of fighting for his place. He was out for 4 months and is adapting to a new team/style.

Amen!! I hate this cash in shit, 7 years with us and I dont give a shit whay anyone says hes the best left back we have had in my lifetime and there is still plenty in the tank. The same people calling for Rose to be started will be the same fans that slate the kid once he has a bad game or 2, gets right inside my ball sack that!! I mean this quote.....

"During my four months out injured at the beginning of the season, I attended every game at White Hart Lane and I would sit in with the Tottenham fans but with my hoodie up so nobody could recognise me," Assou-Ekotto says. "I now feel I have a better understanding of what it is to be a supporter and, for me, there are two types.

Not many players would of done this, I think he loves the club I genuinely do. Also his analysis of the modern football fan is bang on.
 

CowInAComa

Well-Known Member
Aug 31, 2012
7,293
18,237
I always suspected that under his cool 'dont give a shit' attitude, that really, he does.

Sneaking into every game to watch us play doesnt sound very apathetic to me. He is a yiddo and he knows it.

If he is our left back for the next 3-4 years that would be fine with me, there are only a few better and none we can reasonably get.
 

Achap

Well-Known Member
Nov 3, 2009
501
810
I admire BAE as a person. He comes across as very intelligent and level-headed, and he has a vision for young people and technology that I share. He is a rare character amongst professional footballers, and I wish that there were more like him. I would hope that he remains successful at Spurs for the rest of his footballing career, and thereafter carries on with his foundation - in conjunction with the Tottenham Hotspur Foundation.

As to his abilities as a footballer, personally, I rate him highly, but lack the technical expertise to fully justify my position, so will leave it to the many experts on here to dissect.
 

steventhfc

See man driving a german whip.
May 20, 2009
2,059
818
Best LB we've had in years and people want to get rid of him for a one season wonder living off a wonder goal meal ticket. Do me a favour.
 
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