- Jul 6, 2012
- 8,196
- 17,270
Ugh.
See, the reason why I'm not your biggest fan, BBLG, isn't because you're chief of the eternal optimists, it's because you're just so very unfunny.
Oh I see. This explains a lot of the recent posts around here.
Ugh.
See, the reason why I'm not your biggest fan, BBLG, isn't because you're chief of the eternal optimists, it's because you're just so very unfunny.
Actually, I died 13 years ago and I've been speaking to you all from beyond...I'd love to high five you pal but oh shit guess what you''re behind a keyboard too
COYS!
He is a professional. I really doubt he would go to the press and start slating the club and chairman.https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/45132468
Just wondering what Poch has to say to disabuse you of your pre-conceived notion that he’s devastated with the window ?
You wind up looking pretty dogmatic when nothing will convince you otherwise...
True though I highly doubt he was made aware that he would be left with the exact squad that was lacking in depth, no reliable striker backup (Son is good but we suffer when Kane is out) and fell short of winning the league for the last 3 seasons. I doubt any manager would be happy, when signing a new contract, getting told we would do absolutely nothing in the transfer window.Remember the itk that said that levy is happy to spend ?
I am doubtful the itk had the connections to know what assurances were made reliably. Poch has no agent and Levy ain’t leaking anything ..
Given the ITK from Herc & the Goat,I'm assuming it was GomesKeita Balde going to Inter on loan with an option to buy, wonder if he was the player that turned us down... again.
Would make sense. I guess we won't get a full rundown like Herc gave us last year cause that was about signings and well.. you know.Given the ITK from Herc & the Goat,I'm assuming it was Gomes
My genuine nightmare scenario. It reeks of the tragic irony that comes with supporting this brilliantly mad club in the Levy era
Hey big man, I’ve missed you! See you in the madness of the January windowCan we please dispense with the snide insults and bickering?
Certain posters are of one school of thought, others have a different view. It happens all the time, it isn't the end of the world and I'd guess that there's stuff that's both right and wrong from both ends of the argument. So there's no need for all this stuff.
Thank you.
'madness' = more of the sameHey big man, I’ve missed you! See you in the madness of the January window
It doesn't matter what fans think about the transfer window...it's what Poch and the players think that's important so let's hope they are all ok with how it worked out.
On a positive note Athletico Madrid could not buy anybody last season, they moved into a new stadium and tied their best players to New contracts. They finished one place higher and won a cup!
That’s a brilliant piece of analysis, covering the complex reactions to the window by a range of sensibilitieshttps://www.football365.com/news/the-2018-premier-league-transfer-window-the-losers
Tottenham
“I have very clear ideas of what we need to do. I don’t know if the club will agree with me or not. We are going to talk next week to create the new project. It is a little bit up to Daniel and the club to agree with us.“If we want to be real contenders for big trophies, we need to review a little bit the thing. We need to create dreams that will be possible to achieve. I think Daniel is going to listen to me, of course. You need to be brave. Being brave is the most important thing and take risks.”
The words of Mauricio Pochettino at the end of last season, before he signed a new five-year contract. Not unreasonably, that was taken as a sign that Spurs would do as he asked. And, as the man himself has acknowledged, they have. In a way.
Of the 19 current Premier League teams who didn’t win the title by 19 points last season, 18 have bought at least three new players. Tottenham have bought none. In so doing they become the first Premier League team to draw a blank in a summer transfer window since it was introduced in 2003. It’s certainly brave. And it’s certainly a risk.
There are excuses and mitigations. The rising costs of delivering a £1bn building project (that also currently looks to my admittedly entirely untrained eye some way short of completion barely a month out from its great unveiling, but that’s another matter) are one, the difficulty in improving an already over-achieving, over-performing squad is another.
Spurs have also – European vultures notwithstanding – retained all of their existing first-team squad as Daniel Levy finally realises the dream of the perfect net-spend summer. While fears of initial World Cup weariness are valid, it’s also reasonable to assume that a still young squad will ultimately be stronger for so many of its key components being involved so deep into proceedings in Russia.
If – and that word is doing much heavy lifting here – Toby Alderweireld and Pochettino are willing to rebuild bridges and trust then it’s arguably a positive window given the Belgian’s departure appeared inevitable all summer. Elsewhere, January arrival Lucas Moura has had a full Poch pre-season and might actually be – no, stop it – like a new signing.
And a club that has had far more misses than hits when spending big money (divide the current squad into ‘cost more than £20m’ and ‘cost less than £20m’ and see where you end up) was also right – brave, even – not to sign players for the sake of it at the end of the window. You don’t want another Moussa Sissoko on your hands.
Spurs’ biggest problem this summer was ultimately their inability to correct the errors of previous windows still clogging up Hotspur Way. At time of writing, Vincent Janssen remains a Tottenham player, for Christ’s sake. Don’t add more to it.
But it’s still just really, really weird isn’t it? Not one signing. Not one! In a whole (admittedly curtailed) summer!
There are two things. One, the idea starting to float around that Spurs’ squad is unimprovable at their budget. It doesn’t wash. There are other areas where improvement could have been made, but there’s a big neon flashing sign with ‘CENTRAL MIDFIELD’ written on it.
Jack Grealish was clearly a target, and Spurs bungled it by not getting that deal done early in the window before Aston Villa’s takeover by some of the richest men in the world changed the balance of power somewhat. But did a Premier League scouting network truly conclude there was nothing that could be done to improve on Eric Dier, an ageing Mousa Dembele and injury-prone duo Harry Winks and Victor Wanyama?
Spurs have some outrageously talented youngsters coming through, but when Sissoko appears in central midfield – and he will – the idea that Spurs’ squad could not have been augmented is going to be an interesting position to adopt.
More importantly than the specifics is the mood of the place. Tottenham fans can expect little sympathy from outside. They are about to move into a stunning new stadium to watch a likable side play lovely football. They’ve been had, though. The season-ticket prices at the new stadium are some of the highest in world football. The cheapest junior season ticket is almost £400. Most season tickets at the new ground start around the £1,000 mark.
When these were announced to grumbles from the fans, the need to compete financially with the biggest clubs was part of the club’s justification. Had the club said at the end of the season that this summer would be spent focusing on tying down current players to new deals, backing the youth system and delivering a world-class new stadium, perhaps making a signing or two along the way if the opportunity arose, then fans would likely be more understanding today. But when season tickets were being purchased and memberships renewed they were promised bravery and risk-taking. Their expectation that it was not this kind of bravery and risk-taking was reasonable.
Pochettino was right to make the best of the situation yesterday and build up his (excellent) existing squad and express hope that youngsters can step up. But Spurs cannot pretend this was the plan all along. Something’s gone wrong. The fans deserve a proper explanation.
That’s a brilliant piece of analysis, covering the complex reactions to the window by a range of sensibilities
This is the key to the mood within the camp; if they have signed/will sign imminently then that’s good. If this isn’t the case, consider the relationship between Poch and Levy damaged. I’m not being wilfully emotive or hyperbolic here; we were told by one of our top itk that they were going to sign early in the transfer window, an itk who got it right with Poch and Kane at roughly the same time. So if it transpires they have now not signed these deals, it’s likely a sign they’re not as happy now as they were in JuneDo we know if the Goat bleat from June 2nd, 2018 still holds as far as Dele and Eriksen signing new contracts?
http://www.spurscommunity.co.uk/index.php?threads/update-29-the-goat-on-contracts.132982/
I struggle with this for three reasons that have nothing to do with the contents of the article so nothing personal, leGin!