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Spurs 1-1 Frankfurt: Two Tottenham Talking Points

AANP’s latest book ‘All Action No Plot: Postecoglou’s First Season’, is out now for just £7.99 from Amazon (ebook from £6.99) – while Spurs’ Cult Heroes is also still available

1. It’s The Hope That Kills

Now you can call AANP a grumpy, pessimistic, cynical, long-suffering Spurs fan who will always find the cloud to any silver lining and whose default mode is to expect it all to end in disaster – and you wouldn’t be the first – but when that Ekitike lad popped home his goal like he was shelling peas, the slump with which I descended into my seat was a pretty defeatist one. ‘This won’t be pretty’, was, if I recall correctly, the specific line I muttered, before mentally calculating how far ahead Ajax went before Lucas Moura went into overdrive.

It was a pretty rancid sort of goal to concede too. I don’t suppose I’ll ever sit here and note that we’ve conceded a joyous goal, but one could probably freeze-frame various different constituent parts of this one, and shoot a few pointed looks at a few specific personnel as the woeful saga unfolded.

Maddison straightforwardly losing possession in midfield was a bad start, and a slap on the wrist is administered accordingly, but if you were to suggest that this and this alone brought about the goal I’d suggest you go back and study the history books a little longer, because between Maddison’s gaffe and the ball hitting the net, a fair amount of detritus was crammed in.

For a start, Porro hit upon the bright idea of allowing one of the brightest young talents in Europe, and the designated Frankfurt danger man, to tootle onto his vaunted right foot rather than showing him down line on his left. P.P fans would no doubt wave an indignant fist and point to the fact that thereafter he did not allow Ekitike a sniff on his right, and correct they would be – but ought it really have taken a goal to alert our man to this danger? Ought he not to have been fully tuned in to the threat a few days earlier when preparing for the match?

A muttered oath or two also flew in the directions of Bentancur and Bergvall for failing to rush out and close down that Ekitike pest; and if you play back the footage you’ll note Romero dangling the world’s least committed foot in the vaguest direction of the shot, an attempted block so half-hearted it barely merited the name.

As mentioned, at that stage one felt obliged to watch out of a sense of duty rather than anything else. What followed, however, put the spark right back into things.

It wasn’t so much the result, you understand (which, if anything, felt like an opportunity missed), or the mind-boggling nature of Porro’s goal, but rather the performance. If the first half was a pretty spirited illustration of tapping UEFA on the shoulder to demand that our name not be crossed off the guestlist just yet, the second half randomly produced some of our best football in months. A low bar, admittedly, but by any metric, that second half was wholesome fare.

The five-minute salvo early on, in which Bergvall, Son, Bentancur and Maddison took turns at peppering the goal, set a pleasingly upbeat tone, and in a turn of events that would have had even the most optimistic amongst us squinting in disbelief, our heroes generally kept up the pressure throughout the half, almost as if the message had penetrated even the thickest of skulls that this was a matter of considerable urgency.

Nor was it one of those gung-ho-to-the-point-of-suicidal knockings, in which every fit and available member bombs as high up the pitch as possible and we are left repeatedly and desperately outnumbered every time possession is lost.

Admittedly there was precisely one such moment right at the end of the first half, in which we were left 2 vs 4 at the back (and when Pedro Porro is the only one with the good sense to hang back cautiously you know that the rest have blundered pretty spectacularly), but otherwise, even when Frankfurt did counter, there was not quite the usual sense of gloomy inevitability about things.

Most pleasing to the AANP eye was the general sense of urgency. Both in possession (in terms of shuttling the ball quickly and movement of the ball), and out of possession. It might not have been perfect but one got the impression that all involved were treating this as a bit of an event. It was a far cry from pretty much every Premier League game of the past six months, in which the overall attitude has been of one, giant, collective shrug.

Well of course, having done the hard work of convincing the cast members that this was one for which it was well worth shedding every available bead of sweat, and creating a solid collection of presentable chances, the disappointment was that we didn’t carve out a win. A 3-1 lead would have given a bit of breathing space, and 2-1 would at least have felt like a challenge officially presented.

Level-pegging, however, is far from ideal. One assumes that the atmosphere in Germany will be ramped up considerably, and if our heroes have demonstrated anything in recent months it is that they possess the sort of soft underbelly that can cause them all to wilt under pressure and surrender meekly.

Chances, one assumes, will be a dashed sight harder to come by in Germany than in the sunny environs of N17. If we were going to stock up on goals in this tie, last night was the time to have done it.

2. The Midfield Triumverate

Not a moment too soon, each one of the midfield three stumbled upon the bright idea of showcasing the very finest they had to offer.

Of course, one expects nothing less of Bergvall these days – an observation that is simultaneously both joyous and rather crushing. On the one hand, marvellous stuff. That this young pup of a lad can stick out his chest and motor about the place from opening to closing credits is ripping stuff. Even if he never progresses another jot in his career, he’ll have already proven himself a key cog. That second half salvo only gained its head of steam once Bergvall have muttered ‘Enough of these preliminaries’, and burst at their defence to hit the post.

And it’s all rather crushing because it doesn’t really say much about the more experienced luminaries around him that we’re relying on this fresh-faced teen to roll up his sleeves and inspire those around him.

Such a sentiment is probably a little harsh on Maddison and Bentancur, however, both of whom I thought were close to the peak of their powers.

Maddison has repeatedly frustrated this season. No shortage of willing there, but I suppose one might politely say he’s been prone to dithering a little too long in possession and then making a few passive decisions.

Last night, though, he evidently decided that what the place was needed was energy, creativity and an intrepid sort stationed pretty centrally to chivvy things along at a rapid lick. Having admittedly played his own sorry part in the goal conceded, thereafter he set about doing his damnedest to get the operation back on track.

His role in our goal will presumably make the headlines, but I was encouraged by the fact that that dart into the area and smart use of the ball was the norm rather than the exception. I was actually a mite surprised he was hooked off with ten or fifteen left, but folk will do such things I suppose.

And further south, Bentancur was pretty diligent. Tasked largely with filling in when Romero, Porro and chums took it upon themselves to break ranks and gallop forward, his was a performance full of knowing nods and well-judged looks over his shoulder. If a gap needed covering, Bentancur tended to spot the need in good time and make suitable arrangements accordingly. (Credit also here to Bergvall, particularly for one second half interception when Frankfurt seemed to have picked their way to shooting range.)

Bentancur was very nearly the hero of the hour too, being a handy sort of nib to have around the place at corners and free-kicks and the like. I suppose one doesn’t win any awards for hitting the woodwork, so one is reluctant to shower too much praise upon the man for near-misses, but it was handy to have him posing that threat.

In the absence of Kulusevski (who may well end up back on the right anyway), this felt like the first time in bally ages that we actually had a midfield capable of operating smoothly as a unit. That unit-operating will need to go into overdrive in the return leg next week if the season is not to fizzle out.

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6 replies on “Spurs 1-1 Frankfurt: Two Tottenham Talking Points”

We are mostly singing from the same hymn sheet. Just a few other points. Maddison lost the ball which led to them scoring because he was actually trying to do something other than ferry the ball out to Son which is seemingly Ange’s only attacking move. As Son can’t go past a man these days, that route only leads to him passing the ball back inside and so it goes on. Second point: any sort of decent result still seems to depend on the opposition missing east chances (see first ten mins of our famous victory at City) and FFT should have scored a second for sure. It def was better after the break but…

My guess is Ryan Mason is busy dusting off his stand-in manager sheep skin ready to get cracking next Friday 😉

I think we’re all feeling a little strange today. Heartened by a decent performance, the first in a long time, but feeling a little hard done by as we deserved the win.

It took us a while to get going, and by the time we did we were 1-0 down, and I think everybody was fearing the worst. I know I was. We got a grip on the game without creating too much, and then scored a lovely goal, but we didn’t really get going until the second half, where we could have scored 2 or 3 and almost put the tie to bed (there has to be an almost… it’s Spurs). A mixture of poor finishing, good (not great) goalkeeping and the woodwork kept us at bay, and we limited them to a few breakaways at the other end.

Most of us were probably lamenting the absence of Spence. However, Porro atoned for his error with a goal, and Udogie had his best game of the season, looking powerful and dangerous going forward. Spence is a physical monster and should be playing, as physicality is one of our biggest problems. Some of our more gifted athletes aren’t fully fit yet, like VDV and Udogie, whereas Maddison never looks fully fit. He’s so dangerous when he’s running beyond the striker and twisting and turning in the box but, for the most part, he was picking the ball up from the centre backs. Bentancur, although he had a decent game, is not the player he was prior to the ACL, when him and Hjojberg were more often than not going up against a midfield 3 every week, and he was still going box to box. Kulu can run all day, but he was run into the ground and lost his form prior to his injury. Same goes for Solanke, who is feeding on scraps at the moment. Son also looks knackered, and did very little yesterday, and Johnson was woeful, hence the scraps.

So Bentancur and Maddison make up part of our midfield 3, and neither of them have legs, leaving an awful lot on Bergvall’s shoulders, which he thankfully embraces and takes in his stride. He is unbelievable, and his progress, possibly due to, as well as despite, our deficiencies, is the one shining light this season.

We can’t play an intensive pressing system effectively without players that can play at high intensity. We also don’t have a defensive midfielder that senses danger, and we are far too slow and ponderous once we break the press, allowing the opposition to get back in shape.
Because Maddison, as our only real creator, has to play, we need athletes in the other two midfield spots. Bissouma has wasted too many chances, so I would put Bergvall and Sarr as 6 and 8. Both are mobile, can run with the ball and go box to box, and will offer more than any other possible pairing we have, plus Bergvall is press resistant, meaning that he can help us break the opponent’s press.

Johnson’s goals against Southampton, which were very well taken, along with a bit more involvement in the game than usual, gave me false hope that he would make a difference last night. But, as often happens, even sometimes when he scores, he was the worst player on the pitch. I can’t recall one thing he did apart from a woeful finish in the second half, yet he lasted the whole 90 minutes. I’ve often heard it said that you can have good games and bad games, but you should always leave everything on the pitch. It’s also said that the harder you work, the luckier you seem to get. There are no sayings about the benefits of hiding in plain sight while on the pitch, which is what he does. I still think he’s an asset, as his goal tally doesn’t lie, but he’s the epitome of what the pundits are talking about when they say that there’s no individuality in football anymore, and that players are coached within an inch of their life. ‘Get in at the back post’ is probably played on loop while he’s asleep, but against a low block, or even if it’s just him against a full back, his output is embarrassing. Against certain teams, if Porro and Udogie are playing, I’d like to see Spence tried in front of Porro. We’d have real cover for Porro on turnovers, rather than Johnson pretending to bust a gut to get back, and sheer determination to beat the full back and get the ball across, alongside a fair bit of skill to wriggle out of tight areas. His crossing can’t be worse than Johnson’s either, seeing as he never gets it past the first man.

We have nobody in our team that could score the type of goal that Ekitike scored yesterday, and that’s where we fall down. Our pacy attackers (Johnson, Werner, Odobert) have no end product, and our end-product player (Son) now has no pace. We could have got Raphina and Doue, but we ended up with Odobert and Werner. It’s amazing that we’ve scored as many goals as we have with such a poor front line, but it also shows why we’ve had such a bad season. We have nobody on the PL list for errors leading directly to a goal, so it’s wastefulness due to ponderous or poor play, leading to turnovers, which end up costing us. We don’t create anywhere near enough clear-cut chances for the great positions we get into, yet we can be broke upon with one or two quick forward passes. You can put this down to the tactics, but if we were more pragmatic, relying on counter attack, our wastefulness would be even more evident. Son is no longer deadly, and there’s no Kane with a guaranteed 30 goals a season. We need real quality and invention in the final third, and we don’t have it.

So, with all that in mind, and assuming Kulu isn’t fit to start, my team for next Thursday would be:
GK: Vicario
RB: Porro
CB: Romero
CB: Van der Ven
LB: Udogie
DM: Bergvall
CM: Sarr
AM: Maddison
RW: Spence
LW: Son
CF: Solanke

I’m hoping that Spence actually being able to get the ball across would bring Son and Solanke into the game more, while also providing protection for Porro against Ekitike, but Tel is an option off the bench if Son is poor. Johnson or Kulu could come on later at RW if Spence moves to LB if/when Udogie goes off, or Kulu could replace a tiring Maddison.

Ange wouldn’t pick this team, but this is no time to play it safe as his job depends on it. Go aggressive, and go for the win in 90 minutes. We will not win there on penalties as we are mentally weak.

We could be looking for a new manager in a week’s time, but I really hope we make it through. Next season looks really bleak if we don’t win this competition. Frankfurt are favourites now, but if we play well and take our chances we can beat them. Our away record in Europe is really poor under the last few managers, but we did field a second string team a lot of the time and came unstuck, so let’s see what a strong first XI can do…

Some good points made Pricey, I like your idea for Spence but would prefer to see it enacted this weekend first. Where we are now is that Johnson can’t cross a ball and Son can rarely get past a RB.

I’d also like to see give Mikey Moore given a chance next week – he’s a forgotten man but can turn a game and score for us. Angie always sticks to players that ought to be the best but rarely are.

Postecoglou’s explainer in his press conference about Mikey Moore’s lack of playing time doesn’t gel with me. There is no need to keep mentioning his age – he has more or less missed a season and I doubt that will help his progression. With the U-17’s winning the PL trophy with another great hat-trick performance from Luka Williams-Barnett who is another potential superstar – we need a head coach who is committed to developing our best young players into regular 1st players.

A terrific contribution Pricey – your assessment of Johnson is right on the money and the idea of playing Spence and Porro is solid thinking – not something to expect from our coaching team. This idea had crossed my mind but I had been thinking of Porro playing the advanced role because of his ability to deliver quality crosses.

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