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Wolves 4-2 Spurs: Three 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. How Much Longer?

The game, it would appear, is almost up. One never really knows with Grandmaster Levy, but it does not take a great leap of the imagination to imagine him now preparing some words of thanks and making arrangements with the media team, because short of a miracle that would make Lazarus blush The Postecoglou Era is seemingly coming to its natural end.

Put simply, you cannot go about the place stuffing up literally every engagement and expect to skip away gaily at the end of it all without any consequences. Stuffing up once in a while, you may get away with. Even stuffing up a couple of times consecutively could conceivably be excused, in a “Such-things-happen-dear-boy” sort of way. And depending on circumstances one could maybe point to a sizeable heap of the temporarily crippled, or a dominant display somehow ending in a head-scratching 1-0 defeat.

But when the collective trots out under your watch week after week, and simply ambles through the motions with the sullen reluctance of schoolboys being dragged about the place against their will, you really have to sit down in a quiet room with the man in charge, and ask in no uncertain terms what the devil he is doing. Or what the devil he is not doing, if you want to hit the nail on the head particularly cleverly.

Both performances and results have been of undiluted rot for an absolute age now, and while the players ought to hang their heads in shame, AANP is the sort who considers that the general attitude about a place starts with the fellow in charge. And Postecoglou seems utterly unable to get a tune out of his troops at present.

In some respects, of course, one sympathises. All four goals yesterday were the result of what one might call Individual Human Error, and one can only imagine the fruity Anglo-Saxon that would have escaped the Postecoglou lips as he watched Vicario and Romero and Bergvall bungle activities quite so spectacularly.

After all, when a man is down and in need of the troops to rally around and dig in for him, the last thing he wants is for those same troops to absent-mindedly point their weapons at their own feet and, forgetting where they are, tug on the trigger as their minds drift elsewhere. Such fat-headedness does not really serve the agenda. In need of some respite, Our Glorious Leader was instead treated to the sight of three of his most trusted lieutenants presenting gift-wrapped goals to the other lot, so he couldhave been excused the weary sigh.

Even in these circumstances, however, ultimately one can direct a stern look towards the leader of the pack, because the complacent, sloppy nature of yesterday’s mishaps leaves the whiff of a culture in which mistakes are shrugged off without too much recrimination. And if that’s the message being peddled by the Big Cheese, then it’s little wonder our heroes fail to rouse themselves to any great – or even middling – heights week after week.

Another huge frustration from afar is that just a few days ago our heroes demonstrated that when the urge grips them they are still fully capable of donning their Sunday best and belting out something decent. The draw against Frankfurt might not exactly have been a performance for the ages, but churn out that sort of produce every game and I imagine sentiment would turn back in Ange’s favour.

The win against Alkmaar a few weeks ago was of similar ilk, and where you might think that the fact that our lot can turn up the dials on certain, special occasions might soothe the aggravated soul, it in fact does quite the opposite, at least to this particular Tottenham-watcher. Seeing the crew-members unveil a bit of sparkle on Thursday nights in Europe simply pours petrol over the flames the following Sunday in the Premier League, when they make the collective decision to keep their A-games firmly under lock and key, and instead treat the whole 90-minute binge as one giant inconvenience.

All that said, there is still a pretty straightforward way for Our Glorious Leader to wriggle his way back into the good books. I’m not entirely convinced that even winning the Europa would do the trick at this stage, if League performances continue to freefall – but if he can cajole, bribe or in some other way convince the players to start playing like their lives depend on it in every game, it would be a jolly good start. Playing well and, ideally, winning on a weekly basis would, I fancy, do wonders. Goodwill may well have drained from most Spurs fans, but at this stage I simply want to trot up and enjoy the show.

As an interesting aside, for those amongst us who enjoy a statistical quirk, Postecoglou’s record at this stage (90 games, apparently) is superior to those of Messrs Burkinshaw and Venables. So all is not necessarily lost, but when both results and performances are this poor for this long, it is difficult to defend the chap; and conversely, an upturn in both would give at least some reason to persist.

2. Vicario

Part of the problem with being a goalkeeper, of course, is that when you make a fig of things, the consequence is rather severe. Whereas if Solanke, for example delivers a duff pass, or Ben Davies clatters his man, those nearby generally have an opportunity to regroup and correct things, and the error can generally be wiped from memory.

Not so the goalkeeper. Misplace a short pass when you’ve got 1 on your back, and the chances are you’ll be picking the ball out of the net within about 5 seconds, with various cameras zooming in on your features and replaying the moment from all angles, just to stick the knife in. So when Vicario had one of those days on which he randomly fixated on all the worst possible options, we paid for it rather dearly.

I actually thought all the criticism flung his way for that punch in the first minute was a bit thick. It was not the best punch, I agree. His conviction and aggression levels could certainly have been topped up. But neither was it the worst in the world – he at least made contact ahead of those around him, and shovelled it to the edge of the penalty area, which seems the minimum requirement in these situations.

If anything I was rather irritated that none of those around him thought to loiter on the edge of the area, in anticipation of precisely such an under-nourished clearance.

That said, I did not have any sympathy with Vicario for then bleating away about being hindered in the act of goalkeeping. If there were opponents in his way and jostling him – well, why shouldn’t they? That sort of give-and-take is all part of the bargain, and rather than chasing after the referee once the ball has flown past him, I’d rather he directed his energies towards blitzing everything in his path and dashed well making sure that the six-yard box is his domain and nobody else will get a sniff.

However, as evidenced by that ghastly second goal, the business of blitzing everything in his p. and making the six-yard box his d. is pretty foreign territory to Vicario.

Now admittedly the cross for that second goal caught a deflection and took on board a sizeable slice of spin. If I were addressing a distressed three year-old who had failed to gather in cleanly a heavily spinning ball, I might toss them a sweet and suggest they do not dwell on the incident.

Vicario, however, is an experienced, international goalkeeper. As such, I will not be tossing him a sweet for his efforts on that second goal. I have a good mind instead to pelt him with rotten fruit. His hesitation and general flapping was close to a sackable offence for a man paid a tidy sum to, essentially, catch a ball.

Sandwiched in between these was yet another of Vicario’s mind-boggling errors with ball at feet. Of course, AANP has long despaired of the business of passing out from the back, but it is here to stay so I can but suffer in silence on that one – as sure as night follows day, we insist on passing out from the back.

Normally the problems emerge when the ball reaches our defenders and they duly tie themselves up in knots; but on this occasion Vicario simplified things by removing defenders from the equation and simply passing the ball straight to the Wolves lot inside our own area. That they did not score says much about their finishing, but Vicario should hang his head in shame, and meanwhile AANP yearns for the day when goalkeepers simply return to blasting the ball up to halfway and letting everyone scrap it out from there.

3. Our Defending

Not that the errors yesterday were Vicario’s and Vicario’s alone. As mentioned, that second goal was immediately preceded by a cross from the left deflecting upwards and with a fair amount of spin, so an element of challenge was undoubtedly introduced.

For clarity, however, having been deflected upwards and received its generous helping of spin, the ball had not morphed into a bomb, mid-flight. It was still just a football, and any bright spark in Tottenham sky blue landing upon the bright idea of clearing it with a spot of heft as it fell back down to earth would have received no unpleasant surprises.

Such a course of action, however, was far beyond our lot. Ben Davies opted to stop and play for offside, a decision that Djed Spence, behind him, was having no part of. The result was that the Wolves chappie whom Davies had a moment earlier been monitoring was now free to stroll in unfettered fashion right up to our six-yard box, to have a poke around and see what mischief he might get into.

This was the genesis of the problem really, because while the forward rather pickled his header, his mere presence unnerved Vicario considerably, prompting his flap. Of Davies, however, there was no sign. He only re-emerged on the scene once the damage was done and the ball in the net, to appeal with some gusto for an offside flag, which rather put the seal on his ignominy.

There then followed, for the third Wolves goal, the most peculiar error from Romero. Seemingly in full control of things, with the ball under his stewardship and not too much danger in the atmosphere, Romero picked one heck of a moment to begin daydreaming and completely forget where he was and what he was doing. Despite staring straight at the ball, he seemed suddenly seized by the urge to take a few steps off in a different direction.

Well, one could have advised him beforehand that that would be a dubious move, and so it proved. Whichever Wolve it was stationed on his shoulder could not believe his luck, and scooped up the ball to take towards goal, leaving our World Cup-winning centre-back looking suspiciously like he was possessed of two left feet.

Depressingly, even the mighty Bergvall joined in with this lunacy in the later stages, attempting to cart the ball out of defence and instead pushing it obligingly to the opposition forwards. He at least can draw upon a whole stack of good deeds faithfully carried out this season – the most recent of which came five minutes after his arrival yesterday, with his forward burst for our first goal.

The rest of them, however, ought to blush in shame and go without food and water for a few days by way of penance. It’s hard enough for us when our midfield offers so little protection, but when the defenders and goalkeeper dance about the place with little clear concept of the basics of the role, one rather hangs the head and wonders what’s the point.

For what it’s worth, yesterday’s positives included a sprightly first half from Maddison; that rarest of sightings from the size nines of Brennan Johnson, in the form of a pretty decent cross; and a return to the pitch of Kulusevski, which suggests he will be involved in at least a temporary capacity on Thursday.

Really, however, this was yet another round of muck, from which neither players nor manager emerge with the slightest credit.

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7 replies on “Wolves 4-2 Spurs: Three Tottenham Talking Points”

After all the bad performances this season I thought saying “that was the worst Spurs display ever” to my few mates was getting repetitive. However, Ange has delivered a lot of consistency in that area.

I don’t look forward to a Spurs match anymore, it’s a time filler I feel obliged to look at every Sunday and at the kick off I murmur “here we go then” in a subdued voice to myself.

It’s going to be an interesting week though, I suspect the supporters will turn their attention momentarily away from Levy if we don’t beat Frankfurt.

Yes. A strangely lame effort again, a flock of headless chickens.

Many (most?) of the multitudinous defensive mistakes this season come from being over-exposed at the back, when the margin for error is that much less. Ange is 100% to blame for that. And it’s not as if we even have the speedy passing and high-intensity pressing of early Ange. Basically, he’s not very smart.

One way or the other, even if we stagger to the EC final we’ll lose to a dreadful MU team.

Start putting all available money aside to sign Ancelotti as soon as Real sack him. Get a grown-up in charge.

A good but sad read AANP where your last 3 lines say it all. Postecoglou should have been fired straight after this pathetic performance. As AANP said, he can’t get any kind of tune out of our mob – total discord instead. Forget the Europa League – winning that trophy will not provide me (at least) any comfort or reassurance about Postecoglou & his coaching team’s ability to manage & coach. Where next? Not Ancelotti for me – I hope for a Burkinshaw clone – possibly Kieran Mckenna or Chris Davies – both are proper coaches & low profile characters with a Spurs pedigree.

Well, I don’t think Ange’s exit date matters too much, as his replacement is very likely employed elsewhere for another month. Just who that might be, is where all our thoughts are turning. I’ve got a hankering after Marco Silva – no fool, that one. (As commented above, Ange just ain’t that smart.)

Oh dear, oh dear AANP. But fear not as I understand Ange is organising a cheese and wine party for our defence so they can all get to know each other.

Audere est Facere!! Lol

I think his legacy might be remembered by Spurs fans in a similar way to that of Liz Truss.

When posting after the Frankfurt game I eluded to the fact that no Spurs players are on the PL list this season for errors leading to goals. Then, as if things aren’t bad enough already, four individual errors happen in the same match! And it could have been worse, as there were others that should have led to goals, but didn’t.

Vicario is now either sublime or ridiculous. He looked calm and assured when he originally came back from injury, so it’s weird that he’s now all of a sudden a complete bundle of nerves. He’s not even being manhandled at corners anymore, so this transformation makes no sense at all, but it definitely reverberated to the rest of the team. Unfortunately, and this has happened for quite some time, and not just under Ange, lethargy breeds lethargy when it comes to our players. We don’t have anyone to grab people by the scruff of the neck and tell them to wake the hell up. We just get abject performances and then the tired old ‘we must learn from this’ press conferences.

Twice, despite our calamitous defending, we got back into the game, and twice, almost immediately, we were 2 goals down again. That’s how brittle we are. In between the horrors we had our fair share of the play, but once again we were mostly huff and puff without an end product. Tel scored almost by accident, and Richarlison couldn’t really miss, so when you take those goals away there wasn’t really much else apart from a Bissouma long range effort. Maddison got on the ball a fair bit but had nobody to link up with, and his dead ball delivery was woeful, and Tel was lively but with mainly no end product. Johnson actually got an assist but was pretty anonymous for the rest of the match, and I can’t think of one thing that Solanke did. Romero, as well as his awful mistake, on another day could have got a red and a 3-match ban for jumping in two footed. He could well be our best player, but he hasn’t stayed fit long enough or been consistent enough throughout his time here, so we will probably cash in this summer unless we can win the EL and get him to commit, but I won’t lose any sleep if he goes, even though it’s another top player (when he feels like it) jumping ship.

Ange, I’m afraid, must now be dead man walking. I don’t think the players have downed tools, but his team selections aren’t working, and we are perfectly within our rights to question why left back Ben Davies is at CB, right back Djed Spence is at left back, and central midfielder Archie Gray is at right back. You could have played Gray alongside Romero, which isn’t ideal, but then at least the other two are in their natural positions.

We need a major overhaul. Not just the manager, who I’m not sure I’d save now even if we won the EL, but a large chunk of the squad. Not exactly Levy’s forte though. We had Dier for 10 years, and Ben Davies is still here. Son is going out with a whimper, stuck on the touchline, where his diminishing pace is clearly evident, and our forward line is probably around the 16th or 17th best in the league, despite our goal tally. Solanke is starved, and does most of his work away from goal, and most of our crosses hit the first man. There are a handful of players that you would want to build the team around (Vicario (despite yesterday), VDV, Bergvall, Kulusevski, Spence, Porro, Udogie), others that are worth keeping around (Kinsky, Danso, Gray, Solanke, Maddison, Son, Moore, Sarr), and that’s about it. We need quality, and we need leaders. The leadership team at the club are a joke. They don’t have the right mentality, and they do nothing whatsoever to lift the team when we are playing badly. We need a new system that doesn’t cripple the players. We need to utilise the strengths of Porro, Udogie and Spence going forward without leaving gaping holes at the back. We need defensively aware midfield players, and we definitely need a new captain. Keep Son as club captain if he stays, but on the field we need a new voice who can lead by example.

It’s time to say goodbye to Davies, Reguilon, Bissouma, Bentancur (sadly, as he’s not the same after the ACL), Werner and Richarlison, and possibly Romero. If we could sign Guehi, Wharton, Delap and Cunha, and maybe Mitoma if I’m being greedy, we would be a lot stronger than we are now, but we all know that we’d be lucky to get one of those, as we only look for bargains or potential to sell on at a profit.

This has been the worst season I can remember. We’ve been crap before, but during those days we still had players that would excite you, even though we had a soft underbelly. Bergvall aside, who else is there? Maddison is 28, he’s not going to get any better. Son’s best days are behind him. There are some good players, but none of them get you off your seat. It’s all about the system nowadays, and our system has rendered our players lame, with 17 defeats from 32 games.

Hopefully we can get a win in Frankfurt, but we will need a performance that we haven’t achieved since our win at City, and I’m not sure we have it in our locker anymore. But there’s always hope…

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