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Andros Townsend charged by FA over alleged betting regulation breach

Posted by & filed under England Under-21s, European Under-21 Championship, football, guardian.co.uk, News, QPR, Sport, The FA, Tottenham Hotspur.

• Tottenham winger withdraws from England Under-21s squad
• Twenty-one-year-old spent season on loan at QPR

The Tottenham Hotspur midfielder Andros Townsend has withdrawn from the England Under-21 squad for this summer’s European Championship after being charged with breaching betting regulations by the Football Association.

The charges against Townsend, who was on loan at Queens Park Rangers during last season, are not believed to relate to match fixing but involve breaking the FA’s rules on betting on competitions in which a player is involved.

“The Tottenham Hotspur player has been charged with breaches of Rule E8 (b) in relation to a number of betting offences. The player has until 3 June to respond to the charges,” the FA said.

A separate statement from the FA said: “Townsend will receive the full support of the FA and Tottenham Hotspur FC in seeking rehabilitation whilst responding to the allegations.”

The 21-year-old winger will be replaced in the England Under-21 squad by Birmingham’s Nathan Redmond.

Townsend has until June 3 to respond to the charges.

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Tottenham target Leandro Damião and Roberto Soldado for next season

Posted by & filed under football, guardian.co.uk, News, Sport, Tottenham Hotspur, transfer window.

• Scott Parker and Tom Huddlestone available for transfer
• Gareth Bale ‘very disappointed’ to miss out on top four

Tottenham Hotspur hope to demonstrate their ambition remains intact despite a failure to reach next season’s Champions League by renewing their efforts to sign the Brazil forward Leandro Damião and seeking to pair him with Valencia’s Spain international Roberto Soldado.

The pursuit of both strikers, coupled with the confidence that Gareth Bale will sign new terms to remain at White Hart Lane for at least another season, would satisfy the manager, André Villas-Boas, who has called for the club to “raise the bar again” before next season. They missed out on the top four this time despite amassing an impressive 72 points.

The Portuguese said in January that Leandro “fits the profile” of a potential recruit and attempts were made during the winter window to secure their long-standing target. Tottenham enjoy a close relationship with the 23-year-old’s club, Internacional, whose president, Giovanni Luigi, suggested this month that Spurs had resumed dialogue over a move for a player who has 16 caps. A price of around £16m has been mooted, with the Brazilian club apparently now braced to lose the player to the Premier League.

Securing his signature would represent something of a coup, though the desire to play him alongside Soldado is particularly eye-catching. The Spain forward, who would have commanded a fee close to £30m a year ago, has been watched by Spurs scouts this season as he has maintained his impressive form at the Mestalla. He could be available for nearer £20m should Valencia fail to qualify for the Champions League.

The 27-year-old started his career with Real Madrid but after a productive spell at Getafe, has thrived at Valencia after joining as a replacement for David Villa. He has 27 goals in all competitions this season. Spurs had also expressed an interest in the Queens Park Rangers forward Loïc Rémy, though it remains to be seen if that will be maintained with the player on bail following his arrest on suspicion of rape, a claim he denies.

The Spurs chairman, Daniel Levy, hopes to construct a team around Bale with the Wales international, who is happy to remain at White Hart Lane, expected to sign improved terms that will keep him at the club for next season at least. There will be a buy-out clause inserted which could lead to him moving abroad should an offer in excess of £50m be received next summer; though, by then, Tottenham hope they will have secured passage into Europe’s elite competition.

Bale, who scored his 26th club goal of the season in the 1-0 defeat of Sunderland on Sunday, has expressed his frustration at the club’s failure to reach the Champions League. “It was obviously great to sign off with a great goal in the last minute, but circumstances made it hard to celebrate,” he said.

“To miss out on our objective [Champions League qualification] is very disappointing. It was great to get the win but the clouds just came over and made it a little bit duller, but it’s something we have to learn from, we are a young squad, and we will take it into the future.”

Bale is due to play for Spurs against Jamaica in a friendly in the Bahamas on Thursday.

There will be significant outgoings at Tottenham, too, with a number of senior players effectively available for transfer. Their number include the England internationals Scott Parker and Tom Huddlestone, as well as Emmanuel Adebayor, who managed only five league goals all season following his permanent move from Manchester City. William Gallas, 35, will leave under freedom of contract.

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Gareth Bale: Tottenham must regroup for next season’s Champions League

Posted by & filed under football, Gareth Bale, guardian.co.uk, News, Sport, Tottenham Hotspur.

• Bale won Tottenham player of the year award
• ‘To miss out on our objective is very disappointing’

Gareth Bale has admitted he found Tottenham’s latest failure to qualify for the Champions League hard to stomach. Bale rounded off a remarkable season on Sunday by scoring his 26th goal of the campaign, but his winner against Sunderland was not enough to earn the club Champions League qualification.

The 23-year-old lit up the competition three seasons ago, starring in the club’s run to the quarter-finals, which saw them beat both Milan sides before losing to Real Madrid. And having enjoyed such a successful season personally, the Welshman concedes that he was disappointed to miss out on another shot at European glory.

“It was great to sign off with a great goal in the last minute, but circumstances made it hard to celebrate,” Bale said after picking up the Tottenham player of the year award. “To play the way we have also but to miss out on our objective [Champions League qualification] is very disappointing.”

Bale will play his last match of the season on Thursday when Tottenham play the Jamaica national team in a friendly in the Bahamas. Bale, who scored 31 goals for club and country this season, will discuss his future with Spurs over the coming weeks.

The club are understandably keen to hold on to their best player and the manager André Villas-Boas recently called on the forward to end speculation about his future by signing a new deal at White Hart Lane. For now, the signs look promising for Tottenham fans. From his comments after the victory over Sunderland, he seemed in no mood to abandon ship and head to Real Madrid.

“We fought hard this season, the team and the manager have been great,” Bale said. “We have got the record points for the club in the Premier League. That would normally be enough to qualify for the Champions League, but it’s not meant to be again. It’s disappointing, but we will pick ourselves up again. We will just have to regroup this season and give it another go.”

Villas-Boas is keen to build his team around Bale next season, and stressed that significant investment was required to bridge the small gap between themselves and Arsenal.

Leandro Damião, Christian Eriksen, Christian Benteke and Heung-Min Son have been mentioned as possible targets for the north London club. Bale thinks the foundations are there for Spurs to have a successful 2013-14 season.

He added: “It was great to get the win but the clouds just came over and made it a little bit duller, but it’s something we have to learn from, we are a young squad, and we will take it in to the future.”

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Gareth Bale to sign new Tottenham contract worth £150,000 a week

Posted by & filed under football, Gareth Bale, News, Sport, The Guardian, Tottenham Hotspur.

• Forward committed to Spurs for the near future
• Real Madrid will have to wait at least one more season

Gareth Bale is poised to commit his immediate future to Tottenham Hotspur after agreeing improved terms at White Hart Lane despite the club’s failure to get to the Champions League. The deal is expected to include a release clause for bids over £50m that can be triggered at the end of next season.

Spurs’ victory over Sunderland on Sunday was in vain as Andre Villas-Boas’s team ended the season in fifth place, just behind their bitter rivals Arsenal, despite amassing 72 points. Missing out on Europe’s lucrative elite competition has serious implications for the club’s revenue streams, and left Tottenham vulnerable to bids for their better players.

The chairman, Daniel Levy, has indicated, though, that he will seek to add to the squad before next season.

Giving Bale, the Professional Footballers’ Association player of the season and young player of the season, terms worth about £150,000 a week would be a serious statement of intent given that a number of suitors, not least Real Madrid, are interested in buying the Wales international.

The 23-year-old scored 31 times for club and country this season, including Sunday’s winner, but has always indicated a willingness to stay.

Tottenham are confident they can price many of the forward’s predators out of the market but the release clause would allow Bale and his club to review the situation at the end of next season.

The hope is that the club will qualify for the Champions League next time.

The forward joined the rest of Villas-Boas’s squad in flying to the Bahamas on Monday for a post-season Caribbean tour, which includes an exhibition match against Jamaica on Thursday at the Thomas A Robinson National stadium on Nassau island.

“Will the big clubs be able to lure Bale away? It is very, very difficult to lure a player of [these dimensions] away,” said the manager.

“You have to hold on to your best assets. Gareth is travelling with the team. This is an opportunity for him to touch that fan base that he has around the world, so we are looking forward to him coming and competing. All of our players will be coming down. We have a few developmental players and we hope to bring them all so that they can get the experience.”The manager, who expects Wiliam Gallas to depart under freedom of contract, will discuss the club’s plans for the summer with Levy and the owner, Joe Lewis, who is based in the Bahamas over the course of the trip. He hopes to bring in Fabio Capello’s former England general manager, Franco Baldini, as a technical director. “We have been outlining the route ahead for what we want to do in terms of the club structures and hopefully the arrival of somebody else in the structure for the recruitment side, a technical director, so hopefully we can take those steps forward,” added the Portuguese. “We got ever so close, but they (Manchester United, City, Chelsea and Arsenal) will do their job in window, and we will do ours the Tottenham way: scouting properly and look for good grabs in summer window to make it a stronger squad.”

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Football Weekly: Arsenal win battle for fourth – podcast

Posted by & filed under Alloa, Arsenal, Brighton & Hove Albion, Championship, Chelsea, Copa del Rey, Crystal Palace, Editorial, Fiorentina, football, guardian.co.uk, José Mourinho, League One, League Two, Manchester City, manchester united, Milan, Paolo Di Canio, Serie A, Siena, Sport, Sunderland, Tottenham Hotspur, West Bromwich Albion, Yeovil Town.

There’s a end-of-year atmosphere in the pod today, as the team discuss the weekend’s action. There’s that 5-5 send-off for Sir Alex Ferguson, sympathy for the Newcastle goal that never was and the present left in the away team’s dressing room at Brighton.

The season’s not over yet for Sid Lowe – three weeks and counting – but he finds the time to celebrate Atlético Madrid’s win in the Copa Del Rey and ponder José Mourinho’s seemingly imminent move to Chelsea.

Plus we talk about Barry’s charity work, form a barbershop quartet and leave a pig’s head in the locker of Politics Weekly.*

Please leave your comments on any of the above in the section below.

* One of these is not true.

Premier League 2012-13 review: Our writers’ best and worst moments

Posted by & filed under Arsenal, aston villa, Blogposts, Chelsea, Everton, football, Fulham, guardian.co.uk, Liverpool, Manchester City, manchester united, Newcastle United, Norwich City, Premier League, QPR, Reading, Southampton, Stoke City, Sunderland, Swansea City, Tottenham Hotspur, West Bromwich Albion, West Ham United, Wigan Athletic.

Brilliant goals, best-forgotten predictions and matches that prompted dramatic late rewrites

Best player

Paul Doyle Luis Suárez. His dazzling turns, incessant mischief-making and much-improved finishing made him a joy to watch.

Dominic Fifield Juan Mata. Of those I watched regularly, he was the most consistently excellent, with his astonishing tally of 12 assists and 12 league goals testament to his impact at Chelsea throughout another tumultuous campaign.

Owen Gibson Hard to see beyond Gareth Bale. Not since Cristiano Ronaldo was in his pomp at Manchester United has a player demonstrated such an ability to seize a game and shape it.

Barry Glendenning A stunningly original choice here: Tottenham game-changer Gareth Bale.

Andy Hunter Robin van Persie. Signed to wrestle the title back from the wealthiest team (though not much of a team) on the planet and delivered under that pressure by February.

David Hytner Dimitar Berbatov. The best player to watch and the best player to write about.

Jamie Jackson Gareth Bale. The Welsh flyer has become the Premier League’s successor to Cristiano Ronaldo as the man who consistently scores and performs superbly.

Stuart James Gareth Bale. Just gets better and better. Almost single-handedly carried the Tottenham team and deserves to be playing Champions League football next season.

Scott Murray A toss-up between Christian Benteke and Adam Le Fondre. Hats off to your Van Persies, Bales and Suárezes (Suari?) but there’s something infinitely more romantic about those calmly pelting them in while all around is panic.

Sachin Nakrani Dimitar Berbatov. A left-field choice but then Berba is a left-field player. Languid, highly-skilled, hilariously ratty and the only man who would dare wear a “Keep calm and pass me the ball” T-shirt. Oh and he got 15 goals in his debut season with Fulham, which ain’t bad.

James Riach Gareth Bale repeatedly scored stunning, match-winning goals and spearheaded Tottenham to their biggest ever Premier League points total.

Barney Ronay Michael Carrick. Often did the job of two men in midfield for the champions. The Roy Keane of the elegant interception.

Jacob Steinberg It feels utterly ridiculous not to be picking Robin van Persie. But that’s Gareth Bale – utterly ridiculous. The quality of his goals and performances for Tottenham have been staggering.

Daniel Taylor Gareth Bale, with an honorary mention for Michu (clearly not playing for a big enough club to get many PFA votes) and Robin van Persie.

Louise Taylor Philippe Coutinho. Arsenal’s Santi Cazorla has been lovely to watch but Coutinho is the midfielder capable of making Liverpool great again.

Paul Wilson Luis Suárez. More watchable and audacious than Robin van Persie or Gareth Bale, if also more annoying and apparently more hungry.

WINNER Gareth Bale.

Best manager

Paul Doyle Michael Laudrup. Took a successful Swansea side and made them even better through smart signings and more effective attacking.

Dominic Fifield David Moyes. Everton finished sixth, above their city rivals for a second successive season, and lost only once at Goodison Park all campaign. Their squad boasts quality but not much depth, so to sustain such a challenge while others spend so heavily felt miraculous. Moyes has earned his opportunity with Manchester United.

Owen Gibson Sir Alex Ferguson. Fittingly in his final season, he marshalled his resources one last time following the bitter disappointment of the last day in 2011-12 to ease to the title.

Barry Glendenning Michael Laudrup. Prior to the start of the season, I idiotically predicted that Swansea City under his management would resemble “a car crash”.

Andy Hunter Sir Alex Ferguson. Another league title lifted by the latest Manchester United team to be spurred on by talent, naturally, but also character. A huge loss to the game.

David Hytner Rafael Benítez. Could not have done much more than win the Europa League and finish third. Moreover, he maintained his dignity at all times in the face of sustained hostility.

Jamie Jackson Michael Laudrup. As a first season in the top flight claiming the first major trophy of Swansea City’s 101-year history and finishing ninth was impressive.

Stuart James Michael Laudrup. There was a feeling Swansea were punching above their weight under Brendan Rodgers. Then Laudrup took over and won the first major trophy in the club’s history and secured a top-10 finish in the Premier League. Oh, and he also traded at a profit in the transfer market. Not bad, all in all.

Scott Murray Rafael Benítez, only the second man to win a European trophy at three different clubs (after Udo Lattek). The snipers – and it’s not just been Chelsea fans, either – can simmer down now.

Sachin Nakrani Michael Laudrup. Had the tough task of replacing Brendan Rodgers and did so with aplomb. Swansea finished two places higher than they did in 2011-12 and have become a more dangerous attacking unit.

James Riach In the face of bitter protests from Chelsea’s supporters, Rafael Benítez remained dignified and won the Europa League title as well as securing third place.

Barney Ronay Rafa Benítez. Perhaps not the obvious choice but still: a European trophy and third place in the Premier League. And all without the full support of the club’s fans or – it would seem – board.

Jacob Steinberg Michael Laudrup won Swansea their first major trophy in his first season in England, made some shrewd signings and ensured their football remained easy on the eye.

Daniel Taylor Steve Clarke. Well, probably Sir Alex Ferguson. But I owe Clarke an apology for having him to win the sack race last August.

Louise Taylor Paolo Di Canio. Not content with saving Sunderland from relegation he speaks a lot of good sense. And makes the Premier League infinitely more colourful.

Paul Wilson David Moyes. After years of not winning anything, he walks off with the top prize. Tremendous first seasons from Steve Clarke and Michael Laudrup, solid progress by Sam Allardyce and Brendan Rodgers.

WINNER Michael Laudrup.

Best goal

Paul Doyle José Enrique for Liverpool v Swansea. Great move in which every touch was a trick.

Dominic Fifield Matthew Lowton’s volley from distance beyond Asmir Begovic, Stoke’s fine goalkeeper. It was a goal that breathed life into Aston Villa’s pursuit of survival.

Owen Gibson Van Persie v Aston Villa. Wayne Rooney’s raking 70-yard pass and the Dutchman’s skill in watching the ball drop on to his boot before volleying home was a fitting way for United to clinch the title.

Barry Glendenning Luis Suárez for Liverpool against Newcastle. Sprinting at full speed, he controlled a long ball to the edge of the penalty area with his shoulder while under pressure from Fabricio Coloccini, before taking it around Tim Krul and prodding home. In little more than a couple of seconds and with just three touches he made two very good players look like chumps.

Andy Hunter Robin van Persie v Aston Villa. From the pass by Wayne Rooney to the movement, awareness and sublime technique of Van Persie’s volley; a glorious goal and a true jaw-dropping moment.

David Hytner Luis Suárez v Newcastle Utd. Speed, strength, sumptuous chest control, balance, feint, touch, finish. Genius.

Jamie Jackson Robin van Persie’s second v Aston Villa. Wayne Rooney’s sublime arcing pass placed into the path of the on-rushing Dutchman was complemented by a left-foot volley struck oh so sweetly in a game that sealed Manchester United’s 20th championship.

Stuart James A close call between Matthew Lowton’s wonderful volley for Aston Villa against Stoke and Robin van Persie’s brilliant strike against Villa. Van Persie gets the nod on the basis that he was hitting a ball dropping over his shoulder.

Scott Murray Shinji Kagawa’s cerebral sidefoot against Norwich City.

Sachin Nakrani Matthew Lowton against Stoke. A stunning chest-and-first-time-hit volley that ultimately won a important game for Villa, lifting them out of the relegation zone.

James Riach Robin van Persie’s fine volley against Aston Villa oozed quality. He timed his run perfectly and made the finish look ridiculously easy.

Barney Ronay Romelu Lukaku versus Sunderland. Essentially a series of high-speed crash tackles, but still a rare joy to watch. The kind of goal the Hulk would score. Or a runaway cement mixer.

Jacob Steinberg I didn’t think Bale’s stabbed finish against Swansea in March really got the recognition it deserved. It was Messi-esque in its speed and inventiveness.

Daniel Taylor Luis Suárez v Newcastle. It’s the control, running, looking over his shoulder, then trapping a 40-yard pass on his chest and shimmying past Newcastle’s goalkeeper. The finish was simple; what preceded it was sublime.

Louise Taylor Fernando Torres in Chelsea’s 3-1 win at Sunderland. Torres met Eden Hazard’s cross with a perfectly cushioned volley expertly directed beyond Simon Mignolet. Not bad for a striker supposedly “finished”.

Paul Wilson Van Persie’s volley from Wayne Rooney’s sumptuous pass against Aston Villa. Otherwise anything from the Bale collection.

WINNER Robin van Persie v Aston Villa.

Best match

Paul Doyle Southampton 3-1 Man City. It is always good to see hungry young slicksters batter a team of glamorous slackers.

Dominic Fifield Chelsea 2-3 Manchester United in October, a game that saw the hosts reduced to nine, retrieve a two-goal deficit, then succumb to an offside winner. It was subsequently tainted with controversy after allegations were made against Mark Clattenburg by home players. Just as significantly, it proved to be the beginning of the end for Roberto Di Matteo.

Owen Gibson Manchester City 2-3 Manchester United. Just as the previous year had been defined by City’s 6-1 humbling of their neighbours, so Van Persie’s last-gasp winner seemed to symbolise this season’s revenge.

Barry Glendenning Reading 3-2 West Brom will live long in my memory. I was reporting on it and three Reading goals in the final eight minutes meant a panic-stricken rewrite. It was great fun, mind.

Andy Hunter Selecting only from games attended, Liverpool 2-2 Chelsea. The Benítez sub-plot, a commanding Chelsea display, a rousing Liverpool recovery and, of course, the best and ridiculous worst of Luis Suárez. The moment it dawned he had bitten Branislav Ivanovic, and that a week of inquests and accusations of a media witch-hunt was sure to follow, was not a highlight, however.

David Hytner Chelsea 2-3 Manchester United. Great goals, a stirring fightback, red cards, contention, pulsating from start to finish. The subsequent, unproven allegations about Mark Clattenburg ought not to overshadow the memory.

Jamie Jackson Manchester City 2-3 Manchester United. In the closing moments Van Persie’s free-kick deflected off Samir Nasri, who had turned his back, to beat Joe Hart and all three points were heading to Old Trafford.

Stuart James The first 5-5 draw in the history of the Premier League, at The Hawthorns on the final day of the season, must take some beating.

Scott Murray West Bromwich Albion 5-5 Manchester United, the nearest football’s ever got to DG Bradman, b Hollies, 0. Sport always has the last word, leaving even the geniuses wondering exactly what the hell just happened.

Sachin Nakrani Manchester City 2-3 Manchester United. Not a title decider but the moment it felt power had shifted back across Manchester. A pretty dramatic contest, too.

James Riach Newcastle United 0-3 Sunderland. This was the turning point in Sunderland’s survival bid, a gutsy performance that included three excellent goals and some incredible celebrations from Paolo Di Canio.

Barney Ronay Manchester City 2-3 Manchester United. Decided which way the seasonal Manchester momentum was heading – plus a lovely bit of soap opera in Van Persie’s free-kick and Nasri’s flinch.

Jacob Steinberg A personal highlight was West Ham’s comeback against Chelsea in December. Chelsea murdered West Ham in the first half and should have been two or three goals up at half-time. But the introduction of Mohamed Diamé changed the game and Upton Park was a very loud and enjoyable place to be by the time Modibo Maïga made it 3-1 to West Ham.

Daniel Taylor Southampton 2-3 Manchester United. The kind of match for which Sir Alex Ferguson will be remembered: losing 2-1 until the last three minutes and then a quick one-two from Robin van Persie and some frantic rewrites in the press box.

Louise Taylor Newcastle United 3-2 Chelsea. A fantastic game filled with fabulous counter-attacking football and settled by Moussa Sissoko’s 90th-minute winner for Newcastle.

Paul Wilson Newcastle 3-2 Chelsea was a real humdinger, the one where Demba Ba took a boot to the face and got his nose splattered.

WINNER Manchester City 2-3 Manchester United.

Best signing

Paul Doyle Christian Benteke – £7m for the young striker who kept Aston Villa in the Premier League in his first season in England. A bargain.

Dominic Fifield Robin van Persie. Michu was the bargain of the season, but Van Persie ensured Manchester United eclipsed Manchester City in the title race. A player who made a difference.

Owen Gibson The still improving Christian Benteke narrowly edges Van Persie for value. He scored on his debut and didn’t stop, keeping Villa up despite his misfiring colleagues.

Barry Glendenning Michu’s transfer to Swansea City from Real Vallecano for £2.2m was an astonishing, astute bit of business … for Swansea.

Andy Hunter Michu. His form may have tailed off after the Capital One Cup final but Swansea are unlikely to hold that against him. A steal at £2m, he epitomised the style and class of Michael Laudrup’s team and the club’s historic cup win in their centenary year.

David Hytner Robin Van Persie. Took the No20 shirt at Manchester United. Made the difference in the club’s 20th title.

Jamie Jackson Van Persie. “If” is a questionable concept in sport but had the Dutchman signed instead for City would United be champions?

Stuart James Michu was an absolute bargain at £2m but Christian Benteke was also an incredible piece of business. Without Benteke’s goals (of every description) Villa would surely have been relegated.

Scott Murray Philippe Coutinho. A pocket Molby, or a Beardsley-sized Beardsley?

Sachin Nakrani Michu. Strikers who score 18 goals in their debut season for a new club in a new country are not meant to cost £2m. An incredible piece of business.

James Riach Michu is the clear choice after scoring 18 goals for Swansea City at a cost of £2m from Rayo Vallecano. An absolute bargain.

Barney Ronay Christian Benteke. A £7m signing who kept Villa up and will now probably leave for much more. In short bursts looked like the perfect centre-forward in the making.

Jacob Steinberg Swansea paid £2m Michu and got more than their money’s worth.

Daniel Taylor Michu, and if we can ignore Steve Clarke (see above) I did predict this last August.

Louise Taylor Robin van Persie. He did not come cheap but, by their standards, an arguably limited, non-vintage, Manchester United would not have won the title without the Dutch striker.

Paul Wilson Has to be Van Persie, if he really made the difference between United and City.

WINNER Michu.

Worst flop

Paul Doyle Roberto Mancini. There are professors who got PhDs from a slot machine in Blackpool who could mount better defences of their title than Manchester City managed.

Dominic Fifield Alou Diarra at West Ham, if only because I suggested back in August that he would prove to be the bargain of the campaign. He may have been free but he arrived an experienced France international, the kind of player who could take the Premier League by the scruff of the neck, but five appearances in all competitions and a loan to Rennes rather sums up his impact. Then came the allegations that he had been lured to Upton Park by “false promises”.

Owen Gibson It seems unfair to single him out amid myriad overpaid failures at Loftus Road. But at £12.5m and £100,000 a week, Christopher Samba’s admission that he wasn’t prepared for the Premier League when he arrived in January couldn’t help but grate as Queens Park Rangers went down with a whimper.

Barry Glendenning Considering the high standards he set for himself last season, the decline of Newcastle midfielder Cheick Tioté has been particularly notable.

Andy Hunter Queens Park Rangers. Every signing made last summer and in January and their two managers, Mark Hughes and Harry Redknapp. Abysmal.

David Hytner José Bosingwa. A European champion with Chelsea last May, he was tempted to QPR by the big wages and did little to justify them. Refused to take his place as a substitute against Fulham. Jeered by fans on his last appearance against Newcastle.

Jamie Jackson Chelsea fans who failed to back Rafael Benítez. What, exactly, did the Blues supporters want by not getting behind the manager? Failure? Having returned the Europa League and third place Benítez has shown the kind of manager he is.

Stuart James Hard to look beyond the Queens Park Rangers team, headed up by José Bosingwa. Probably won’t happen but would be great to see him running out at Yeovil.

Scott Murray David Moyes and Everton, after yet another craven capitulation in the Cup. Roberto Martínez and Wigan showed them how to play the glory game.

Sachin Nakrani Christopher Samba. The personification of QPR’s ill-thought-out, irresponsible and bloated transfer strategy.

James Riach Chris Samba arrived at QPR in January for a club record £12.5m. Having not played since November, the centre-half was in poor shape and has admitted he was unprepared for a Premier League return.

Barney Ronay Emmanuel Adebayor. Came to life a little towards the end of the season, but it took until May for Spurs to win their second match in which he actually scored.

Jacob Steinberg It has not quite worked out for Scott Sinclair, has it?

Daniel Taylor Queens Park Rangers, the A to Z of how not to run a coherent football club.

Louise Taylor James McClean, Sunderland. The once so promising left winger regressed alarmingly. Desperately requires the “revolution in the brain” prescribed by Paolo Di Canio.

Paul Wilson Not blaming Harry Redknapp in particular, but everyone involved at QPR must view the season as a bit of a fiasco. Wigan’s defence coach, if they actually had one, also had a season to forget.

WINNER Queens Park Rangers (particularly Christopher Samba and José Bosingwa).

Biggest gripe

Paul Doyle Lack of innovation at set-pieces: most are very predictable. Players are getting their priorities wrong when they put more thought into their goalscoring celebrations than how to actually score in the first place.

Dominic Fifield The mess that was Queens Park Rangers. Their survival last season had been celebrated but what followed was pathetic. Their stay in the top flight was a missed opportunity.

Owen Gibson Hardly original, but in a season when low level grumbling about ticket prices became loud protests, the urgency of more clubs addressing the issue can’t be overstated.

Barry Glendenning The paranoia and seething rage of some fans is tedious. Relax, it’s just football.

Andy Hunter Extortionate ticket prices that have turned some football stadiums into tourist destinations and homes for a precious, middle-aged, middle-class audience.

David Hytner Sky sources. Just because the TV channel invented the game does not give them the licence seemingly to take other outlets’ stories and information and present them as their own.

Jamie Jackson Prominent footballers who shun the media when playing, then take up jobs in the media on retirement.

Stuart James The ruthless sackings of Brian McDermott at Reading and Nigel Adkins at Southampton. Both victims of their own success.

Scott Murray Faux moral outrage, 25 hours a day, eight days a week. Life’s too short to be this annoyed.

Sachin Nakrani The FA’s disciplinary decisions. A four-match ban for racism (John Terry), a 10-match ban for biting (Luis Suárez) and no ban at all for nearly snapping someone’s leg (Callum Mcmanaman). Madness.

James Riach Giving players a voice by reporting their nonsensical comments on Twitter, particularly one converted Francophile.

Barney Ronay Get rid of the “the ref saw it so we can’t do anything” law – thereby destroying at a single stroke the gist of roughly 50% of all angry football talk radio content.

Jacob Steinberg The FA Cup final (with Budweiser; mustn’t forget the sponsors) was great entertainment but it still shouldn’t kick off at 5.15pm or be played on the same weekend as league games.

Daniel Taylor 1) goal music, 2) Brendan Rodgers never told us who were in the envelopes.

Louise Taylor Those Chelsea fans who persistently undermined Rafael Benítez and demanded his dismissal after he, quite reasonably, gave them a measured ticking off following an FA Cup win at Middlesbrough. Benítez performed splendidly; is José Mourinho really going to do better?

Paul Wilson The Premier League is tilting towards the south, even south Wales. From a position of strength a few years ago, there are only the four core north-west clubs left. Lancashire is becoming an outpost, rather than a sensible location for a football writer to base themselves.

WINNER The FA’s disciplinary process.

Change for next season

Paul Doyle Play-offs for last Champions League spot and last relegation spot. There is an obvious antidote to anti-climaxes, as followers of the Championship, League One and League Two know full well. And why should the lower leagues have better endings than the top flight?

Dominic Fifield Transfer windows for managerial changes. Chelsea can have their own one, if necessary, in late February/early March. November is far too early.

Owen Gibson They have more need than most, but it would be nice to see others follow Arsenal’s lead in introducing special cut-price areas for teenagers.

Barry Glendenning Cheaper ticket prices would be nice.

Andy Hunter Same as last season: retrospective punishment for diving.

David Hytner Sir Alex Ferguson to hold regular press conferences in his new role as a Manchester United director.

Jamie Jackson Cameras in changing rooms, please.

Stuart James That the Manchester United manager attends post-match press conferences.

Scott Murray Pitchside bats, for smashing goalline cameras into pieces so small they can be sieved through a sock. Perfection is a pipe dream and, anyway, bemoaning the occasional incorrect decision is all part of the fun.

Sachin Nakrani £20 away tickets. In January the Football Supporters’ Federation launched its “Twenty’s Plenty for Away Tickets” campaign in a bid to establish an across-the-board, affordable pricing structure for travelling fans. Its introduction would show football at the highest level retains a soul.

James Riach Retrospective punishment even if a match official has seen the incident during the game. Some blatant and ugly fouls have escaped proper scrutiny this season.

Barney Ronay Relegate five teams.

Jacob Steinberg It is understandable that the FA doesn’t want to undermine referees but it is slightly farcical that retrospective action can’t be taken over incidents – Callum McManaman’s tackle on Massadio Haïdara, say – which the officials decided not to punish during games.

Daniel Taylor Maybe the Premier League, with its £5.5bn television revenue, could give Kick It Out more than £100,000 a year operating costs (roughly the same as someone who earns £50,000 a year chucking 25p into a collection tin).

Louise Taylor Journalists reporting on Premier League teams being invited, as happens at certain European clubs, to eat training ground lunches with players as part of an obligatory extension of current weekly press conferences. With increased trust unlikely to be abused it could only erase paranoia, increase understanding and enhance coverage.

Paul Wilson Players attending finals in a suit should be made to stay in a suit, and frisked if necessary to make sure they are not carrying spare kit, boots and shin-pads.

WINNER Cheaper tickets.

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André Villas-Boas urges Tottenham board to strengthen in the summer

Posted by & filed under Andre Villas-Boas, football, News, Sport, The Guardian, Tottenham Hotspur.

• We must do it in the Tottenham way, manager adds
• ‘The others have great squads and will continue to add quality’

André Villas-Boas has urged the Tottenham Hotspur board to invest strongly in the squad over the summer to help the club close the gap on the Premier League’s top four, which they narrowly failed to make this time out.

Tottenham beat Sunderland 1-0 on Sunday to finish with a club-record Premier League haul of 72 points. Agonisingly, it was not enough for Champions League qualification, as Arsenal won at Newcastle by the same scoreline to take the final spot in Europe’s elite competition.

Villas-Boas’s disappointment was etched into his features. “We got ever so close but the other top teams will do their job in transfer window and we must do ours, in the Tottenham way, scouting properly and looking for good grabs in the summer to make it a stronger squad.

“Getting 72 points serves as a good reference for the future but not making it means that next season, to compete at this level, we have to make probably more than that. The others have great, great squads and will continue to add quality. Next year we’ll have to be extremely competitive.”

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Tottenham Hotspur 1-0 Sunderland | Premier League match report

Posted by & filed under football, Match Reports, Premier League, Sport, Sunderland, The Guardian, Tottenham Hotspur.

Newcastle 0-1 Arsenal

Gareth Bale collected possession in the last minute, he jinked inside, rolling the ball on to his left foot and unfurled a glorious shot into the far, top corner from 25 yards. Under normal circumstances, Bale’s goal, his 26th of a stellar season, would have been the cause for frenzied celebration. Not here. It did not matter.

The victory propelled Tottenham to 72 points, a Premier League record for the club. They have finished in the top five for the fourth consecutive season. And they have qualified for Europe. There has been lots to like about André Villas-Boas’s debut season at White Hart Lane. Yet it rang hollow. The post-match lap of appreciation featured forced smiles and heavy hearts. None of it was enough for the European qualification that they really wanted.

Arsenal did what they had to do at Newcastle United. Tottenham’s old foes got the victory that they needed to render everything academic here, not only Bale’s winner but the denial of two Tottenham penalty appeals and the latest white knuckle ride of the White Hart Lane crowd. Tottenham have not had a penalty all season. They have not had one in the league at this stadium since April 2011. It did not matter.

Tottenham are scarred by the memories of last-day agonies past and now they have something from the present. It had been lost on nobody that Arsène Wenger’s Arsenal finish above Tottenham. That is what they do but the throbbing atmosphere had been underpinned by the yearning for something, anything to conspire to make things different.

Villas-Boas simply wanted to see his team do their job, to finish what has been an encouraging season with the record points tally. The emotions churned inside him and they erupted upon the first penalty controversy in the 19th minute.

Bale had the jump on Sebastian Larsson, the former Arsenal player, following Tom Huddlestone’s through ball, and when he tore into the box, he felt his opponent’s arm in his back. Bale went down and when the referee, Andre Marriner, blew his whistle and raced towards the scene, it felt as though he had awarded the penalty. He had not. To Tottenham’s anguish, the man wearing red ruled that Bale had faked it. For the fifth time this season, and the fourth in the Premier League, the triple player of the year saw yellow for simulation. Villas-Boas went crackers, and not for the last time.

Tottenham controlled the first half, even though Danny Graham created an excellent opportunity for Connor Wickham on 31 minutes: Hugo Lloris’s block at close quarters was vital. Villas-Boas’s team had tempo and aggression, and they flickered in the final third.

Tottenham’s big chance of the first half fell to Bale, following Aaron Lennon’s cut-back, but as the crowd held its breath, he did not make a clean connection with his left foot, which is not something that has been said too often this season. His shot hit Jack Colback, possibly on the arm but this time, there was rather less contention.

Marriner and his officials, though, ensured their hot reception at the interval when they ruled that Bale was offside following John O’Shea’s loose back header. There was an argument that O’Shea had triggered a second phase of play but Simon Mignolet saved anyway from Bale. The language from the stands towards Marriner at half-time was choice.

Sunderland were riddled by injuries, they had midfielders in the full-back positions and a grand total of five minutes of first-team experience among their outfield substitutes. They ought to have been there for the taking but they had another glorious chance to take the lead early in the second-half. Wickham caught Huddlestone dallying in possession and fed Graham, who beat Michael Dawson and struck low and hard. Lloris made a reflex block.

The sense of grievance was heavy in the air and it deepened upon the second non-penalty award. After Emmanuel Adebayor had spun and shot, Carlos Cuellar, diving low to his right, made the save. Cuellar, of course, is not the Sunderland goalkeeper. Villas-Boas was incandescent.

Then Arsenal scored at Newcastle. The Sunderland fans chanted “One-nil to the Arsenal,” and the atmosphere was sapped. Further evidence that it might not be Tottenham’s day came when Clint Dempsey saw a shot smuggled to safety by Colback on the line and from the rebound Lennon’s shot deflected off Colback, hit the post and squirmed to safety. From a Tottenham point of view, it was excruciating.

There was the obligatory false alarm of a Newcastle equaliser – the surge of delight quickly dissipated – and the general edginess was reflected in Scott Parker, who was visibly fuming to be substituted and he avoided eye contact with Villas-Boas.

Sunderland were reduced to 10 men in the 74th minute when David Vaughan hacked at Lennon for the second time in the second half but Tottenham looked ready to fizzle out. Bale refocused them and, all of a sudden, there was Adebayor asking fans in the stands for the score from Newcastle. There were nervous looks at phones. The miracle, though, did not come.

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Tottenham Hotspur 1-0 Sunderland | Premier League match report

Posted by & filed under football, guardian.co.uk, Match Reports, Premier League, Sport, Sunderland, Tottenham Hotspur.

Gareth Bale collected possession in the last minute, he jinked inside, rolling the ball onto his left foot and unfurled a glorious shot into the far, top corner from 25 yards. Under normal circumstances, Bale’s goal, his 26th of a stellar season, would have been the cause for frenzied celebration. Not here. It did not matter.

The victory propelled Tottenham to 72 points, a Premier League record for the club. They have finished in the top five for the fourth consecutive season. And they have qualified for Europe. There has been lots to like about Andre Villas-Boas’s debut season at White Hart Lane. Yet it rang hollow. The post-match lap of appreciation featured forced smiles and heavy hearts. None of it was not enough for the European qualification that they really wanted.

Arsenal did what they had to do at Newcastle United. Tottenham’s old foes got the victory that they needed to render everything academic here, not only Bale’s winner but the denial of two Tottenham penalty appeals and the latest white knuckle ride of the White Hart Lane crowd. Tottenham have not had a penalty all season. They have not had one in the league at this stadium since April 2011. It did not matter.

Tottenham are scarred by the memories of last-day agonies past and now they have something from the present. It had been lost on nobody that Arsène Wenger’s Arsenal finish above Tottenham. That is what they do but the throbbing atmosphere had been underpinned by the yearning for something, anything to conspire to make things different.

Villas-Boas simply wanted to see his team do their job, to finish what has been an encouraging season with the record points tally. The emotions churned inside of him and they erupted upon the first penalty controversy in the 19th minute.

Bale had the jump on Sebastian Larsson, the former Arsenal player, following Tom Huddlestone’s through ball, and when he tore into the box, he felt his opponents arm in his back. Bale went down and when the referee, Andre Marriner, blew his whistle and raced towards the scene, it felt as though he had awarded the penalty. He had not. To Tottenham’s anguish, the man wearing red ruled that Bale had faked it. For the fifth time this season, and the fourth in the Premier League, the triple player of the year saw yellow for simulation. Villas-Boas went crackers, and not for the last time.

Tottenham controlled the first half, even though Danny Graham created an excellent opportunity for Connor Wickham on 31 minutes: Hugo Lloris’s block at close quarters was vital. Villas-Boas’ team had tempo and aggression, and they flickered in the final third.

Tottenham’s big chance of the first half fell to Bale, following Aaron Lennon’s cut-back but as the crowd held its breath, he did not make a clean connection with his left foot, which is not something that has been said too often this season. His shot hit Jack Colback, possibly on the arm but this time, there was rather less contention.

Marriner and his officials, though, ensured their hot reception at the interval when they ruled that Bale was offside following John O’Shea’s loose back header. There was an argument that O’Shea had triggered a second phase of play but Simon Mignolet saved anyway from Bale. The language from the stands towards Marriner at half-time was choice.

Sunderland were riddled by injuries, they had midfielders in the full-back positions and a grand total of five minutes of first-team experience among their outfield substitutes. They ought to have been there for the taking but they had another glorious chance to take the lead early in the second-half. Wickham caught Huddlestone dallying in possession and fed Graham, who beat Michael Dawson and struck low and hard. Lloris made a reflex block.

The sense of grievance was heavy in the air and it deepened upon the second non-penalty award. After Emmanuel Adebayor had spun and shot, Carlos Cuellar, diving low to his right, made the save. Cuellar, of course, is not the Sunderland goalkeeper. Villas-Boas was incandescent.

Then Arsenal scored at Newcastle. The Sunderland fans chanted “One-nil to the Arsenal,” and the atmosphere was sapped. Further evidence that it might not be Tottenham’s day came when Clint Dempsey saw a shot smuggled to safety by Colback on the line and from the rebound Lennon’s shot deflected off Colback, hit the post and squirmed to safety. From a Tottenham point of view, it was excruciating.

There was the obligatory false alarm of a Newcastle equaliser – the surge of delight quickly dissipated – and the general edginess was reflected in Scott Parker, who was visibly fuming to be substituted and he avoided eye contact with Villas-Boas.

Sunderland were reduced to 10 men in the 74th minute when David Vaughan hacked at Lennon for the second time in the second-half but Tottenham looked ready to fizzle out. Bale refocused them and, all of a sudden, there was Adebayor asking fans in the stands for the score from Newcastle. There were nervous looks at phones. The miracle, though, did not come.

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Premier League final day – in pictures

Posted by & filed under Arsenal, aston villa, Chelsea, Editorial, Everton, football, Fulham, guardian.co.uk, Liverpool, Manchester City, manchester united, Newcastle United, Norwich City, Premier League, QPR, Reading, Southampton, Sport, Stoke City, Sunderland, Swansea City, Tottenham Hotspur, West Bromwich Albion, West Ham United, Wigan Athletic.

As the 2012-13 Premier League season draws to a close, we bring you the best images from the last 10 games

Premier League fans verdict part 2: QPR to Wigan Athletic

Posted by & filed under Features, football, guardian.co.uk, Premier League, QPR, Reading, Southampton, Sport, Stoke City, Sunderland, Swansea City, Tottenham Hotspur, West Bromwich Albion, West Ham United, Wigan Athletic.

Stoke stayed up but football often terrible; Swansea need quality striker to back up Michu; West Brom had a ‘special season’

QPR 2/10

Things could not have gone much worse really. Overpaid, overhyped and underachieved. We have paid a king’s ransom in wages that would take on the GDP of a small country and what do we have to show for it? Bottom of the league and relegated in April.

Star man Loïc Rémy performed admirably to get as many goals as he has in a poor team, while Clint Hill continues to perform beyond his capabilities. Other than that it’s been misery from front to back.

The flops I would call José Bosingwa a flop, but that would indicate I had a level of expectation. I have been disappointed with two signings in particular: Park Ji-sung has evidently received some misguided lip service previously – how he passes as a footballer is beyond me. Esteban Granero is undoubtedly talented but unable to keep up with the pace of Premier League football.

The gaffer 5/10 Harry Redknapp attempted to mould a side with very little to work with. His attempt to patch things up in January gave us a fighting chance but the mess he walked into will not improve until he can shift out the troublemakers.

Who should he sign? A blend of Championship experience and youthful exuberance. Players who care about the shirt. A forward to replace Rémy, who will leave, and more sprightly replacements for the ones we inevitably show the door to.

Best visiting fans Southampton were loud, proud and backed their manager. Worst Chelsea were fairly uninspiring for a local fixture.

Adam Boxer, QPR.VitalFootball.co.uk

Reading 4/10

No one is happy when the team gets relegated from the Premier League, even if it is expected for at least one of the newly promoted teams to return straight back to the Championship – I was fairly relaxed with Reading until February and March, which was our undoing: losing the games against Villa and Wigan sunk the ship.

Star men Alex McCarthy, Adrian Mariappa, Alex Pearce and Sean Morrison.

The flops Danny Guthrie and Pavel Pogrebnyak.

The gaffer 5/10 Brian McDermott was sacked after the poor results referred to above and Nigel Adkins was brought in too late to be able to stop the downward spiral. McDermott will always be respected for getting the club into the Premier League after the disappointment in the play-offs the previous season.

Who should he sign? It will be more a question of who we can hold on to and who we want to get moved on as the squad will hopefully be in the shake-up for promotion next season.

Best visiting fans Man City, Spurs, Newcastle.

Worst The usual suspects in Chelsea, West Ham and Man United and disappointingly a significant minority of Liverpool fans, who almost managed to undo a lot of goodwill extended to their club in regard to Hillsborough over the years in one afternoon.

Ian Maynard, Observer reader

Southampton 10/10

This season was all about survival. We were bottom in November, so it’s been a fantastic turnaround.

Star man Morgan Schneiderlin has taken to life with England’s elite like a duck to water. Tirelessly covering every blade of grass, his consistently good performances won him both fans’ and players’ player of the season. Rickie Lambert loves proving his doubters wrong. With 14 goals in his first Premier League season, he’s shown he can compete at this level and he brings more to the team than goals.

The flops Gastón Ramírez hasn’t lived up to the his £12m price tag. He has shown glimpses of his talent but with no real consistency. He needs more time to adapt to English football.

The gaffer 7/10 Mauricio Pochettino inherited a team that were playing well in a system that was not too different from his own. He didn’t need to reinvent the wheel. Instead Southampton went looking for the ball, pressing high up the pitch. Wins against City, Liverpool and Chelsea show Saints can beat the best. Now to do it against smaller teams, too!

Who should he sign? A quality centre-back would improve us considerably. Further up the pitch we’ve struggled to find goals lately, despite dominating large periods of games. An attacking midfielder who can play a final killer ball is a must.

Best visiting fans Newcastle. Worst Reading.

Ben Gammon, GoMarchingIn.co.uk

Stoke City 6/10

We have stayed up but some of the football has been terrible and the slide towards the Championship was terrifying. We simply didn’t perform for months and looked very poor since New Year. 8/10 for the first half of the season, 3/10 for the second.

Star man The outstanding performer was Asmir Begovic, a quality keeper. Steven N’Zonzi looked a class act for most of the season and the Huth/Shawcross duo was solid.

The flops The signing of Michael Owen did not really work and Charlie Adam has not been the wonder signing we hoped. That is more down to him being played up front than anything else; he has played further back in recent weeks and been outstanding. Ryan Shotton has been found out at times.

The gaffer 6/10 Tony Pulis has done wonders for this club, but has spent a fortune in the past few years. For many fans he needs to change his beliefs and show a new Stoke next season or they may turn on him. We are among the lowest scorers yet again.

Who should he sign? Two full backs, a back-up centre-half, a couple of fresh wingers and some strikers who can score. So not that much really.

Best visiting fans Villa (special mention to Spurs for singing Happy Birthday to Stoke). Worst Arsenal, just because they are.

Richard Murphy, Author, Stoke City On This Day

Sunderland 4/10

Another successful season at the Stadium of Light as we comfortably avoided relegation five days before the final game. Add to that some turgid football, two disastrous cup defeats, the demise of a manager whom everyone wanted to succeed and the arrival of a head coach who brought unwelcome political baggage with him, and you can see that it really has been a belter. In fact, it’s been the most underwhelming and disappointing of the 50 seasons I have watched Sunderland. Next season has to be better – perhaps we can avoid relegation before the cricket season starts? I give it four out of 10 – and 3 of those are for the win at Newcastle.

Star man Simon Mignolet has been outstanding and Danny Rose had a fine loan. Steven Fletcher scored vital goals and John O’Shea tried to marshal a defence that was as reliable as a 1988 Austin Maestro.

The flops Adam Johnson was in and out, poor Danny Graham looked lost and James McClean was simply consistently awful .

The gaffer The players never got going under Martin O’Neill, so he gets 3/10. As for Di Canio: a fine start, then lost his way, so 6/10.

Who should he sign? At least one central defender and a creative midfield player.

Best visiting fans Everton and Southampton. Worst As always, the Horse Botherers, and Fulham.

Pete Sixsmith, SalutSunderlandcom

Swansea City 9/10

It couldn’t have gone much better. No second-season syndrome – the Swans went from strength to strength under Michael Laudrup, with Europa League qualification and winning our first ever major trophy.

Star man Michu, for scoring a large quantity of goals to get into the top 10. Chico Flores and Ashley Williams have developed an excellent defensive partnership while Jonathan de Guzman and Wayne Routledge have stood out in midfield.

The flops Loan striker Itay Shechter. Laudrup needed a striker to complement Michu but the Israeli just hasn’t stepped up to the mark, having managed only one goal all season and that was recently at Wigan. Luke Moore, another striker, has also struggled.

The gaffer 9/10 Michael Laudrup has taken us to another level. We’re a more effective attacking team due to some of his tactical changes and the signings he made in his first couple of months in charge. The only thing preventing him from getting a perfect 10/10 score is that our performances have been lacking since February when we won the Capital One Cup, but you can barely fault a manager that has guided us to Europa League qualification and our first ever major trophy win.

Who should he sign? With Shechter and Moore struggling this season, Michael Laudrup needs a quality striker to take the goalscoring pressure off Michu and to allow him to play in his preferred attacking midfield role.

Best visiting fans Norwich. Worst Chelsea.

Kevin Elphick, Swansea.VitalFootball.co.uk

Tottenham Hotspur 7/10

Win today and we shall have three points more than last season. If we don’t qualify for the Holy Grail – I mean Champions League – then blame the failure to beat both Wigan and Fulham at home (some double, that) and the foot-shooting, twice, on Merseyside. We played our best in sharp, instinctive bursts but generally have been too static when we have had to break a team down. Only 28 goals in 18 home games is a weak return. Man City at home was a microcosm of our season. Clueless for 70 minutes before blowing them away in a 10-minute burst.

Star man Gareth Bale papered over a lot of cracks, mainly from outside the penalty area.

The flops Jermain Defoe – one goal since Boxing Day. Emmanuel Adebayor – five all season. He reminds me of an hour hand: you know it must be moving but you can’t quite make it out. Only when you wind it up do you see it move.

The gaffer 6/10 André Villas-Boas was up and down. Up – beating West Ham and Arsenal in quick succession. Down – losing the next two games to Liverpool (when we had them on their knees) and Fulham. Selection for both was poor: hands up who thinks Benoît Assou-Ekotto is a midfielder? We often found ourselves with no width on either flank.

Who should he sign? Two strikers who want to make an effort for 90 minutes and can score inside the six-yard box. This has been copied and pasted from last season’s review.

Best visiting fans Norwich. Worst Wigan.

Dave Mason, Observer reader

West Bromwich Albion 8/10

It definitely tailed off – the 4-0 mauling at Norwich was meaningless though gruelling – but overall it’s been a special season. In November we were third and six months later, despite a frustrating slump, we’re still in the top 10. With our resources, that’s brilliant.

Star man Defender Gareth McAuley won the players’ player of the season, and deserved it. He’s not the division’s biggest name, which works in our favour, but is hugely important to us. Romelu Lukaku shone (it’s unsettling when your outstanding attacking talent is only on loan) and we had a solid core.

The flops The Peter Odemwingie episode played a big part in our post-January stumble, and it could have been handled so much better. He’s a fine player, but good luck to whoever takes him on next.

The gaffer 7/10 A blistering first half of the season, and a confusing second. Steve Clarke made some odd choices in the past few months, attracting plenty of criticism. But it’s a learning experience. If we start next season like we finished this one we’ll be in a mess, but I don’t see that happening.

Who should he sign? Lukaku or a replacement of equal quality. The spine of the side is solid, but we need a potent goal threat. He’s too raw to be in Mourinho’s Chelsea side, so should be available for another year. We just need to fight off the rival clubs also trying to nab him. We also need more strength in depth throughout the squad. The summer’s recruitment could make or break next season.

Best visiting fans Newcastle. Worst Reading.

Dave Fleming, Observer reader

West Ham United 8/10

Mid-table survival in our first season back in the Premier League has to be classed as a success. It may not have been a spectacular campaign, but it’s a very solid outcome.

Star man Winston Reid been consistent at the back and James Collins is just the sort of no-nonsense stopper we needed. Carroll’s arrival from Liverpool lifted the whole side and he’s far better on the ground than people think. Jaaskelainen, meanwhile, had a great season in goal and Diamé and Jarvis have done well, too.

The flops Ricardo Vaz Tê has really disappointed at this level after scoring lots of goals for us in the Championship. Modibo Maïga, meanwhile, cost us £4m, but hasn’t really been given a chance to show what he can do.

The gaffer 7/10 Big Sam has done all that has been asked of him in his two seasons so far – but now he needs to develop a more expansive game and maybe play two strikers when required.

Who should he sign? We need a new full-back, Carroll on a permanent deal, and another striker, too.

Best visiting fans Wigan for sharing that taxi – very community minded.

Worst Chelsea, for the way they turned on Benítez.

Pete May, HammersInTheHeart.blogspot.co.uk

Wigan Athletic 7/10

At the start of the season, relegation wasn’t something I contemplated, but injuries across the whole defence, have cost us. That said, winning the FA Cup and getting into Europe weren’t on the cards either, and the FA Cup final win was superb.

Star man Shaun Maloney has been outstanding. Arouna Koné has had a great debut season. Maynor Figueroa and Emmerson Boyce are the Mr Dependables, and Callum McManaman has ended the season superbly.

The flops Ali al-Habsi hasn’t hit anything like the form of last season. Gary Caldwell has also struggled. Ryo Myiachi has been disappointing, mainly because his loan was mostly spent on the injury table.

The gaffer 7/10 Roberto Martínez has done another sterling job. Winning the FA Cup and getting into Europe has added to his stock. He still has flaws but hopefully he will stay.

Who should he sign? We need to see who will leave after relegation and if the out of contract players sign new deals. Certainly a striker, winger and full-backs are required.

Best visiting fans Bradford in the League Cup had a brilliant following. Worst We’re always criticised for our crowds, but QPR’s following were as appalling as their team were.

Dave Whalley, @LaticsDave

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Arsenal expect to make Champions League while Tottenham fear more pain

Posted by & filed under Arsenal, Arsène Wenger, Features, football, Sport, The Observer, Tottenham Hotspur.

Arsène Wenger is convinced his side will secure a top-four finish at Newcastle but Spurs are haunted by near misses of the past

The buildup to the final afternoon has exposed the lay of the land when it comes to the Premier League’s only lingering conundrum. Over in Enfield the talk revolved around the legend of the lasagna and a cruel miracle in Munich, Michael Dawson shuddering as he recalled the near-misses that have cast Tottenham Hotspur outside the Champions League places in the recent past. A little further round the M25, however, and the buzzwords offered up by Arsène Wenger were “strength” and “belief”, the focus on eye-catching recent progress.

Arsenal spy an opportunity in the campaign’s finale. Bitter north London rivals career into contests with under-achieving, yet secure, opponents from the north-east with only a point between them and a place in Europe’s elite at stake. Spurs, unbeaten in seven matches, can muster a Premier League high of 72 points by beating Sunderland and still find themselves fifth, a place lower than last term. If Wenger’s side win at Newcastle, a top-four place is theirs for a 16th season in succession. The Frenchman has watched his team shed only four points from nine games since they succumbed at White Hart Lane. So much for the “negative spiral of results” André Villas-Boas believed was afflicting those across the capital divide at the time.

Life is apparently all about the positives again for Arsenal. No key players are agitating for moves or entering the final 12 months of their contracts at the Emirates, and the three clubs above them in the table at present are facing up to managerial upheaval and summers of change.

“It might not work everywhere,” said Wenger. “So we can have a little advantage on some teams, even if [José] Mourinho coming back to Chelsea, if I read the newspapers well, doesn’t look to be a completely new experience. There is an opportunity for us. When you finish the season strongly – like we are – you prepare already for next season because you go with more certainty. Last year we had a new team, whose belief we have built up, and we want to use that to win the game on Sunday. But the match is also about showing that when you have to turn up, you turn up.

“A win will show we have the strength and belief that we can start strongly again next season, that we remain on a run and it won’t be interrupted by the summer break. It will show there are some qualities in this squad that will come out next year. The last few summers we’ve had the [Cesc] Fábregas and [Samir] Nasri cases, and Robin van Persie last year, and they were very difficult.

“We were on pre-season camps and, every time, a player was half in or half out, and that’s not the best way to prepare mentally for the season. So the stability will help us. Finish in the top four and we’ll give the club the best chance to deal well in the transfer market, and, if we do that well, a good potential chance to win the championship next year.”

Such giddy optimism is born of the late-season rally that has chased down Spurs. Last year Arsenal had trailed by 10 points going into the derby at the Emirates Stadium in February, the 5-2 success that afternoon inflicting psychological damage on Harry Redknapp’s team. Tottenham were overhauled and ended up trailing in by a point and, despite finishing fourth, missed out on the Champions League when Chelsea won the trophy at the Allianz Arena.

“To miss out the way we did was amazing,” said Dawson. “We weren’t even out of the pitch able to do anything about it, but just watching in on television … When it went to penalties I thought: ‘Is this really happening?’ A strange evening. It wasn’t meant to be. Then there was West Ham [in 2006] when we woke up on the final morning in prime position and feeling the way we did.”

At the time, Spurs’ ropiness was put down to food poisoning from the hotel pasta on the eve of the game, though it was apparently actually born of a bug that had festered at the training ground. “That was an absolute disaster,” said the centre-half. “I was one of those struck down, but I played. Well, I was out on the pitch, anyway. You can’t describe it when you have worked 10 months of the season and it comes down to the final day, and there were six or seven of us out there [afflicted]. Michael Carrick had to come off. Running round took it out of you, but football can be cruel sometimes. We can take heart from the way we’ve come back this season, and maybe something bizarre will happen at Newcastle. We’re due one, surely.”

That is their hope. Spurs’ frustration is that a seven-point lead over Arsenal, established in that victory at White Hart Lane in early March, has since been surrendered despite their form hardly appearing slapdash. One last opportunity for salvation remains, but it will be Wenger’s side who can shape their own destiny. The Frenchman was asked about Chelsea’s Europa League success in midweek, his message of congratulations tempered by an insistence that sides eliminated from the Champions League should not drop into the second competition. “But if I’d won the Europa League like Chelsea, I’d have been happy as well,” he added. As it is, whether Tottenham or Arsenal, the side that slips into that tournament on Sunday evening will feel condemned.

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England manager hits out at clubs’ post-season tours to the US

Posted by & filed under Chelsea, England, football, manchester united, News, Roy Hodgson, Sport, The Observer, Tottenham Hotspur.

• Roy Hodgson criticises Manchester City, Chelsea and Spurs
• Manager says they have ‘scotched’ plans for England friendlies

Roy Hodgson has criticised Manchester City, Chelsea and Tottenham for the timing of their post-season tours of the US, claiming England’s plans for the friendly matches against the Republic of Ireland and Brazil have been “scotched”.

England play the Republic at Wembley on 29 May before a trip to the Maracanã on 2 June to face Luiz Felipe Scolari’s Brazil, but Hodgson is furious that his preparations have been hindered by players travelling long distances with their clubs.

Chelsea and City will play each other in St Louis on 23 May and in New York on 25 May, potentially selecting a number of players – including Joe Hart, James Milner, Frank Lampard and Ashley Cole – who were named in Hodgson’s squad on Thursday for the upcoming friendlies. Tottenham will play the Jamaican national team in the Bahamas on 23 May, with England’s Kyle Walker and Jermain Defoe expected to feature.

To compound Hodgson’s frustration, the Football Association originally brought forward the games against Ireland and Brazil so the players could be released earlier for their summer breaks, but with the Chelsea, City and Spurs contingents now facing the possibility of four transatlantic flights in quick succession, the England manager admits the situation is far from ideal.

“We’ve been very unlucky there. I’m not going to be hypocritical about it, we brought our games forward,” Hodgson said. “Our official dates are on June 6th so we’d have been keeping the players through to June 7th. So our thought a long time back was let’s do it as quickly as possible after the season and get the players back home for a long rest.

“My thinking, which is based a lot on having been a club manager, is that they’ll probably want a few days after the season ends, they won’t want to go straight from the end of the season to us, so let them have a week and then we’ll keep them a week and then they’re free.

“So we’ve been scotched a little bit by the teams who decided to go on long close-season tours. It’s made in particular the first match a little bit difficult because some of the players will only have been back a few days when we’ve got to play and also we’re scotched in that all the teams have decided to go far west to America and Bahamas, so they’re going backward and forward on these long journeys. But that’s again the situation we find ourselves in. We can’t dictate to clubs what they do.”

Hodgson, who named Andy Carroll and the Reading goalkeeper Alex McCarthy in his 22-man squad, believes the honour of playing for England can sometimes be overshadowed by club commitments.

“Every game you play as an England player is a great opportunity. I don’t think I can ever stop emphasising how important playing for England should be,” he said. “If we’re not careful we’re going to lose sight of the fact that, yes, the Barclays Premier League is a fantastic league and winning it is something quite fantastic to do and the Champions League and Europa League, they’re big leagues too, but international football is up there apart. So in my time as manager I shall always be preaching that you should never inany way debase the chance to play for England.”

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Solving the Right Wing Dilemma

Posted by & filed under analysis, Bale, Club, coys, english, fast, FC, Features, football, Hart, highlights, hotspur, injury, lane, league, Lennon, News, premier, right, Rumours, runner, salah, soccer, speed, Spurs, tactical, tactics, THFC, Tottenham, townsend, Transfer, white, wing.

The last few seasons have been connected by one predictable plot twist – a problem with depth on the flanks. This year, as happened the year before, Aaron Lennon picked up a knock about two-thirds of the way through the season, decimating Tottenham’s crucial width and reducing their attacking options. I’ve written at length about […]

Arsenal’s Arsène Wenger confident Spurs will be damned on judgment day | David Hytner

Posted by & filed under Arsenal, Comment, football, Sport, The Guardian, Tottenham Hotspur.

Arsenal manager brims with belief that Tottenham are the team who will lose out in final-day race for Champions League qualification

Do not talk to Tottenham Hotspur fans about the club’s capacity to fall short. Whether it be down to meat-based Italian pasta dishes or the scarcely believable sucker punch from a cross-town rival, they have seen their goal in recent seasons wrested from them in cruel and faintly ridiculous fashion.

This time round, the battle for Champions League qualification has again come down to the wire and there is an apprehension underpinning the excitement at White Hart Lane, the fear that fate could deal them a new and devilish card. If André Villas-Boas’s team beat Sunderland at home on Sunday, they would finish on 72 points, which would be a club high in the Premier League years.

It is a haul that, almost always, is sufficient for a top-four place. Only once since the league was slimmed down to 20 clubs in 1995-96 has the team in fourth taken more than 72 points: Liverpool finished with 76 in 2007-08. Villas-Boas brought up the statistic on Friday morning. It is on his mind. But 72 may very well not be enough.

Over at Arsenal, they know what they need to do and they intend to do it. Win at Newcastle United and they would ensure qualification to Europe’s elite competition for the 16th season in succession. Tottenham, as they were last season when Chelsea won the Champions League to relegate them to the Europa League, despite a fourth-placed finish, would be powerless, consumed by ifs and buts.

This is what Arsenal do. They finish in the money places and, also, they finish above Tottenham. They torment Tottenham. Never in Arsène Wenger’s 17-year tenure have Arsenal trailed in behind their neighbours. The last time it happened was in 1994-95.

It was perilously close in 2005-06, when Tottenham entered the final day one point ahead of Arsenal in fourth. But then the majority of their team woke up with gastroenteritis or, according to folklore, a stomach bug from a dodgy lasagne and they did not have the strength to win at West Ham. Arsenal beat Wigan Athletic and laughed loudly.

Arsenal retain the hope of a third-placed finish, although they need Chelsea to slip up at home to Everton and there is the 130-1 shot, according to bookmakers, of an unprecedented play-off between the London clubs for the third and final automatic pass to the Champions League group phase. That fixture would take place at Villa Park on Sunday 26 May and would be needed if Chelsea were to draw against Everton and Arsenal won by one at Newcastle, scoring two more goals than Chelsea in the process. This would see the clubs inseparable on points, goal difference and goals scored.

But Sunday’s entertainment essentially boils down to Tottenham versus Arsenal; to the quest for each club to force themselves on to the right side of the finest of margins. Every other major issue in the division has been resolved. The spotlight on north London promises to be intense.

There was common ground between Wenger and Villas-Boas. The former noted how Arsenal had already equalled their 70-point tally from last season, despite the various problems that they had encountered, chief among them the demoralising departure of Robin van Persie to Manchester United, and he said that “I will keep fantastic memories of this team”.

Villas-Boas reflected a little wistfully on the clutch of recent draws and the 2-1 loss at Everton in December, when his team conceded twice in the last minute. “The Everton defeat was the real mark on the season,” he said. But he professed himself to be “extremely satisfied” with how his debut campaign had gone. “We always look back with the sensation that we’ve done things properly,” Villas-Boas said. “But it’s not up to me to judge.”

The judgment will come on Sunday evening and, for Arsenal in particular, it is hard to escape the feeling that it will be black or white. Even Wenger acknowledged that the financial consequences of missing out on the Champions League would be “big”, although he maintained that the sporting reasons would be the most painful.

As he prepared for the fixture against a Newcastle team still basking in the relief of avoiding relegation at Queens Park Rangers last Sunday, there was the narrowing of focus that has characterised the recent weeks for Arsenal. And confidence. Wenger positively brimmed with it.

At the beginning of March, after Arsenal lost the derby at White Hart Lane, they trailed Tottenham by seven points. Villas-Boas claimed that Arsenal were “in a negative spiral and once you get into that negative spiral, it’s difficult to get out of it”. The words ring hollow. Arsenal have since been unbeaten, winning seven and drawing two in the league. They even won at Bayern Munich immediately after the derby, even if it failed to prevent an away-goals exit from the Champions League.

“This team suffered for a very long time from a lack of confidence because you take the talisman away – Robin van Persie – and get new players in,” Wenger said. “Then you lose the first big games and suddenly, we are faced with scepticism. Balancing the team took a while but since this has been back we have been very efficient. The Bayern Munich away game was very important. You could feel after that we could do it.

“I had the feeling it could go to the last day and when we were seven points behind, we’d have been happy for that. But we’ve fought back to be in a position where we can master our own fate. We know how to behave to win. Let’s just continue what we’ve done recently.”

There were forward glances from both managers, inevitably, concerning personnel upgrades. Villas-Boas spoke of his desire to appoint a technical director to oversee player transfers and he admitted that he had tried to sign the Barcelona striker David Villa last season when he was in charge at Chelsea. Villa is a possible target for him again this summer.

Villas-Boas also said that with José Mourinho set to return to Chelsea and be afforded the money to make a huge impression on the market, the west London club would “absolutely be the team to beat” next season. Tottenham, he suggested, had to try to keep pace.

It tends to feel more cerebral at Arsenal and Wenger’s reflections on Sir Alex Ferguson, the outgoing United manager, carried an unwitting subtext. “He never looked like he refused to move forward and be open to new things,” Wenger said. “You have to respect this progressive attitude. We can all be a little bit restricted to our experience and what worked before.”

Wenger has regularly stood accused of the above and his revelation that he was close to signing the free agent and France Under-21 striker Yaya Sanogo from Auxerre sounded like something from the tried and trusted.

It was difficult, though, to look too far beyond Sunday’s showdown, when the passions will rage and the drama swirl. “It’s one of the biggest rivalries in football,” Villas-Boas said. “The buzz that you feel around the club now and the pressure is extraordinary.”

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André Villas-Boas wants Tottenham to appoint a technical director

Posted by & filed under Andre Villas-Boas, football, News, Sport, The Guardian, Tottenham Hotspur.

• Manager feels it would help secure world-class signings
• Roma’s Franco Baldini is favourite for the job

André Villas-Boas says that he wants Tottenham Hotspur to appoint a technical director in order to make them bigger players on the transfer market. The Roma general manager Franco Baldini, who previously held a similar post alongside Fabio Capello in the England setup, is the favourite for the job.

The Tottenham chairman Daniel Levy is an advocate of the two-tier continental-type structure, which can aid the continuity of player recruitment and, having inherited David Pleat as the director of football upon his arrival at the club in 2001, he went on to employ Frank Arnesen and Damien Comolli as the sporting director.

The results were mixed but Villas-Boas says that it would benefit him to work with such a figure, particularly one with the “experience of dressing rooms” rather than, for example, a boardroom executive. He worked productively with Antero Henrique at Porto.

Villas-Boas refused to say whether Baldini might be appointed at Tottenham, where Levy has not replaced the former chief scout, Ian Broomfield, who was central to player recruitment. Broomfield left to join Harry Redknapp at Queens Park Rangers. Levy sacked Redknapp as Tottenham’s manager last summer.

“The chairman and I have been outlining the route ahead for what we want to do in terms of the club structures and, hopefully, the arrival of somebody else in the structure for the recruitment side – a technical director,” Villas-Boas said. “Hopefully we can take those steps forward. It’s not up to me to confirm anything.

“The most important thing is the relationship between the person that bridges the gap between manager and board, and that he is able to be focused on the technical side of things. [It should be] someone who has experience of dressing rooms, represents the club, and is able to link up with players and agents.”

Villas-Boas made it clear that he was fully supportive of the appointment, and he suggested that he might be more comfortable purely as coach, who could concentrate on work on the training pitch.

“I think of a more European style of structure, of a head coach and then the functions of a manager will be handed up to a different person,” Villas-Boas said. “It’s something that works. Since the first day, I told the club that it’s somebody who is extremely important.”

Tottenham are notorious for leaving some of their transfer deals to the last moment, and the overlap between the start of the season and the closure of the summer window has, on occasion, been unsettling. “Ideally when you set up for the first game of the season … to have put the team to bed would be the ideal situation,” Villas-Boas said.

Tottenham will pursue “quality” additions regardless of whether they qualify for the Champions League and Villas-Boas had praise for the Barcelona striker David Villa, with whom he has been linked. “I tried to move him to Chelsea [last season],” he said. “He’s a world-renowned striker,” he said.

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Tottenham must beat Arsenal to Champions League to close wealth gap

Posted by & filed under Arsenal, Business, Champions League, Features, Finances, football, Sport, The Guardian, Tottenham Hotspur.

Tottenham’s income is dwarfed by Arsenal’s and they will struggle to sustain their elite status unless they make top four

Should Arsène Wenger lose his formidable record of 15 straight seasons in the Champions League and be beaten to the fourth qualifying spot by Arsenal’s north London rivals Tottenham Hotspur on Sunday , the hit will be tougher in football terms than financially.

For André Villas-Boas’s side, if they beat Sunderland at home and Arsenal fail to beat Newcastle away, a return to the Champions League will make a greater financial difference. Extraordinary as it seems, Spurs make fully £100m less income than the club with whom their fans most closely wish to compare themselves. The booming cash from the Emirates Stadium’s 60,000 seats and executive plushness, including the Champions League ties themselves, pushed Arsenal’s matchday income to £95m in 2011-12, more than three times that of Spurs at still 36,534-capacity old White Hart Lane. Arsenal made £245m last year, including £85m from TV and broadcasting, which includes Champions League income. Spurs made £144m altogether, a huge gap.

Last season Uefa harvested a total £1.1bn from the worldwide broadcasting rights of this most seductive club competition, and from selling its platform of sponsorships to Adidas, Ford, Gazprom, Mastercard and the other corporations.

Uefa distributed £865m of that Champions League money to the participating clubs, 55% in fixed amounts for those in the tournament from the group stage. The other 45% is paid in proportion to the size of a club’s national television market – how much their broadcasters contributed to the overall TV total. England is one of the biggest markets, so our clubs do well from this “pool” payment.

Arsenal qualified from the Champions League play-offs last season and made it to the round of 16, where they lost 4-3 to Milan on aggregate, having lost 4-0 away at San Siro. Their share of the Uefa Champions League income was £28m, less than half the £60m Chelsea earned from winning the trophy.

The five home matches played earned the Gunners healthy income on top of that, although the club’s accounts do not break down how much they make from each match. So although as a proportion of the overall £245m income Arsenal would survive decently enough without Champions League participation, it would be a serious blow.

Spurs’ Champions League run to quarter-final defeat in 2010-11 was a landmark boost to the club’s football pride, and a financial one, too. They made £25m more from Uefa distributions that season than in 2011-12, when they played in the far less lucrative Europa League. Overall last year Spurs’ income dropped 12% to £19m, from £163m to £144m.

This season Uefa estimated its gross Champions League income is £1.34bn, of which 75%, £1bn, will be shared among the clubs. With Arsenal and Manchester United knocked out in the round of 16, and Chelsea and Manchester City gone in the group stage, no English club will have earned dramatically this year as Chelsea did in 2011-12.

So, as Uefa itself argues, the financial benefits of playing in the competition can be exaggerated. As it accounts for around 10-15% of a Premier League club’s income, that means 85%-90% of the rich clubs’ earnings are made in domestic football, and that percentage will be even higher next season given the projected increase in the Premier League’s own TV deals.

Nevertheless, the Champions League earnings are still significant, helping to take the top four clubs into a tier financially above those outside European competition. Spurs will have difficulty sustaining top-four status until they can make more money consistently, with the long-proposed new stadium integral to that plan. Arsenal’s commercial success and filling of the Emirates has been based to some extent on their continuous qualification for the Champions League.

It raises a club’s status, and its ability to keep its stars such as Gareth Bale and Jack Wilshere, when players are competing in the most prestigious of tournaments, and broadcasts their virtues around the world. For all these reasons, not just the money, they all very much want to be in it.

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Tottenham Hotspur v Sunderland: squad sheets

Posted by & filed under football, News, Premier League, Sport, Sunderland, The Guardian, Tottenham Hotspur.

Sunderland are safe and they travel to London without a clutch of key players. But any notion that they might already have their minds on the beach has been scorched by Paolo Di Canio. The visitors will be up for this one and they will seek to derail Tottenham’s Champions League dream which, admittedly, also needs help from Newcastle United. André Villas-Boas will rely on the noises from the crowd to keep him informed of Arsenal’s fortunes at St James’ Park and he will focus merely on the victory he needs. It will be tense. David Hytner

Venue White Hart Lane, Sunday 4pm

Tickets Sold out

Last season Tottenham 1 Sunderland 0

Referee Andre Marriner

This season’s matches 23 Y72, R4, 3.30 cards per game

Odds Tottenham 3-10 Sunderland 11-1 Draw 19-4

Tottenham

Subs from Friedel, Naughton, Caulker, Carroll, Livermore, Huddlestone, Holtby, Sigurdsson, Defoe, Fredericks, Archer

Doubtful Assou-Ekotto (knee)

Injured Gallas (calf, Aug), Kaboul (thigh, Aug), Sandro (knee, Aug)

Suspended None

Form guide WDWDWD

Disciplinary record Y54 R2

Leading scorer Bale 20

Sunderland

Subs from Westwood, Rose, Kilgallon, Vaughan, Mangane, Bramble, Marrs, Mandron, Laidler, Egan, Noblem, Reed

Doubtful Bramble (calf)

Injured Cattermole (knee, Aug), Fletcher (ankle, Aug), Brown (knee, Aug)

Suspended Gardner (last of two), Sessègnon (last of three)

Inelegible Rose (terms of loan)

Form guide DDLWWL

Disciplinary record Y59 R2

Leading scorer Fletcher 11

Match pointers

• Tottenham are one point away from matching their best ever Premier League points total (70) set in 2009-10

• Sunderland have won just one of their past eight top-flight games with Tottenham

• Emmanuel Adebayor has scored five goals in his past six Premier League games in the month of May

• Sunderland have been caught offside on fewer times (67) than any other side

• Only Teddy Sheringham (21 in 1993-94) has scored more goals for Tottenham in a Premier League season than Gareth Bale (20) this term

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In Case You’ve Forgotten, This is a Full Strength Spurs Squad

Posted by & filed under Adebayor, andre, AVB, Bale, Boas, Club, Defoe, Dembele, dempsey, FC, Features, football, Hart, hotspur, injury, kaboul, lane, Lennon, Lloris, News, Sandro, selection, Sigurdsson, soccer, tactics, team, Tottenham, Vertonghen, Villas, white.

Sometimes during the long winning streaks this season, a small minority of fans were infected by a certain amount of hubris. As soon as a negative result happened, some took the opportunity to decry the club with both hands. “We didn’t spend enough money”, “Friedel is rubbish”, “Steffen Freund isn’t shouting loud enough”. Etcetera. But […]

Ten things to look out for in the Premier League this weekend | Louise Taylor

Posted by & filed under Arsenal, aston villa, Blogposts, Chelsea, Everton, football, Fulham, guardian.co.uk, Manchester City, manchester united, Newcastle United, Premier League, QPR, Sport, Sunderland, Tottenham Hotspur, Wigan Athletic.

Chelsea fans have the chance to say sorry to Rafael Benítez, Steve Harper bows out after 20 years at St James’ Park, while Sir Alex Ferguson – and possibly Wayne Rooney – say farewell to Manchester United

1 The Bridge of Sighs

Those Chelsea fans who, due to some imagined slight, made life so hard for Rafael Benítez have a chance to say sorry when the Europa League-winning manager presides over the last Premier League game of his interim reign. Hats off to Benítez for his “rant” – actually, it was a pretty measured statement of the obvious – against militant Chelsea fans after an FA Cup win at Middlesbrough at the end of February. He had the guts to stand up to them and stick to his guns. A few might even thank the “fat Spanish waiter” for moving David Luiz into a holding central midfield role and beginning the reawakening of Fernando Torres. Will José Mourinho – if he arrives – really do any better? Might the odd Chelsea fan even be a little sad to see Benítez go? Meanwhile, Everton supporters – not to mention the club’s owner, Bill Kenwright – will be holding back the tears as David Moyes takes charge of their team for the last time before moving on to Manchester United. After 11 largely successful years at Goodison he deserves the warmest of ovations.

2 Workaholic Sunderland

Paolo Di Canio has threatened to curtail his Sunderland players’ summer holidays, slashing them from nearly seven weeks down to four should he detect signs of “unprofessionalism” at White Hart Lane. With Tottenham and Arsenal competing for a Champions League place, this will be music to Arsène Wenger’s ears. Some Sunderland players who had planned to stay in London or fly abroad on Sunday night have been forced to cancel such plans as Di Canio has ordered the squad to fly back to Newcastle airport before spending “a few days” training on Wearside next week. At least Connor Wickham is listening to his new manager. A week after being berated by Di Canio for wearing a skimpy T-shirt and “acting like a playboy model” on a cold, rainy Wearside day, the young striker has taken to turning up for training wearing a scarf. “I’m very pleased,” Di Canio said.

3 Fergie’s farewell but will Wayne be there?

Sir Alex Ferguson bows out at West Bromwich Albion on what is bound to be an emotional occasion underpinned by a real “end of empire” feel. The Hawthorns is an atmospheric, evocative place; in other words, a “proper” football ground and an appropriate venue for Fergie’s last stand. All eyes will be on the retiring knight but the presence – or absence – of Wayne Rooney’s name from the team sheet promises to provide an intriguing subplot.

4 The aftermath of Colo’s Party

This week Sammy Ameobi posted pictures of a party held by Newcastle United’s captain, Fabricio Coloccini, at his very nice house in Jesmond, attended by what appeared to be Alan Pardew’s entire squad who were tucking into some fabulous-looking food. Was it a not-so-subtle message that Newcastle’s players are very firmly bonded rather than divided into French- and English-speaking cliques or simply a farewell to a centre-half widely expected to play his last game for Newcastle at home to Arsenal on Sunday before returning to his native Argentina? Maybe it was a bit of both but, on the pitch, Pardew will need Coloccini to be at his very best against Wenger’s Champions League hopefuls. And especially after Newcastle conceded nine goals in their past two games at St James’ Park, against Sunderland and Liverpool.

5 Jack Colback v Aaron Lennon

Jack Colback regressed under Martin O’Neill at Sunderland but the versatile midfielder or full-back has improved dramatically under Di Canio and is fast emerging as a real favourite of the Italian. On Sunday he is pencilled in to play left-back against Aaron Lennon. The outcome of that little duel could have a bearing on the composition of next season’s Champions League. It will be watched with interest by Danny Rose, the ineligible Spurs left-back who has impressed while spending the past season on loan at Sunderland. Rose and Colback look destined to turn into top players.

6 Harper’s last hurrah

After 20 years’ sterling service at St James’ Park – too often sitting on the bench as reserve goalkeeper – the 38-year-old Steve Harper makes his final, and 199th, appearance for Newcastle at home to Arsenal before leaving the club. Injuries to Tim Krul and Rob Elliot mean the popular Harper will receive a richly deserved send-off. He is doing his coaching badges but hopes to play for another year before carving out a career in management. Tottenham’s manager, André Villas-Boas, will be keeping everything crossed he plays a blinder.

7 The definition of anticlimax

If anyone wants to understand what an anticlimax feels like they should hot-foot it to Wigan for their home game with Aston Villa. A week after beating Manchester City in the FA Cup final, Roberto Martínez’s side are relegated and preparing for Championship life. Suddenly a game that for weeks had been billed as a potential do-or-die battle for survival with Villa is utterly meaningless. It will be a bitter-sweet afternoon but at least, as my colleague Paul Wilson pointed out this week, the music at Wigan is invariably excellent.

8 Martin Jol’s message to Gus Poyet

Martin Jol’s Fulham have taken one point from their past seven games and contain 12 players aged over 30 in a squad desperately in need of overhauling. Craven Cottage sources maintain Jol will not be sacked but Gus Poyet, much lauded for his work at Brighton, has admirers in Fulham’s boardroom and is thought to be keen on relocating to west London. There could not be a better time for Jol’s Fulham to win at Swansea, with Dimitar Berbatov perhaps issuing a reminder of his defence-confounding talent.

9 Harry Redknapp’s last Premier League game?

Few would bet on it but Redknapp is 66, his QPR side are relegated, so it is not entirely inconceivable that this visit to Liverpool could represent the final act of one of the Premier League’s more colourful managerial careers.

10 Absent faces at the Etihad

Roberto Mancini, David Platt and most of the rest of the Italian’s old staff have cleared their desks, with only Brian Kidd remaining to coach Manchester City against Norwich as City await Manuel Pellegrini’s arrival from Málaga and the beginning of – another – brave new world. It is incredible to think that the Premier League’s top three teams – Manchester United, Manchester City and Chelsea – will be under new management next season.

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Can I get a Left-Back up in Here?: Spurs v Sunderland Tactical Preview

Posted by & filed under AFC, analysis, Bale, BPL, Club, coys, danny, di canio, EPL, FC, Features, football, formation, Hart, highlights, hotspur, hotspurs, injury, lane, Lennon, Match, News, paolo, preview, Report, Review, rose, season, Spurs, Sunderland, tactical, tactics, THFC, Tottenham, white.

Well, there’s ninety minutes of the 2012/13 season left, and Champions League football might not be in our hands, but you can’t say that Tottenham haven’t given it a damn good go. If Tottenham win against Sunderland at White Hart Lane but don’t qualify for the Champions Leauge, they’ll have still finished the season on 72 […]