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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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Who is the best Premier League right-back? | Stats Comparison

Posted by & filed under AFC, Arsenal (M), Arsenal (NN), aston villa, AVFC, Azpilicueta, Bacary Sagna, baggies, Bosingwa, boyce, BPL, Canaries, CFC, Chelsea, city, clyne, Coleman, danny simpson, demel, efc, english Premier league, English Premier League Opta Stats, English Premier League Stats, EPL, EPL Index Featured Article, EPL Index Statistical Comparisons, epl opta stats, EPL Stats, Everton, ffc, Fulham, full back, full backs, gardner, Glen Johnson, gunter, hammers, Johnson, Jones, Kyle Walker, latics, LFC, Liverpool, lowton, Man City, Man Utd., manchester, Manchester City, manchester united, Manchester Utd, martin, MCFC, MUFC, Nathaniel Clyne, Newcastle, Norwich, NUFC, opta, Opta Stats, pl, potters, Premier League, premier league opta stats, Premiership, QPR, Queens Park Rangers, Rafael, rangel, Reading, reither, RFC, Right Back, right backs, Sagna, Saints, SCFC, SFC, Shotton, Simpson, Southampton, Spurs, Stoke, Stoke City, Sunderland, swans, Swansea, THFC, toon, Tottenham, Tottenham Hotspur, United, Villa, WAFC, Walker, WBA, wbafc, west brom, West Bromwich Albion, West Ham, West Ham United, WHU, WHUFC, Wigan, Wigan Athletic, Zabaleta.

When you’re sitting in the pub with your mates, picking your favourites of the Premier League, the one position that has to be the hardest to choose a winner for is the right-back. It is not in any way as easy as left-back, with Ashley Cole usually taking that spot, and Leighton Baines coming through [...]

Who is the best Premier League right-back? | Stats Comparison

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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

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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The Premier League Shockers – How common are the shocking upsets?

Posted by & filed under Arsenal, Arsenal (M), Arsenal (NN), aston villa, Blackburn Rovers, Bolton, Bolton Wanderers, CFC, Chelsea, Chelsea Stats, english Premier league, English Premier League Opta Stats, EPL, EPL Index Featured Article, EPL Index Statistical Comparisons, epl opta stats, EPL Stats, Everton, Fulham, Liverpool, Manchester City, manchester united, Manchester Utd, Newcastle United, Newcastle Utd, Norwich, Norwich City, Premier League, premier league opta stats, Premier League Shocking Upsets, Premier League Upset Results, QPR, Reading, Shockers, Shocking Upsets, Southampton, Spurs, Stoke City, Sunderland, Swansea, Swansea City, Tottenham, Tottenham Hotspur, west brom, West Bromwich Albion, West Ham United, Wigan, Wigan Vs QPR Preview, Wolves.

Ok, so Landry was talking about the ‘other’ type of football, however the sentiment remains true for ‘real’ football.  One of the most beautiful things about the beautiful game is the potential for a freak, unexpected result.  An incredible, unbelievable result. There’s nothing that neutral football fans enjoy more than seeing an underdog grabbing a [...]

The Premier League Shockers – How common are the shocking upsets?

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Belgian’s Taking over the EPL | Hazard, Dembele, Fellaini, Benteke et al Stats

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The Belgians are coming, you have been warned. If we didn’t already know about the remarkable number of talented players coming out of Belgium in recent years we do now. Many people have already earmarked them as dark horses for next year’s World Cup with a view to them becoming genuine contenders for the European [...]

Belgian’s Taking over the EPL | Hazard, Dembele, Fellaini, Benteke et al Stats

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Not A Good Day For Tottenham – 7th May

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May 7th is not a day that has brought much joy for Tottenham. On that day they have suffered relegation and avoided defeat on only four occasions. WARNING – Not for Spurs supporters of a nervous or anxious disposition On This Day 7th May, 1977 Manchester City 5  Tottenham Hotspur 0 (1st Division) The darkest [...]

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Stat Heaven: EA Sports Performance Index

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As we enter the closing weeks of this Premier League season, fuel your pub knowledge with this week’s Stat Heaven, packed with so many decimal points we make Opta jealous.

Top Counter Attacking Teams This Season | Opta Stats Analysis

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Teams that can hit you on the counter attack at any moment are incredibly hard to defend against, especially when speed merchants such as Gareth Bale and Theo Walcott are running at your defence. So which teams have impressed in the counter attack and …

Premier League: 10 things to look out for this weekend

Posted by & filed under Arsenal, Blogposts, football, guardian.co.uk, Manchester City, manchester united, Newcastle United, Premier League, QPR, Reading, Sport, Sunderland, Swansea City, Tottenham Hotspur, West Bromwich Albion, Wigan Athletic.

Coded messages from Roberto Mancini and Sam Allardyce, Lukas Podolski’s big chance and QPR’s impending implosion

1) This is Podolski’s moment

Arsenal fans love to sing about how they won the league at Old Trafford in 2002 and, although the prospect of giving the returning Robin van Persie a guard of honour must be sickening to some, at least Manchester United will not become the first team to win a trophy at the Emirates. Perhaps it will work in Arsenal’s favour that a potentially bleary-eyed United wrapped up their 20th title on Monday night. A small blessing, though, and the sight of Van Persie will infuriate the home fans, who saw another star player leave last summer. Yet the problem was not only that Arsenal lost Van Persie but also that Arsène Wenger did not adequately replace him. Olivier Giroud is not a flop. Let’s not go that far. But Arsenal still downsized. Giroud will be suspended against United, though, which means that there could be a place for another of Wenger’s summer signings, Lukas Podolski, who has hardly been a roaring success, although he has not been helped by a niggling ankle injury which could require surgery. He has been out of the picture in recent weeks but this is a big chance for him to make everyone forget about Van Persie and prove that he deserves the central role he craves. Jacob Steinberg

2) Is it time for Ben Arfa?

Newcastle’s struggles this season can partly be attributed to Hatem Ben Arfa’s injury problems. Without the Frenchman, they have lacked a spark and often resorted to falling back on a long-ball style which is unlikely to endear Alan Pardew to Newcastle’s supporters for too long. Ben Arfa is a player who can conjure something out of nothing, such as his outlandish solo goals against Blackburn and Bolton last season, but Newcastle have been unable to rely on that ingenuity this year. After recovering from his hamstring injury, Ben Arfa has made three appearances off the bench, but with Newcastle in need of points to secure their Premier League status, the visit of a Liverpool side that will be missing Luis Suárez could be the perfect time to unleash the winger. JS

3) Tottenham beware

Roberto Martínez could not have sounded more pleased with Wigan’s performances in their past two matches, against Manchester City and West Ham. Just to be clear, they lost both, scoring in neither, and in recent weeks it has been possible to detect a certain arrogance about Wigan which seems to be hurting their chances of survival. They can be a great side to watch but sometimes there is a sense that they are too pleased about their own brilliance to actually capitalise on it, which was the case when their sterile dominance over 10-man QPR meant they drew a game that they should have won. So now they find themselves being written off. Again. And that’s exactly what they want us to do. Logically a Tottenham side revitalised by Gareth Bale should have no problems at the DW Stadium and yet, in a strange way, because they’re a strange team, no one would be surprised by a Wigan win. JS

4) West Brom’s slide

Many folks foresaw Steve Clarke struggling in his debut campaign as a No1 manager but the only bother that West Bromwich Albion have been in all season came via that slapstick Peter Odemwingie skit. Still, the early-season challenge for Europe has long since faded and the task now is to ensure a top-half finish – anything else would be a disappointment given their start to the season. Southampton, however, are well equipped to leapfrog them during the run-in and fulfil Nicola Cortese’s ambition of not merely avoiding relegation but doing so in style. Finishing in the top 10 may just convince Roy Hodgson to give Rickie Lambert and Jack Cork (as well Adam Lallana, Nathaniel Clyne and Luke Shaw) a chance and remind Didier Deschamps that Morgan Schneiderlin is French and fantastic. Paul Doyle

5) QPR’s impending implosion

Queens Park Rangers’ season has been a case study in self-destruction. From misguided recruitment to limp performances and barmy red cards, own-goals and goofs, they’ve seldom been anything other than laughable. The owners have been made to look like fools but naive ambition is a forgivable enough offence. Perhaps more so than excessive caution. Reading are guilty not of investing badly but of underinvesting. They did not jeopardise their financial future, which is obviously good, but nor did they give themselves realistic prospects of surviving, which is bad, especially as they made the same mistake when getting relegated five years ago. The upshot of all this failure is that both sides are going down, meaning Sunday’s match between the pair is about little more than salvaging pride, of which Reading’s players have shown more this season. PD

6) Swansea’s Davies stealing the show

Swansea lifted their first major trophy this season and played their distinctive eye-catching style, yet their achievements remain understated. The absence of Michu from the PFA Player of the Year top six was surprising but Ben Davies would be entitled to feel even more hard done-by to be overlooked for the Young Player of the Year. He had almost zero senior experience when he was thrown into the first team to replace the injured Neil Taylor three games into this season but quickly gave the impression that he had been there for years. His composure and tidy dynamism make him perfectly suited to Swansea and, indeed, to Wales, for whom he now has senior caps. At Stamford Bridge this weekend he will come up against Eden Hazard, who was nominated for the senior and young player of the year gongs – the Belgian is brilliant but he has not been as consistently impressive as Davies this season: and the last time they met Hazard got so frustrated he wound up booting a ballboy. PD

7) A preference for defeat?

Apart perhaps from flying badgers and philanthropic bankers, few things seem as unnatural as fans hoping their own team lose. Yet this weekend some supporters will find themselves feeling perverse. Oh yes. A minority of Arsenal fans, for instance, may hope that Robin van Persie fires Manchester United to victory at the Emirates to ram home to the Arsenal hierarchy the need for a change of policy; similarly, many Stoke fans must hope that Norwich win at the Britannia this weekend to hasten Tony Pulis towards the exit. Other fans will believe that Pulis has earned the right to show that he has learned from this season’s mistakes and will evolve for next term, but others are convinced that such a change from Pulis goes beyond unnatural to totally impossible. PD

8) Sarcasm is the lowest form of wit

With second place all but guaranteed after the most feeble title defence since the director Andrew Dominik insisted naming his movie The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford wasn’t a plot spoiler, it will be interesting to see how Roberto Mancini’s petulance manifests itself when his side entertain West Ham. During last weekend’s reverse at the hands of Tottenham Hotspur, the City manager sent Joleon Lescott on to play as a makeshift centre-forward for the closing minutes, stopping short of forcing the centre-half to carry a placard bearing the message: “Hey Sheikh Mansour, look what the gaffer’s reduced to”, presumably in an attempt to draw attention to the paucity of decent options available on his bench. Underneath that trademark blue and white scarf there is clearly a resolutely brass neck. Standing in the adjacent technical area to Mancini on Saturday lunchtime will be none other than Mr Sam Allardyce, another manager with previous in the field of dropping sledgehammer subtle hints to his employers through the medium of naming (or, more pertinently, not naming) replacements. With both sides having little to play for, the battle to see who can make the most sarcastic substitutions could be the most fiercely fought of the match. Barry Glendenning

9) Wilson or Di Canio?

In this week’s Football Weekly … Extra, pyramid-inverting award-winning Blizzard editor Jonathan Wilson observed that Sunderland’s next three matches are against Aston Villa, Stoke and Southampton and that a point from each match would do all four teams quite nicely, thank you very much. In what can only be described as an innocence-busting endorsement for skulduggery of the most snakebelly-low cunning, Wilson went on to suggest that if he were manager of his hometown club, he’d suggest to suits from Villa, Stoke and Southampton that a spot of mutual back-scratching might be in order to keep everyone concerned in the Premier League and send some other shower of underachieving mugs down to the Championship. Thankfully, for the sake of the few shreds of the Premier League’s integrity that remain intact, Sunderland are not managed by Wilson, but by Paolo Di Canio, who is an Italian. BG

10) There really isn’t much to look forward to about Everton v Fulham

Go on, guess who got last pick when it came to looking forward to something in this round of Premier League fixtures? BG

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EPL Top Players So Far | Goal Scorers, Creators, Assists & Passers!

Posted by & filed under Arsenal, aston villa, Chelsea, David Silva, English Premier League Opta Stats, English Premier League Stats, EPL, EPL Index Featured Article, EPL Index Statistical Comparisons, epl opta stats, EPL Stats, Everton, Fulham, Gareth Bale, Liverpool, Luis Suarez, Manchester City, Manchester Utd, Newcastle Utd, opta, Opta Stats, Premier League, Premier League Most Assists, Premier League Most Chances Created, premier league opta stats, Premier League Top Players, Premier League Top Scorers, Premier League's best players, Robin Van Persie, Santi Cazorla, Steven Gerrard, Swansea City, Tottenham Hotspur, Wayne Rooney, West Bromwich Albion, West Ham United.

Welcome to our monthly edition of the Premier League’s top players. With Manchester United wrapping up the title against Aston Villa on Monday night the attention now turns to the battle for the Champions League places, the race for survival and which player will be crowned as the player of the year and young player [...]

EPL Top Players So Far | Goal Scorers, Creators, Assists & Passers!

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Tottenham Hotspur 3 Man City 1 | Tactical Analysis & Stats

Posted by & filed under Bale, Bale Stats, English Premier League Opta Stats, English Premier League Stats, EPL, EPL Index Featured Article, epl opta stats, EPL Stats, EPLIndex Tactical Report, Gareth Bale, Manchester City, opta, Opta Stats, Premier League, premier league opta stats, Spurs, Spurs Stats, Tottenham Hotspur, Tottenham Hotspur 3 Man City 1 Tactical Analysis, Tottenham Hotspur 3 Manchester City 1 Match Report, Tottenham Hotspur 3 Manchester City 1 Tactical Analysis, Tottenham Stats.

An excellent encounter at White Hart Lane ended with Tottenham Hotspur coming from behind to win. A game that Man City took a grip of initially, eventually saw key tactical changes from Villa Boas which dragged Spurs forward and altered the complexion of the game. Line Ups Having recovered from injury, Villa Boas put Gareth [...]

Tottenham Hotspur 3 Man City 1 | Tactical Analysis & Stats

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Premier League Top Players So Far | Goal Scorers, Creators, Assists & Passers!

Posted by & filed under Arsenal, aston villa, Chelsea, David Silva, English Premier League Opta Stats, English Premier League Stats, EPL, EPL Index Featured Article, EPL Index Statistical Comparisons, epl opta stats, EPL Stats, Everton, Fulham, Gareth Bale, Liverpool, Luis Suarez, Manchester City, Manchester Utd, Newcastle Utd, opta, Opta Stats, Premier League, Premier League Most Assists, Premier League Most Chances Created, premier league opta stats, Premier League Top Players, Premier League Top Scorers, Premier League's best players, Robin Van Persie, Santi Cazorla, Steven Gerrard, Swansea City, Tottenham Hotspur, Wayne Rooney, West Bromwich Albion, West Ham United.

Welcome to our monthly edition of the Premier League’s top players. With Manchester United wrapping up the title against Aston Villa on Monday night the attention now turns to the battle for the Champions League places, the race for survival and which player will be crowned as the player of the year and young player [...]

Premier League Top Players So Far | Goal Scorers, Creators, Assists & Passers!

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Clint Dempsey Has Plenty To Smile About In First Season At Tottenham

Posted by & filed under Clint Dempsey, featured, important goals, Manchester City, popular, soccer, Spurs, Tottenham Hotspur.

Clint Dempsey has seen his stature rise once again as Tottenham’s season draws to a close. After a difficult start with Spurs, he established himself in the team before losing out due to the return of Emmanuel Adebayor and injury. Now restored to the team he can smile at three goals in the last two [...]

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What the Premier League also-rans need to challenge Manchester United

Posted by & filed under Arsenal, Blogposts, Chelsea, Everton, football, guardian.co.uk, Liverpool, Manchester City, manchester united, Premier League, Sport, Tottenham Hotspur.

United have won the title with four games to spare, but all is not necessarily lost for their main challengers next season

ARSENAL

Why are they 21 points behind?

Selling their best player, Robin van Persie, to United and watching him bang in goals for them was not a hugely encouraging start. Olivier Giroud, who has needed time to settle, has struggled to fill his boots. Cashing in on key personnel and failing to sign replacements that are better is nothing new and it has raised questions about the club’s ambition, glass ceilings and transfer market policy. Is Arsenal’s true goal a Champions League finish?

What they need to do in the summer?

Sign world-class talent, with the priority positions being goalkeeper, defensive midfield and centre-forward.

Can they catch United next season?

Unlikely. Arsène Wenger has the funds at his disposal to sign £20m-plus players, which might help to accelerate a bridging of the gap but, at heart, he is opposed to splashing out in such fashion. He remains committed to prudent spending and developing players. His belief in his principals is unwavering but he has not won a trophy since 2005. David Hytner

CHELSEA

Why are they 22 points behind?

This has been exposed as a season of transition at Stamford Bridge, overseen by an interim manager the supporters do not want and driven by a team crammed with key players still adjusting to a new league. The old guard are being phased out, the sheer number of games draining energy and momentum from the league campaign. Those factors combined have left them floundering, even if anything above sixth would technically be an improvement on last term.

What they need to do in the summer?

Appoint a new manager who can unite the squad, galvanise the support and convince the hierarchy he is the answer, and continue the process of regeneration with players of class who can make an immediate impact. José Mourinho, a manager who virtually guarantees trophies, is the fans’ choice. The likes of André Schürrle, Radamel Falcao, Marouane Fellaini and Paulinho would inject further quality into the squad, if they can be convinced to come.

Can they catch United next season?

On the basis that this United side are not streets ahead, despite what the table suggests, then possibly. But Chelsea retain that ability to implode. A title challenge in two years’ time might be more realistic. Dominic Fifield

EVERTON

Why are they 28 points behind?

That Everton are in the bracket of United’s rivals, and still have an outside chance of Champions League qualification, is testament to the outstanding work of David Moyes and his players. One of only four teams to beat United in the league this season, a lack of resources has inevitably caught up on the squad at times, particularly up front where Nikica Jelavic has failed to repeat the goalscoring prowess of last season.

What they need to do in the summer?

So much rests on whether Moyes renews his contract or leaves. Should he stay then adding a few quality additions – while keeping Marouane Fellaini and Leighton Baines – would have a profound impact on a team that is close to fulfilling its to- four promise.

Can they catch United next season?

Not without finally unearthing fresh investment. Everton could, however, get closer if they deliver on the previous answer. Andy Hunter

LIVERPOOL

Why are they 33 points behind?

A dreadful start to the season under Brendan Rodgers left Liverpool playing catch-up long before his intended style began to take shape in the new year. Inconsistent and with only one world-class forward in Luis Suárez – whose stunning form is the sole reason Liverpool are not even further adrift – the signs of progress have come only in flashes.

What they need to do in the summer?

Retain Suárez at all costs and prove that lessons have been learned from the transfer mistakes that Rodgers and the club’s owner made last summer. The team need more leaders, especially in a central defence that will be losing Jamie Carragher this summer, and for their owner’s under-24s-only transfer policy to be relaxed.

Can they catch United next season?

Given Rodgers will have had a season to impose his ideas, and Liverpool’s recruitment team is now in place, there should be a more consistent challenge next season but overhauling a 33-point gap in one summer is a tall order. Andy Hunter

MANCHESTER CITY

Why are they 16 points behind?

If any of Robin van Persie, Eden Hazard, Javi Martínez and Daniel De Rossi had been bought last summer the quality of Roberto Mancini’s squad would have increased and we would not be having this postmortem a month from the season’s end. Fingers also have to be pointed at the star men who have disappointed. Step forward Joe Hart, Vincent Kompany, Sergio Agüero, Carlos Tevez, David Silva and Samir Nasri: all have failed to find the consistency they are paid lucratively to guarantee.

What they need to do in the summer?

Up to 11 players could leave so recruitment must better than last summer. The element missing is searing pace so adding a lightning wide player would allow Mancini’s gang to open up teams who have learned to stifle the clever-clever approach that relies on David Silva too much. Also, a forward who can genuinely compete with Carlos Tevez and Sergio Agüero.

Can they catch United next season?

Yes. But as City plan to play 4-3-3 once August comes this system must be tried and tested. Jamie Jackson

TOTTENHAM HOTSPUR

Why are they 23 points behind?

Despite Andre Villas-Boas’ rhetoric in July that his new club ought to be genuine title contenders, the realistic target was always going to be top-four, particularly as there has been so much transition in terms of personnel. The loss of Luka Modric was huge, even though Mousa Dembele has enjoyed a fine season and the injury to Sandro was another blow. Villas-Boas’ counter-attacking style has yielded excellent results away from home but he is yet to find the key at White Hart Lane. The failure to sign a striker in January, coupled with Emmanuel Abedayor’s toils, did not help.

What they need to do in the summer?

Keep Gareth Bale. Sign a striker (they must accept that Brazil’s No9 Leandro Damiao is worth more than £13m) and possibly add cover on the flanks, although Andros Townsend’s return from his loan at QPR might be one solution.

Can they catch United next season?

No. David Hytner

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Tactical Triumph for Andre Villas-Boas As Tottenham Defeat Man City

Posted by & filed under Andre Villas-Boas, featured, Manchester City, popular, soccer, Spurs, tactical switch, Tottenham Hotspur.

Andre Villas-Boas enjoyed a tactical triumph as Tottenham recovered from a goal down to beat Manchester City 3 – 1 in the Premier League at White Hart Lane. The match was almost identical to the match in Manchester in November when City’s manager Roberto Mancini’s switch of tactics brought City success with two late goals. [...]

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Tottenham rewarded after André Villas-Boas shows his flexible thinking | Michael Cox

Posted by & filed under Comment, football, Football tactics, Manchester City, Premier League, Sport, The Guardian, Tottenham Hotspur.

The manager’s introductions of Huddlestone, Holtby and Defoe were timed to perfection in the victory over Manchester City

This is precisely the sort of display we expected when André Villas-Boas arrived in England nearly two years ago – Tottenham won this game thanks to pace, width and clinical finishing, following an intelligent tactical switch from their manager.

In a first half that Manchester City dominated, the two teams were arranged in a similar fashion – Scott Parker sat deep and allowed Mousa Dembélé to storm forward, while Gareth Barry did the same for Yaya Touré. Both sets of wide players came inside quickly, while Edin Dzeko and Emmanuel Adebayor were largely isolated up front.

The major difference was the player “in the hole” on either side. Spurs used the fit-again Gareth Bale, who received the ball in dangerous positions in the opening moments, but gradually found his space restricted as City remained compact. With Clint Dempsey and, in particular, Gylfi Sigurdsson moving inside, City defended narrow and Bale was crowded out.

At the other end, Carlos Tevez showed greater positional intelligence throughout the first half, positioning himself between the lines, and constantly drifting to the flanks to overload Tottenham in wide areas. His pass to James Milner in the build-up to Samir Nasri’s opener was sublime, and the Argentine also created chances for Nasri and Dzeko with clever touches after finding himself unmarked.

Villas-Boas made a subtle change at half-time: Bale swapping with Dempsey and moving to the right flank. This unwittingly played into City’s hands, however – Roberto Mancini had been forced to replace the injured Milner with Aleksandar Kolarov, who went to the left flank. In tandem with Gaël Clichy, City shut down Bale’s space easily.

After an hour, Villas-Boas changed things more dramatically, moving from a 4-2-3-1 to a 4-3-3. Tom Huddlestone replaced Parker and sat solidly in the holding role, tracking Tevez across the pitch, and spraying some excellent forward passes into attack. Meanwhile, Lewis Holtby replaced Sigurdsson, and alongside Dembélé helped overpower Barry and Touré with sheer energy.

Once Jermain Defoe had replaced the ineffectual Adebayor 10 minutes later, Spurs were playing in a completely different fashion. Their first half attacks were slow and involved various players crowding the centre – now, with Bale higher up the pitch and looking for balls in behind, an approach Defoe instinctively replicated, they could attack directly at speed. Forward passes were combined with clever runs, and Spurs were superb for the final 20 minutes and Mancini failed to respond tactically.

With Spurs in a powerful 4-3-3 and Bale out on the right, cutting inside on to his left foot in the manner of Brazilian forward Hulk, Spurs were reminiscent of Villas-Boas’s Porto side that won the Portuguese league unbeaten and the Europa League in 2010-11.

The impression that Tottenham have rediscovered their ‘vertical’ style of play, the fact that Villas-Boas himself was a crucial part of the victory, and the small matter of three points against a quality side at such a crucial stage of the season, means this win might one day be considered pivotal in Spurs’ evolution under their Portuguese tactician.

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Roberto Mancini rounds on Manchester City players after Spurs defeat

Posted by & filed under football, Manchester City, News, Roberto Mancini, Sport, The Guardian, Tottenham Hotspur.

• City manager disappointed with attitude during title defence
• United can win title at home to Aston Villa on Monday

Roberto Mancini has questioned the attitude of his Manchester City players, wondering whether it has been the equal of their Manchester United counterparts as his club prepared to hand over the Premier League title to their cross-town rivals.

City’s 3-1 defeat at White Hart Lane by a Tottenham Hotspur team that made a dramatic statement about their Champions League credentials meant that United will secure their 20th league championship with a home win over Aston Villa on Monday night.

Mancini was as bewildered as many others in north London on Sunday afternoon as City failed to build upon an early lead and then surrendered a position of comfort in the closing stages. Inspired by Gareth Bale and three highly effective substitutions by André Villas-Boas, Tottenham scored three goals in seven minutes to reignite a top-four dream that appeared to have faded.

As Villas-Boas looked ahead to Tottenham’s final five matches, with the decisive one to come at Chelsea, Mancini was left to reflect on his players’ desire, which he suggested had to be the problem as there was nothing to choose between them and United in technical terms.

“We don’t have a gap [to United],” said Mancini, the City manager. “The last two or three years … every time we have played United, we have played better, also when we have lost the game. We lost in the last minute [earlier in the season]. Last year, we beat them easily. The reason there is a gap like today [in the league] … probably there is more attitude, they wanted. They started the season and they wanted to win after last year. There are many reasons why we lose but I repeat, they deserve to win it.”

Mancini was asked whether he thought City had gifted Untied the title. “Sometimes, we probably did,” he replied. “I think the 13- or 15-point gap is not reality for this championship. They are not a better team but they deserve to win this title because we lost a lot of points in games we probably didn’t deserve to lose. United won a lot of games in a row with goals and they deserve to win the title.

“The race was finished three or four weeks ago. Will I watch the Villa game? If I am at home, why not? It will mean nothing to us. We wanted to win this championship. What can we do? We can maybe say only congratulations to them. When you win, you deserve to win it. You always need a bit of luck in football. It is like life. But they did not win by luck. They had a better attitude because they lost last year.”

Mancini appeared to revisit an old grievance when he spoke of United buying “some new players in the summer and they scored a lot of goals.” He had been determined to sign the striker Robin Van Persie from Arsenal, only for the Dutchman to join United and deliver 21 league goals so far this season.

“I’m not happy because I like to win the championship,” Mancini added. “This was our target. I’m not happy with the season because I want always the maximum. But we have another chance to win the FA Cup and I think the FA Cup is important. And we can be in second position. If that is not good enough, then every manager should be sacked.”

Villas-Boas highlighted Clint Dempsey’s 75th minute equaliser as the turning point and he said that his players’ confidence had been restored. “We still have to reach our objectives for this season to be considered a full success,” he said. “Hopefully we are able to achieve it. We are in control because we have the game in hand but it is against Chelsea, and it’s a difficult game at Stamford Bridge.”

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Manchester City’s capitulation at Tottenham sums up their season | Barney Ronay

Posted by & filed under Andre Villas-Boas, Comment, football, Manchester City, Premier League, Roberto Mancini, Sport, The Guardian, Tottenham Hotspur.

Roberto Mancini’s side outclassed Spurs for 70 minutes but then seemed to drift at vital moments, just as they have done to concede the title to Manchester United

With 70 minutes of this match gone Manchester City seemed to be providing a thrummingly well-engineered glimpse into the medium-term future, not so much outclassing Tottenham as simply refusing to let them to play at all, and delivering an invigorating pointer towards what the Premier League – and even Europe – might expect next season. And yet, by the end of the match Steffen Freund, prominent throughout in his capering managerial wingman role, could be seen pinching the cheeks of a junior Tottenham ballboy with such celebratory vigour that the ballboy was still rubbing them in discomfort as he walked down the tunnel a few minutes later. Behind him City’s players, trudging off the White Hart Lane turf in watery spring sunshine, looked as through they could have done with a pinch or two of their own after one of the season’s more improbable 3-1 defeats.

And yet there was something oddly familiar too here, a temptation to see in City’s glossily expert capitulation a cartoonish sense of a season in microcosm. City have made a habit of veering on to the hard shoulder and offering Manchester United the road in the title race. Here they again looked like the best team in the country for most of the match but still managed to end it as glum-faced champions un-elect, offering United the chance to take back an expensively acquired league championship at the earliest opportunity with victory on Monday night at home to Aston Villa.

“They [United] are not better than us, but they deserve to win the title,” Roberto Mancini said afterwards. Which begs the obvious question: how did that happen then? And where does it leave the manger who has overseen such underperformance?

In a sense City’s annihilating first-half show – a 1-0 thrashing of comprehensive proportions – makes defeat seem even more dysfunctional. City were better in every department. In the battle of the side-winding English ball-shuttlers, Scott Parker was overshadowed by Gareth Barry. He may have attracted the rather unkind nickname “Davros” from some Spurs supporters – tribute to his favourite slow-motion, 180-degree turn in possession, reminiscent of the chair-bound swivels of the Dalek overlord – but Parker battled gamely as ever. He was simply outgunned by City’s superior central power; just as City’s attack had both teeth and high-class lateral movement, whereas Spurs had Emmanuel Adebayor. If there is some consolation in the fact that Spurs have won just once in the Premier League when Adebayor has scored this season, it is perhaps to be found in the fact that at least he doesn’t score very often. With Carlos Tevez in full rampant-scullery-mouse mode, the contrast between the Togolese and the world’s least sedentary itinerant footballing hired gun could not have been more pronounced, not least in Tevez’s scamper and lovely pass inside for the opening goal, which was beautifully finished by Samir Nasri.

Of course, Tottenham won this game as much as City lost it and there will be much credit given to André Villas-Boas, whose substitutions and change of shape, allowing Bale licence in the second half to rove from his central position, led directly to Spurs’ three goals in seven minutes. Great players make tactical tweaks into masterstrokes (Villas-Boas also looked to have picked the wrong team for 70 minutes) and Bale’s dinked finish for the crowning third goal, delivered at full speed, 81 minutes into the match, but still as dainty as a man skimming the top off his boiled egg, will linger in the memory. Similarly, Villas-Boas deserves credit for bringing on the more physically imposing Tom Huddlestone for a battered-looking Parker, who spent his hour on the pitch buzzing around Yaya Touré like a wing-weary bumblebee trying to bring down an articulated lorry.

But what exactly were City doing all that time? In a way, this has been the story of their season, betrayed by a sense of drift at vital moments. Blessed with endless attacking angles and intelligently led on the right by James Milner in the first half, City essentially vanished in those final 15 minutes, unable to find the secondary surge that was so in evidence towards the end of last season. Some will point to Vincent Kompany being at fault for Tottenham’s first two goals. But City’s real failing here was an inability to do enough with their patent superiority. Despite playing like champions – driving forward like champions, tackling in midfield like champions – they still managed to leave the pitch with Spurs fans singing “you’re not champions any more”.

Mancini has looked increasingly secure as the title has slipped away amid the consolations of familiarly steamrollering form in league and cup. But here his assistants were particularly upset at the final whistle, with David Platt involved in a wretched moment of shoulder-barging bravado with José Mário Rocha, Spurs’ fitness coach. No doubt a coherent medium-term plan is in place at the Etihad Stadium. But this was a strangely decelerating display, and untimely too for a champion team who have displaced their decisive champion’s bite a little too often for comfort this season.

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Tottenham Hotspur 3-1 Manchester City | Premier League match report

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

It was a turn-around so startling as to seem faintly ridiculous. For 75 minutes, Tottenham Hotspur huffed and puffed, Gareth Bale was anonymous and the club’s Champions League dream looked ready to absorb a body blow. Manchester City’s first-half superiority had been total and they were pretty comfortable, if less forward-thinking, after the interval. Vincent Kompany, the captain, had been imposing to the point of frightening.

But in seven crazy, impossible-to-foresee minutes, Tottenham revived spectacularly and City were left to consider that their grip on the Premier League title might not last beyond Manchester United’s home fixture against Aston Villa on Monday night.

André Villas-Boas could reflect that his Tottenham substitutions changed the game but the goal that equalised Samir Nasri’s effort was all about Bale’s craft and vision and, also, an inexplicable freeze from Kompany. Clint Dempsey did not stop and he gleefully tapped home Bale’s cross from the right, which had come from the outside of his left boot.

Tottenham went for the jugular and they located it when the substitute Jermain Defoe jinked inside Kompany and unfurled a right-footed curler that swelled the far corner of the net. The little striker’s stock-in-trade move had brought his first goal at club level of the year. And with the crowd at fever pitch, another substitute, Tom Huddlestone released Bale, who exploded clear of his City shackles before clipping a delightful finish over Joe Hart.

City could not believe it. They might have been fortunate to avoid seeing Nasri sent off in the eighth minute for a terrible challenge on Kyle Walker but they deserved more from their general contribution to the spectacle. Instead, as has been the theme of their championship defence, they were left with regrets. There had been no doubt about which club needed these points the most but the manner in which Tottenham seized them was breathtaking.

Roberto Mancini’s intent had been plain at the start, with two men up front and menace in midfield, and his team crafted the early marker. There appeared to be little on as Carlos Tevez scuttled to win the ball and hold it up by the corner flag, with Jan Vertonghen at his back. But Tevez worked a little room, turned and slipped a pass inside the ball-watching Scott Parker for the on-rushing Gareth Barry. His pull-back invited Nasri to guide a volley into the corner of the net. For the former Arsenal player, it was a sweet moment.

City’s form has come too late for their title defence but they have regularly been good to watch in recent weeks and there was a lot to like about their game here. Tevez was relentless, epitomising the team’s collective work ethic and he dovetailed seamlessly with Edin Dzeko, the Bosnian, who scored four times in this fixture last season. It was possible to fear for Tottenham every time City swept forward in the first-half. Nasri was elusive in a good way, although his studs-up, over-the-ball connection with Walker’s shin was an ugly moment. The only conclusion to draw about the lack of censure was that the referee Lee Mason cannot have seen it.

The game ought to have been over at the interval. Pablo Zabaleta and Tevez combined to release Nasri and, as white shirts converged, he poked narrowly wide of the far post while Hugo Lloris twice made excellent saves. First, after Tevez had set Dzeko in between the Tottenham centre-halves, the goalkeeper flung out his right hand to block and then, from Tevez’s header, his reflexes were first-rate.

Tottenham did have first-half chances. Dempsey weighted a pass inside Nasri for Walker but Hart left his line quickly to make the target sufficiently small – Walker’s shot flew off him – while Dempsey directed a free header over the crossbar from a 44th minute corner.

The second-half had felt seismic at the outset for Tottenham. If they were to make a statement regarding their Champions League aspirations, it surely needed to come here. City pressed and stifled and, for so long, Villas-Boas’ players appeared to have few options in possession. Where could the inspiration come from?

The answer was obvious. Bale was peripheral for most of the match, struggling to exert an influence from his starting central role and, for the first part of the second-half, on the right flank. The home crowd feared the worst and they had taken to outlandish appeals for penalties when Bale, suddenly, helped to turn the game on its head. His assist for Dempsey was the spark; his ice-cool finish the clinching moment. Tottenham are back in business.

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Gareth Bale Starts For Tottenham Against Manchester City

Posted by & filed under featured, Gareth Bale, Manchester City, popular, Premier League, soccer, Spurs, Tottenham Hotspur.

Tottenham received encouraging news with the return of Gareth Bale for their crucial Premier League game against Manchester City at White Hart Lane. Tottenham have slipped to fifth place behind Arsenal and Chelsea but have two matches in hand on their north London neighbours. Gareth Bale who was injured in the final seconds of Tottenham’s [...]

Gareth Bale Starts For Tottenham Against Manchester CityHotspur HQHotspur HQ – A Tottenham Hotspur Fan Site – News, Blogs, Opinion, and More

Tottenham v Manchester City Villas-Boas Aiming To Avenge Earlier Loss

Posted by & filed under Andre Villas-Boas, featured, Manchester City, must win match, popular, soccer, Spurs, Tottenham Hotspur.

As Tottenham take on Manchester City at White Hart Lane in the first of their six ‘Cup Finals’ to the end of the season, their manager Andre Villas-Boas will be looking for a reversal of the result at The Etihad earlier in the season. In that match Tottenham had taken a first half lead only [...]

Tottenham v Manchester City Villas-Boas Aiming To Avenge Earlier LossHotspur HQHotspur HQ – A Tottenham Hotspur Fan Site – News, Blogs, Opinion, and More

Tottenham aim to end the tottering and complete the transformation

Posted by & filed under football, Manchester City, News, Premier League, Sport, The Observer, Tottenham Hotspur.

• Gylfi Sigurdsson calls for end to slip-ups late in games
• Spurs hope to overturn earlier defeat by Manchester City

This season Tottenham Hotspur have lost more leads than a bungling detective but if they defeat Manchester City at White Hart Lane on Sunday they could still solve the Case of the Elusive Champions League Spot. Fail to do so and Spurs will be unlikely to crack it, unless their main rivals – Arsenal, Chelsea and Everton – go off the scent too, which, of course, should not be ruled out in this most curious of pursuits.

Just over a month ago, when a 2-1 victory over Arsenal put them comfortably in third place, seven points clear of their north London neighbours, Tottenham seemed well on track to reclaim the Champions League place they were so agonisingly denied last season when Chelsea gazumped them. But André Villas-Boas’s team have picked up just four points from the last 12 available and are playing catch-up again. Some fans fret that the club is in the midst of the sort of late-season decline that afflicted them last term, but the dips have been spread more evenly throughout this see-saw season.

Spurs have lost 21 points from winning positions this season, more than any side in the Premier League other than Reading, Aston Villa and Southampton. The midfielder Gylfi Sigurdsson believes the most costly slip-ups were the late goals conceded early in the campaign that led to home draws with West Bromwich Albion and Norwich and defeats against Newcastle and Wigan, which were followed by a late reverse at the Etihad against Sunday’s opponents. “We were not good enough at the beginning of the season,” Sigurdsson said. “We dropped too many points late in games.”

At least that was understandable. After all, following the departures of influential players such as Luka Modric, Rafael van der Vaart and Ledley King, Spurs had to integrate a raft of new players this year, including Sigurdsson, and all under a new manager. “It took a bit of time for everything to fall into place,” explains Sigurdsson, who identifies the 3-2 win at West Ham in February – when Spurs rather than their opponents staged a late comeback – as the most formative so far for this new team. “I think it was one of those games where you start to realise you’ve got something special,” he says. “It’s a tough place to go to, as you saw with Manchester United drawing there this week, so to come from behind and win was very important for us.”

Spurs beat Arsenal the following weekend. And then their latest stutter began so, lo and behold, they find themselves needing to come from behind again, having fallen to fifth place. A couple of personnel comebacks could certainly help them today: Gareth Bale and Jermain Defoe are expected to return from injury, and Aaron Lennon may do so too. They are three crucial players for Spurs. And if Sergio Agüero and David Silva fail to regain fitness in time for City, then Tottenham will fancy their chances even more of being on the right side of the latest turnaround in their season.

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Tottenham Memories of a Strong Manchester City Team From The 1960s

Posted by & filed under 1960s, featured, Manchester City, Mike Summerbee, popular, soccer, Spurs, Spurs history, Tottenham Hotspur.

Tottenham face a Manchester City team who provide one of the toughest tests of the season as they did regularly in the late 1960s. A realist would say we are already in the middle of repeating our end of season collapse from last season. Certainly if we don’t beat Manchester City at White Hart Lane [...]

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Gareth Bale set to return for Tottenham against Manchester City

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

• Bale been out since rolling ankle against Basel two weeks ago
• ‘It is good to have him back,’ says André Villas-Boas

Tottenham Hotspur’s Premier League collision with Manchester City on Sunday is not about one man. It is about a finely-tuned tactical battle, tension, deep significance and heavyweight recent history. Yet from a Tottenham point of view at least, the spectre of one man appears to have transcended it all.

The club’s players and staff have come to joke about the Gareth Bale effect; specifically, the manner in which no interview or press conference can be allowed to pass without mention of him. They have an extremely valid point. Bale ticks an awful lot of boxes but consider the added extras for the manager André Villas-Boas’s media briefing on Friday afternoon.

Bale has just been named on the shortlist for the Professional Footballers’ Association’s Player of the Year and Young Player of the Year awards. He had given what Villas-Boas called “a big scare for everybody” when he rolled his ankle gruesomely on his previous appearance, at home to Basel in the Europa League quarter-final first leg two weeks ago and, having not played since, he had been a doubt for City’s visit. His fitness has been newsworthy every day since Tottenham’s return to training on Tuesday, after a four‑day break following the penalty shoot-out defeat at Basel. Tottenham were counting on him. Villas-Boas did not stand a chance.

He delivered the all-important bulletin with the rasping calm that has set the tone for his players’ preparations. Bale is “definitely up for selection”, having trained with the squad on Thursday and Friday. Picking him, Villas-Boas suggested, would not be a gamble. He went on to offer praise to the club’s medical department. He resisted the temptation to perform a Ricky Villa-style celebration.

In other news, Jermain Defoe is back to fitness after an abdominal problem to present Villas-Boas with a teaser up front. Does he persist with Emmanuel Adebayor, who has shown signs of improvement and would be motivated against his former club? Aaron Lennon, though, has not trained because of knee trouble and is unlikely to feature, which is a major blow given the balance that he brings to the team. William Gallas is still out with a calf injury.

But, back to Bale. Villas-Boas was happy to talk up his potential to galvanise the team and instil an element of anxiety in City. “Yes, I think it can,” Villas-Boas said. “We recognise the impact this player has had for us this season, the run of goals that he is on. It can have that factor. Having key players around and players who have been decisive, especially in this last part of the season, is always inspirational for everyone. It is good to have him back.”

Tottenham’s meetings with City in the latter part of the past three seasons have each been gripping and they have the capacity to inspire further, for good and bad reasons. The good for Tottenham came in the penultimate fixture of 2009‑10, in what was effectively a winner-takes-all play-off for Champions League qualification. Peter Crouch stretched to score in the 82nd minute at Eastlands, Tottenham were euphoric and Harry Redknapp got a soaking in the celebrations.

But the following year, the tables were turned. City entered the game, the season’s third last, in fourth position, knowing that a home win would guarantee them elevation to the Champions League. Tottenham, six points behind in sixth, needed victory to stay alive but Crouch’s own goal killed them. It was a seismic moment in City’s development.

“When you do it, you treasure those nights but when you miss out, as we did at City the year after, they are hard to take,” said the Tottenham captain, Michael Dawson. “We had a great journey the year we were in the Champions League and we want to be back playing in it, there’s no hiding it. We’ve got players in the dressing room who want to achieve. We’ve been fantastic so far and, with six games left, we’ll keep fighting, keep performing and we’ll keep believing.”

Last season’s match in Manchester offered a barometer of City’s progress and Tottenham’s ability to fall agonisingly short. It was last January and City were top of the table, five points clear of Tottenham in third. At 2-2, Defoe stretched but he could not convert a last-gasp chance at the far post, which stood to fire the title talk at White Hart Lane. City went up to the other end, won a penalty and Mario Balotelli converted the winner.

When Bale was not being discussed on Friday, the pressure of the fixture was a hot topic. Villas-Boas suggested that City had enjoyed a feeling of liberation since it became clear that they would lose their championship to Manchester United. “Probably, that is why they have been getting these great results and why they have been playing the great football that they play at the moment,” he said.

But there has been no let-up for Tottenham, who have wobbled as they have taken four points from an available 12 to slip into fifth place. A win over City feels vital to reignite the momentum, although Villas-Boas predicted that all of the Champions League hopefuls would drop points over the run-in. Twelve, he added, was the “minimum requirement” for his club. With Bale back, Tottenham’s horizons feel broader.

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Tottenham Hotspur v Manchester City: squad sheets

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

The title race is all over bar the shouting but if Manchester City lose here, there will not even be that, as their neighbours United will surely wrap up the championship with a home win over Aston Villa on Monday. City have found their form too late but it is Tottenham who need the points more urgently, in what is the tightest race for third and fourth places. André Villas-Boas gave his players a four-day break after the Europa League exit against Basel and he admits that Sunday’s scoreline will vindicate the decision or otherwise. David Hytner

Venue White Hart Lane, Sunday 1.30pm

Tickets Sold out

Last season Tottenham 1 Man City 5

Referee Lee Mason

This season’s matches 21 Y68, R0, 3.24 cards per game

Odds Tottenham 2-1 Man City 5-4 Draw 5-2

Tottenham

Subs from Friedel, Huddlestone, Lennon, Adebayor, Holtby, Livermore, Caulker, Assou-Ekotto, Carroll, Fredericks, Archer

Doubtful Bale (ankle), Lennon (knee), Defoe (groin)

Injured Gallas (calf, 27 Apr), Kaboul (thigh, 4 May), Sandro (knee, Aug)

Suspended None

Form guide DWLLWW

Disciplinary record Y46 R2

Leading scorer Bale 17

Manchester City

Subs from Pantilimon, Wright, Maicon, Richards, Kolarov, K Touré, Rodwell, Agüero, Sinclair, Dzeko, Lescott, Silva

Doubtful Agüero (hamstring), Maicon (knee), Rodwell (hamstring), Silva (hamstring)

Injured None

Suspended None

Form guide WWWLWW

Disciplinary record Y55 R3

Leading scorer Dzeko 12

Match pointers

• On City’s last vist to they inflicted Tottenham’s heaviest home defeat since December 1997

• Tottenham have lost their past four Premier League games with City after losing just three of the previous 27

• Carlos Tevez has scored 84 goals in 196 Premier League games, giving him the same record in the competition as Cristiano Ronaldo

• Tottenham are the only team in the division to have had more than 200 shots on target

• City have kept a clean sheet in their last four league games in London but have scored just two goals in response

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Who are the Comeback Kings in 12/13? | Premier League Stats Analysis

Posted by & filed under AFC, Arsenal, arsenal opta stats, Arsenal Stats, CFC, Chelsea, Chelsea Opta Stats, Chelsea Stats, Comeback Opta Stats, Comeback stats, efc, English Premier League Opta Stats, English Premier League Stats, EPL, EPL Index Featured Article, EPL Index Statistical Comparisons, epl opta stats, EPL Stats, Everton, Everton Opta Stats, Everton Stats, LFC, Liverpool, Liverpool Opta Stats, Liverpool stats, Manchester City, Manchester City Opta Stats, Manchester City Stats, manchester united, Manchester United Opta Stats, Manchester United Stats, Manchester Utd, MCFC, MUFC, opta, Opta Stats, Premier League comeback, premier league opta stats, Premier League Stats, THFC, Tottenham, Tottenham Hotspur, Tottenham Opta Stats, Tottenham Stats.

Manchester United are well-known for making a comeback and Arsenal have scored more goals in the last 10 minutes of matches than any other team this season, but which teams out of the top 7 have actually been the best at coming from behind this season?…

Emmanuel Adebayor: Tottenham can profit from fractious Manchester City

Posted by & filed under Emmanuel Adebayor, football, Manchester City, News, Sport, The Guardian, Tottenham Hotspur.

• ‘Man City is a sacred club but we can take them down’
• Adebayor points way to victory over his former club

Emmanuel Adebayor has highlighted what he believes to be the fractious state of Manchester City dressing room, a tension he claims can rise to the surface in “a fight or an argument on the pitch” at White Hart Lane on Sunday.

The Tottenham Hotspur striker spent 18 months at City, after his £25m transfer from Arsenal in July 2009, and he rubbed shoulders with plenty of strong personalities, although many have since departed the club. Adebayor feels that Sunday’s Premier League game is “decisive” for Tottenham’s Champions League hopes and he believes that his team can profit from the fallout if City were to be frustrated.

“We are playing in front of our fans, we’ll give them everything, put Man City under pressure and then for sure, we have a chance to win because I was there and whenever things are not going their way, there will definitely be a fight or an argument on the pitch,” Adebayor said. “That is how we can take them down.”

Adebayor scored 14 league goals in his debut season for City but his relationship soured with the manager, Roberto Mancini, who replaced Mark Hughes in December 2009. Adebayor spent the second part of 2010-11 on loan at Real Madrid before joining Tottenham, initially on loan, but he maintains that he does not “have anything to prove” to City or Mancini.

“Man City is a sacred club,” Adebayor said. “I have a huge respect for the players. I’ve got players there that I can call family – Yaya Touré, Kolo Touré, Vincent Kompany. It’s going to be important for me to prove how good I am but I don’t have any pressure that says I have to beat Man City because of the way they treated me, because they bought me expensively and sold me for cheap.

“Mancini? We are all human beings. We are all adults. Things happened in Man City. I cannot tell you what happened and what did not happen. For me today, I move on. He has moved on. I wish him the best of luck. For me now, Mancini is just a manager I respect, just like Arsène Wenger, like Harry Redknapp and that’s it. Everything stops there. I have to do my job for Tottenham.”

The club, who are anxiously waiting on the availability of Gareth Bale after ankle damage, have endured a rocky ride in recent weeks. Their previous match was the Europa League quarter-final second leg against Basel last Thursday, when Adebayor missed one of their penalties as they lost the shootout, while they have taken only four points from an available 12 in the league to imperil their push for a top-four finish. Adebayor is determined to inspire an upturn against City.

“This will be the decisive game for us,” he said. “If we win, the confidence will be back, definitely. We will have a chance to finish in the top four. From the beginning of the season, our target was to finish in the top four. Now we are out of the Europa League, I cannot say it is a good thing but we have to focus on the league. We have five games to go and we tell ourselves in the dressing room that we have five finals. We have to play them as finals and if we find a way to be in the Champions League, for us it’s a very good season.”

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