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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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Tottenham Hotspur 1-0 Sunderland | Premier League match report

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

Newcastle 0-1 Arsenal

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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André Villas-Boas wants Tottenham to appoint a technical director

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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Tottenham must beat Arsenal to Champions League to close wealth gap

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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Tottenham Hotspur v Sunderland: squad sheets

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

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

Venue White Hart Lane, Sunday 4pm

Tickets Sold out

Last season Tottenham 1 Sunderland 0

Referee Andre Marriner

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

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

Tottenham

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

Doubtful Assou-Ekotto (knee)

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

Suspended None

Form guide WDWDWD

Disciplinary record Y54 R2

Leading scorer Bale 20

Sunderland

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

Doubtful Bramble (calf)

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

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

Inelegible Rose (terms of loan)

Form guide DDLWWL

Disciplinary record Y59 R2

Leading scorer Fletcher 11

Match pointers

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

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

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

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

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

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Harry’s Games | WIN STUFF!

Posted by & filed under competition, John Crace, The Guardian.

While you shouldn’t rely on Alan Pardew this weekend to at least make life interesting for the subscription-paying neutrals (won’t someone please think of the subscription-paying neutrals!) one thing you can bank on, is when it comes to penning a good book, John Crace won’t let you down. Following his quite excellent Vertigo: One Football [...]

Stoke City 1-2 Tottenham Hotspur | Premier League match report

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

Emmanuel Adebayor has come to life just in time. Following his man-of-the-match display against Chelsea in mid-week, the striker who has spent most of this season fending off accusations of uselessness swooped to score an 83rd-minute winner against Stoke City and keep alive Tottenham’s chances of claiming fourth place in the Premier League table.

Spurs had to show character and quality to overcome a Stoke side who took the lead through Steven N’Zonzi in the third minute.

Clint Dempsey equalised in the 20th minute and, after Charlie Adam was sent off early in the second half, the visitors laid siege to the Stoke goal as they sought the win that would take them back into fourth spot, two points clear of Arsenal having played a game more. Adebayor’s goal makes Tuesday’s match between Arsenal and the FA Cup winners Wigan even bigger.

This was a bad time for opponents to come to the Britannia. Before the match Stoke celebrated the 150th year since their foundation, throwing a birthday party around the ground with the same vigour that Rory Delap used to throw balls.

There were circus performers, a jolly brass band and a parade of distinguished players form the past, from Sir Geoff Hurst and Gordon Banks to Ade Akinbiyi. Several members of the squad will merit places in any such commemorations in the future, as will Tony Pulis, even if the manager has not felt much love from fans this season.

Pulis’s achievements in hoisting the club to the Premier League in 2008 will forever be acclaimed but the lack of evolution since then has led to disenchantment – Stoke’s survival for a sixth successive season in the top flight is all but secured despite this defeat but that is no longer considered enough for many supporters given the size of the club’s investment in recent seasons.

So talk of Pulis leaving in the summer remains rife, the latest reports adding the name of Celtic’s Neil Lennon to a list of possible replacements that also includes the Arsenal assistant manager and Stoke native Steve Bould. Whether or not this was a final farewell from the manager, Stoke were determined to make it a joyous occasion for their fans.

Tottenham did not care about any of that. All they were interested in was three points. Their prospects of claiming them darkened early.

In the third minute, Adam curled a delicious free-kick in from the right and N’Zonzi helped himself to a goal, heading into the net from six yards via the post and a touch from Hugo Lloris.

That cranked the home celebrations up a notch, with Adam taking particular pleasure in them given that the away fans had barracked him from the start owing to tackles the Scot has made on Gareth Bale in previous encounters.

Stoke were not the jaded, uninspired side that they have looked in recent months. This was a return to the rambunctious unit that opponents used to hate. Every ball was chased, every challenge an ultimatum: be at your best or get beaten. Spurs set about responding.

Bale forced a fingertip save form Asmir Begovic in the seventh minute with a swirling shot from distance. Dempsey flicked the ball into the net in the 15th minute from an offside position but it was ruled out for offside.

Five minutes later the American got a goal that counted, as a Scott Parker pass from deep led to a mix-up between Begovic and Marc Wilson outside the home penalty area. Dempsey showed deft instincts to lift the ball into the unguarded net from 30 yards.

Spurs started to dominate. Stoke shrunk from fearsome towards frantic. With Parker and Tom Huddlestone gaining control in midfield and Aaron Lennon threatening from wide, the hosts had to defend with gusto.

Begovic did well to parry a header from Michael Dawson after a free-kick from Bale and, in the 43rd minute, Bale slalomed his way into the box and unleashed a low drive that forced another solid stop from the goalkeeper.

But just before the break Adam, visibly a man on a mission, gave a reminder of the menace of the home side with a series of dangerous crosses that caused Spurs to scramble, too.

That was the last positive contribution that Adam would make, as in the first minute of the second half he carelessly tripped Jan Vertonghen to earn a second yellow card. How the Tottenham fans jeered as he trudged past them on his way to the dressing room.

Dempsey almost put Spurs in front immediately, prodding the ball just over after meeting a Bale corner. Stoke battened down the hatches in a bid to withstand wave after wave of Tottenham attacks.

They did a pretty good job of it, although Mousa Dembélé prised them open in the 75th minute with a wriggly run before feeding Bale, who shot just wide from nine yards.

It took a stroke of luck to finally help undo Stoke’s resistance, as Dembélé unwittingly deflected a Bale pass into the path of Dempsey, who rifled the ball across goal for Adebayor to slam into the net from close range.

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Stoke City v Tottenham Hotspur: squad sheets

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

Tottenham travel to the Brittania Stadium to face Stoke knowing that their dream of qualifying for the Champions League is out of their hands. Chelsea and Arsenal occupy the third and fourth spots respectively and will have to have to slip up in either of their remaining two matches in order for André Villas Boas’ side to have a chance of finishing the campaign in the top four. Stoke have proven to be tough opposition in recent seasons and they are unbeaten in their last four games against Tottenham, though three of those fixtures were draws. Alex Sutch

Venue Britannia Stadium, Sunday 1.30pm

Tickets £30-40 (01782 367599)

Last season Stoke 2 Tottenham 1

Referee Kevin Friend

This season’s matches 23 Y90, R1, 3.96 cards per game

Odds Stoke 7-2 Tottenham 10-11 Draw 13-5

Stoke

Subs from Nash, Sorensen, Wilkinson, Cameron, Kightly, Etherington, Palacios, Shea, Ness, Jones, Owen

Doubtful Wilkinson (back), Wilson (thigh)

Injured Whelan (groin, 19 May)

Suspended None

Form guide DWWLLL

Disciplinary record Y75 R3

Leading scorer Walters 8

Tottenham

Subs from Friedel, Dempsey, Huddlestone, Naughton, Defoe, Holtby, Assou-Ekotto, Livermore, Fredericks, Carroll, Fryers

Doubtful Dembélé (hamstring)

Injured Gallas (calf, 19 May), Kaboul (thigh, Aug), Sandr (knee, Aug)

Suspended None

Form guide DWDWDW

Disciplinary record Y53 R2

Leading scorer Bale 20

Match pointers

• All four Premier League games between these teams at the Britannia Stadium have ended 2-1, with each side winning twice

• If Tottenham score two or more goals they will equal the club record for scoring two or more in six consecutive games

• Stoke have 41 points despite scoring just 32 goals, a ratio of 1.28 points per goal

• Gareth Bale has scored in 10 of Tottenham’s 18 away games so far this season

• Matthew Etherington has scored four times against Tottenham, including three in his past three

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Gareth Bale gives the clearest hint yet he wants to stay at Tottenham

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

• Bale says it will be blow if Spurs fail to finish in top four
• Winger says the club ‘has grown and are doing everything right’

Gareth Bale has given the clearest hint yet that he wants to stay at Tottenham Hotspur next season but admitted it will be a big blow if they miss out on Champions League qualification.

The Spurs midfielder, who was on Thursday night given the Football Writers’ Association footballer of the year award to add to the PFA player and young player of the year trophies he has already won, said the club was “doing everything right” and that he and they had “grown together” over the years.

Bale is expected to be offered a four-year contract in the summer in recognition of a stellar season, amid increased confidence among the Spurs hierarchy that he will be persuaded to stay.

“We set our agenda at the start of the season to qualify for the Champions League. We want to finish in the top four and it will feel like a disappointment if we don’t get there,” the 23-year-old told the Guardian.

“The club has grown every year and I’ve become a better player every year. We’ve had a taste of Champions League football and that’s where we want to be again. That’s where the club needs to be to get to the next level. That’s what we’re trying to do this season to lift the club to better things.”

The 2-2 draw at Chelsea left Tottenham’s fate out of their hands in the race for the top four but the manager, André Villas-Boas, has told supporters to “keep the faith” for their final two matches against Stoke and Sunderland.

Bale, who has taken to a new central role this season to devastating effect, lauded the progress made under the chairman, Daniel Levy, since he joined six years ago from Southampton and said he and the club shared the same objectives.

“I want to play at the highest level possible and be playing against the best teams in the world. I think the club is going in the right direction. All our objectives are the same, we just have to try to achieve them now,” he said.

Bale, unveiled by BT as one of a number of ambassadors for its new sport channel, has thrived on the extra responsibility handed to him by Villas-Boas and said the squad was the best he had played in.

“We’re all working well as a team. We’re all working together. The club is going in the right direction, bringing in better players every season,” Bale said.

“The likes of Mousa [Dembélé] and Jan [Vertonghen] have been fantastic additions to the squad and I’m sure we’ll bring in a few more players into the squad again this summer. It’s just a matter of progressing for everyone and reaching our targets.”

Bale, who has scored a string of spectacular and crucial goals this season, said he was comfortable with the elevated level of trust placed in him by Villas-Boas.

“When you’re younger, you’re quite daunted by the manager. As I’ve got older, I’ve also got a lot closer and become a more important player so you speak to the manager more,” he said.

“This year I’ve been handed a lot more responsibility, which has been great. I believe I’ve been able to motivate myself and make myself a better player by it.”

He also paid tribute to the careful husbandry of Tottenham’s resources under Levy and said it was important that the club had been able to grow in a sustainable way, particularly given the introduction of the Premier League’s financial rules.

“Everything has changed. When I first arrived there was talk of a new training ground and a new stadium. As the years have gone in, it’s got better and better. The training ground has happened and next it’ll be the stadium. The club is growing and I think it’s growing within its own means,” he said.

Drawing a distinction between Spurs and other clubs that had spent beyond their means, he said: “That’s why the rules are in place now. We’ve seen a lot of clubs before that have made that mistake. But Tottenham have shown they can make a profit every season and they’re doing it the right way. Everyone is in the same boat and they’re doing everything right.”

Senior Spurs insiders are increasingly confident Bale will stay, even if they miss out on the fourth Champions League place, and the player believes that the squad have matured together and are hitting their peak.

“We’re all of a similar age. We’re all around our mid-20s. We’ve been playing together for three, four, five years,” he said. “We’ve got a good firm English base there as well, which is always important for a club like Tottenham. We’re heading in the right direction and hopefully there is still a lot more to come from the team.”

Bale also insisted there is “a lot more to come” from himself, that he is on an “upward slope” and still learning what was required of him in a more central position.

Asked how he could improve on his impressive season, he said: “Score more goals. More with my right, more with my left. I think you just have to keep going, keep plugging away. Even your best players – if you look at Lionel Messi, [each year] he scores more goals than he has any other year. Cristiano Ronaldo is the same. There is still plenty more to improve. I just have to keep my focus at this level and take it further.”

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André Villas-Boas’s Tottenham still a poor relation to fantastic four | Barney Ronay

Posted by & filed under Andre Villas-Boas, Chelsea, Comment, Emmanuel Adebayor, football, Sport, The Guardian, Tottenham Hotspur.

The Portuguese manager still has work to do if his Spurs side are to reach the levels of his former club Chelsea

Football’s capacity to surprise should never be underestimated. On a night that ended with Tottenham playing catch-up in the conjoined North London slow bicycle race towards that final Champions League place, there was the rare and perhaps even unique spectacle of the home fans routinely booing both managers: their own soon-to-be-ex, Rafa Benítez, and their last-but-one ex, André Villas-Boas. Perhaps Chelsea fans are simply inured to it all by now, choosing instead to save time and simply boo everybody in a suit, past or present.

Beyond the boos this was a brilliantly entertaining 2-2 draw featuring many examples of the kind of fluid attacking play Villas-Boas’s team must produce if it wishes to compete at Champions League level, albeit for Spurs pretty much all of it involved the team in blue shirts. Indeed, it was a slightly confusing night all round as Spurs extracted a late point with a display that was high on grit and yet emerged with a sense that the season may now have tipped decisively away from them.

Afterwards Villas-Boas spoke about Tottenham’s “determination and ambition”. This ambition may be slightly concerning for Villas-Boas, who is currently sitting a space below the league position that saw Harry Redknapp sacked last season. If this was a tactical triumph of sorts for Villas-Boas, whose substitutions changed momentum in the last 15 minutes, it was also a match encircled by ex and soon-to-be-ex-Chelsea managers (like being President of the United States, it feels like you never really stop being an ex-Chelsea manager).

With Villas-Boas, Benítez and the half-glimpsed spectre of José Mourinho lurking ever closer, of the three ex and interims it was Villas-Boas for whom there was most at stake. It has been a season of periodic, if occasionally stuttering, progress for a manager who really could do with an upward spike on his personal CV to dispel the sense that, for all his progressive methods and air of endearing B movie charisma, he cannot amount to anything more than a Europa League Mourinho. This is entirely unfair, of course: in a saner footballing world Villas-Boas, who is a very talented manager, would simply be left to nurture a team, perhaps given a Ferguson-like bedding-in period in which to bloom. But then, this is the Premier League and for Spurs this match had an air of, if not quite make or break, then certainly of a defining moment when it comes to setting the barometer on Villas-Boas’s first season.

Determination aside, Spurs can point to the isolated moments of quality that brought their goals, both with their origins in Emmanuel Adebayor, who had his best game of the season. Villas-Boas had sent his team out in his favoured 4-2-3-1 formation with the world’s most indolent all-action lone striker looking animated in the opening minutes and providing a brilliant individual moment to equalise Oscar’s opener. Since signing for £5m last August, Adebayor has lapsed at times into a parody of forward languor, but his goal in the 25th minute was a reminder of the high-ceilinged talent that lurks behind that kitten-sized attention span. Fed by Lewis Holtby, Adebayor carried the ball 30 yards, all spindly galloping legs, and curled a sublime shot over Petr Cech and into the far corner.

Either side of this Chelsea were often seductively rampant, a team of visibly superior craft in midfield. It’s hard to blame Villa-Boas for this: he might even claim some credit for Chelsea’s fluidity. Again, though, it was Spurs’ porous centre that let them down.

Chelsea’s second goal was beautifully finished by Ramires, an instant toe-poke finish on the run after lovely play by Fernando Torres. But neither Scott Parker, again looking like a worryingly immobile central midfield dalek, nor Tom Huddlestone tracked his forward run.

And for Benítez, the other half of that graceless double booing, these are almost rather carefree end days at Stamford Bridge. How delicious it would be if this brief Benítez spring –a European final, a strong league finish, plenty of fine attacking play from a happy-looking team – comes in time to be something that Chelsea fans might even look back on with a little fond nostalgia.

Certainly there was evidence in the composed menace of Eden Hazard and the usual floating excellence of Juan Mata of the levels to which Tottenham must aspire, a team of pace in strictly delineated areas and one roving smart gun of a midfielder. When Gareth Bale doesn’t play, Spurs are a team of workers, but they fought to the end against superior opponents. And yet on a night of the multidirectional managerial booing, it seemed fitting that the real winners should be elsewhere. Mourinho, if it is to be he, will inherit a team that look, more than at any time in the last year, like they might yet be cut from champion cloth. Arsenal have it in their own admittedly rather tremulous hands to finish fourth. For Villas-Boas, a season of sporadic gains might just be tipping away at the last.

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André Villas-Boas urges Tottenham fans to ‘keep the faith’ after draw

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

• Spurs manager ‘extremely pleased’ after 2-2 draw at Chelsea
• Rafael Benítez disappointed by Chelsea’s failure to score third

André Villas-Boas urged Tottenham Hotspur’s supporters to “keep the faith” after his team surrendered the initiative to Arsenal in the pursuit of Champions League qualification despite twice coming from behind to frustrate Chelsea.

The stalemate, secured by Gylfi Sigurdsson’s late equaliser, left Spurs a point off fourth place with two games to play. Their manager, making his first visit to the club that had sacked him in March 2012 after only 256 days in charge, was left to hope their London rivals drop points in what remains of the campaign.

“Anything can happen,” he said. “The Premier League is completely unpredictable and the next fixtures, with the emotion of the last few games of the season, can be decisive. Keep the faith. Our situation has changed because destiny is not in our hands, but all we can do is win the next two fixtures [against Stoke and Sunderland] and hope somebody slips up. I’m still extremely pleased by the performance.

“It was a great example of Tottenham’s determination and ambition. We increased the tempo and played really well: it was difficult to control Chelsea’s creativity but we had attacking strength and created our own chances. Our focus is on us doing our job in the remaining fixtures and in the Premier League anything can happen. Keep the faith.”

Those sentiments were echoed by his players after the late equaliser meant Tottenham, despite only three wins in eight games, have secured 14 points in the last 10 minutes of games since the turn of the year. “We showed fighting spirit again,” said Michael Dawson.

“Okay, the top four is out of our hands, but someone might do us a favour when they play Arsenal. The draw keeps things going.” Villas-Boas hopes to have Moussa Dembélé restored to fitness after a thigh injury in time for their game at the Britannia Stadium on Sunday.

Chelsea, too, still have work to do if they are to secure their top-four finish though a victory against either Aston Villa or Everton in their remaining games will be enough given their superior goal difference over Spurs. Even so, Rafael Benítez’s frustration was clear with this a missed opportunity to secure the required points. Chances were passed up, most notably when Ramires slipped as he prepared to convert the home side’s third, to leave the Spaniard admitting fatigue had played its part in his side’s late toils. This game was their 66th of a draining campaign.

“We didn’t have the legs,” said the interim first-team manager. “Their second goal was offside but still, we had to defend it better. At the end we were a little bit leggy and were too open, and they were pushing and attacking, and our final pass was a problem.

“We had some players tired, especially in the wide areas controlling their full-backs. We couldn’t hold the ball, so it was not easy. But we had to finish the game off. They pushed and pushed, that’s fine, but we had to find that third. We had chances on the counter-attack to score the third goal, but there was no finish.”

The manager’s decision to substitute Oscar for Yossi Benayoun six minutes from time provoked a chorus of boos from the home support, the disaffection apparently aimed more at Benítez. John Terry later apologised to the Israeli player on behalf of the club for his vitriolic reception.

“I just concentrate on my football,” said Benitez, when asked about the fans’ reaction. “We were weak in the wide areas and a bit tired, and I didn’t see any other wingers on the bench to rectify this. That was my idea [for the substitution].”

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Chelsea 2-2 Tottenham | Premier League match report

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

Tottenham Hotspur would normally celebrate a result like this to the rafters, not least in praise of their team’s powers of recovery after they twice trailed in an arena that has tended to choke their resolve. Yet, in only drawing across the capital at Chelsea, André Villas-Boas’s side have surrendered the initiative to Arsenal in the race for a top-four finish. Their destiny is no longer in their hands; this result could prove damaging.

The visitors’ sense of disappointment felt somewhat perverse. They had come from behind twice and, as the hosts wavered late on, even hinted at the win that would have propelled them back into those coveted places. They could take heart in the character displayed on their manager’s first return to the club who had sacked him 14 months earlier.

Yet, in avoiding defeat, it is Rafael Benitez’s team who have edged closer to achieving his primary objective. Chelsea remain third; one more victory will effectively be enough while London rivals squabble at their back.

Villas-Boas had emerged from the mouth of the tunnel before kick-off to a chorus of boos from the locals, a reaction he steadfastly ignored as he beamed his way through handshakes with those on the home bench and, more notably, the Chelsea substitutes seated in the row behind. Their number included John Terry, a player who had benefited from the Portuguese’s support in the immediate aftermath of his infamous clash with Anton Ferdinand at Loftus Road in October 2011, and also Frank Lampard. His relationship with the latter had been far more fractious and, effectively, at the heart of the ill-feeling and scepticism about the young coach’s credentials in the dressing room.

Smiles were exchanged, the visiting manager apparently untroubled by the reception even if, by the interval, his mood was darkening. Spurs trailed by then, their rearguard having been flooded at either end of the period to douse all the encouragement that had flared briefly just before the half-hour when Emmanuel Adebayor, from nothing, conjured an equaliser. Chelsea had actually been attacking then, threatening from a corner, when Eden Hazard over-played and Ramires surrendered possession for Adebayor to collect inside his own half, glide unchecked downfield and, with Gary Cahill reluctant to advance and stifle, curled a shot over Petr Cech and into the top corner.

It was a stunning effort, his fourth league goal of the season utterly out of keeping with so much of the fitful form that has typified his campaign, and it also bucked the overriding trend of the half. The home side had been the more menacing, Juan Mata spitting a shot over the bar early on before they scored at a set-piece. Mata’s corner was nodded on by Cahill, out-jumping his markers from a standing start, for Oscar to touch in at the far post after eluding Scott Parker. The Tottenham defence appeared ramshackle, pulled out of position far too easily. Those traits would return to undermine them after Adebayor’s goal.

It was the home side’s movement that cut Spurs so deeply. Hazard was a blur, irrepressible as he darted from flank to centre, with Mata conjuring at his side. When Chelsea were allowed to build from a throw-in inside their own half, David Luiz, Ramires, Oscar and Fernando Torres took touches before the striker slipped a fine pass beyond Jan Vertonghen and the retreating Spurs back-line. Ramires, so effective up to then in shackling Gareth Bale, burst through before Michael Dawson or Parker could react and toe-poked a splendid finish across Hugo Lloris and into the far corner. Villas-Boas sank back to his bench in frustration.

His team’s predicament felt increasingly desperate, the need to conjure a first victory in this arena in 23 years – since Gary Lineker rose to meet Nayim’s cross and nod a late winner through Dave Beasant, a goal from a bygone era – acute and the onus was on Bale and Aaron Lennon to wound the European champions. The England winger never made his mark and departed prematurely. Bale, perhaps hampered by that ankle injury sustained against Basel, had also been peripheral, his only chance suffocated by Cahill’s block. The Welshman was granted more licence to wander from the wing as his manager, pounding the technical area as he once did in front of the home bench here, whistled and hollered instructions from the sidelines.

Chelsea continued to eke out the better opportunities. Hazard might have scored the goal his display merited after Dawson’s slip on the stretch, the Belgian’s control as immaculate as his finish was wild. The flick to liberate Mata into the Spurs half soon afterwards was beautifully crafted, the Spaniard sprinting into enemy territory and, once Dawson had caught up, squaring for the unmarked Ramires on the charge only for the Brazilian’s right leg to give way as he prepared to convert. The midfielder sprawled on the turf, whether injured or merely embarrassed, and it felt the kind of miss upon which contests can turn.

Sure enough, as the contest lurched into its final stages and the recent weight of games started to catch up with the hosts, David Luiz wearily presented the ball to Spurs with Benoît Assou-Ekotto’s cross back-heeled by Adebayor, suspiciously behind Cahill and the Chelsea rearguard, for the substitute Gylfi Sigurdsson to convert.

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Tottenham’s André Villas-Boas says ‘invisible’ Chelsea lack style

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

• Manager says his former club lack style and identity
• ‘If you don’t have style, it makes you invisible in football’

André Villas-Boas has accused Chelsea of playing “invisible” football and lacking style or identity since the days of José Mourinho as he prepares to return to Stamford Bridge for the first time since his sacking by Roman Abramovich last season.

The Tottenham Hotspur manager, who needs victory in Wednesday night’s derby to fire his hopes of Champions League qualification, which could in turn thwart those of his previous employer, conceded that Chelsea had done “what matters” in modern football with their recent run of trophies.

Chelsea went on to win the Champions League last year after Villas-Boas’s dismissal in March, not to mention the FA Cup, but it was clear that he felt they had made compromises in terms of their playing style which impacted on the achievement.

“In the end, it’s brought them success and sometimes success is what matters in football – independent of the style,” Villas-Boas said. “I have a different opinion. I think if you don’t have a style, it makes you invisible in football. Only teams with style succeed. But, in the end, success is normally what matters in modern Europe.”

Villas-Boas was asked to clarify what he meant by the comment regarding the “invisible” football. “Style of play … when things are attractive,” he replied. “Obviously, what is attractive to me is maybe different to the style of football you might find attractive.

“We saw the wonderful team that Mauricio [Pochettino] is building at Southampton [at White Hart Lane on Saturday]. Although the change from Nigel [Adkins] to Mauricio is difficult to take because of what Nigel has achieved for that club, the reality is Southampton is not invisible in terms of their football. Their football is absolutely outstanding this season.”

Villas-Boas’s first spell at Chelsea between 2004-2007 saw him work as Mourinho’s opposition scout, when the club enjoyed tremendous domestic success and, according to Villas-Boas, had a clear identity. He feels that it has since proved more elusive, and one of the reasons might have been the high turnover of managers.

Abramovich, the owner, has sacked five of them, including Villas-Boas, since he removed Mourinho, taking his total to seven. In addition, Guus Hiddink and the incumbent, Rafael Benítez, have worked on short-term contracts. Villas-Boas was endeavouring to impose his style on Chelsea only to be sacked after eight months. After his unveiling as Tottenham manager last summer, he said Abramovich had “quit” on him and failed to “put up to the things that he promised“.

“If you remember, the [Chelsea] team of 2004 was an absolutely deadly machine of football but in a different way,” Villas-Boas said. “[It was] great, great counterattacking football and one of the great teams in the country. There are various types of teams … teams built along great creative players and these Chelsea teams have the ingredient to be able to play this type of football. Barcelona with [Pep] Guardiola is probably the best team for playing football in recent years, in my opinion. But it changes from person to person.”

Villas-Boas spoke in glowing terms of the abilities of the some of the players he worked with at Stamford Bridge, including Juan Mata, who was one of the signings that he pushed for, and Frank Lampard, who is one goal shy of equalling the all-time Chelsea scoring record. But he was almost matter-of-fact about the perception that Lampard had not supported him. “Yes, but his ability and quality was never in doubt,” Villas-Boas said. “That [the lack of support] does not really matter right now. There have been other managers in this position before and, in the end, you study what you have done and become better and adapt. Only by learning from experiences are you able to deal with them better the next time.”

Villas-Boas also responded to the Arsenal goalkeeper Wojciech Szczesny’s claim that Tottenham did “not have enough quality” to finish in the top four. “I think it would be a little more tolerable if it had come from a genuine Arsenal fan,” Villas-Boas said. “But it is coming from an Arsenal player, an Arsenal player who is probably only passing by to another club, or he’s not going to stay there for life. In the end, does he mean exactly those words from the heart? He doesn’t, for sure.

“He’s entitled to say what he wants. It would be a little bit more realistic from a famous Arsenal fan to come forward with those words. From an Arsenal player, I don’t think it has that kind of effect on us. I wouldn’t say an Arsenal fan that has just arrived in that club in the last couple of years is entitled to have so much hatred towards Tottenham, like he seems to have.”

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The cost of failure: what missing out on Champions League could mean

Posted by & filed under Andre Villas-Boas, Champions League, Chelsea, Features, football, Gareth Bale, José Mourinho, Rafael Benítez, The Guardian, Tottenham Hotspur.

Chelsea could struggle to sign Falcao and another Europa League campaign could ruin a Mourinho title tilt, while Tottenham may lose Gareth Bale but pick up damaging psychological scars

CHELSEA

Chelsea might still get Mourinho but would Falcao follow?

Roberto Di Matteo was candid in his assessment of the club’s incoming transfer business last summer. Without the Champions League triumph, the former manager said, which overrode the travails in the Premier League to put them back in Europe’s elite competition, they would not have been able to sign Eden Hazard or Oscar. There would be no bailout this time if they were to fall short of the top four and it would not be outlandish to suggest that they could lack the trump card to attract the likes of Radamel Falcao and Hulk, the glamour attacking targets. José Mourinho is expected to be a different story. The manager is set to return from Real Madrid and, having initially worried about the possible lack of Champions League football, it no longer appears to be a concern. You suspect he might even enjoy the novelty of the Europa League, particularly as it would not be his fault. The club’s pursuit of Marouane Fellaini from Everton should also be unaffected but that of Falcao could become complicated.

A Europa League campaign is no basis for a title challenge

The demands of Thursday-Sunday football ought not to be a massive problem but there is something that does not quite scan for Premier League players, something that is mildly disorientating. Rafael Benítez, the interim Chelsea manager, has a more scientific explanation. With only two clear days before a Sunday league game, there is only time for a warm-down and a warm-up, with nothing in between for a more constructive training session. The situation can be better in the Champions League in terms of preparation for a weekend league fixture, particularly as some of the ties in the competition are played on Tuesdays.

The club would feel the pressure of financial fair play

In the wake of Didier Drogba’s winning penalty in last season’s Champions League final, Chelsea estimated that the triumph was worth up to £100m. It allowed them to splash the cash on the transfer market. But a theme of recent times at Stamford Bridge has been the surgery on the wage bill and if the lack of Champions League football would principally affect prestige, the related loss of income would also constrict spending as FFP comes into force. Gate receipts would surely drop, too, in a potential Europa League group phase campaign, if the far-from-sold-out home crowds in this season’s knockout rounds of the competition are any guide.

TOTTENHAM

Gareth Bale’s future

In the eyes of his peers and the football press, Bale has been the best player in England this season. In the eyes of Zinedine Zidane, the Real Madrid ambassador, the Wales forward has been the best player in Uefa club competition. It is safe to say that Bale is ready to grace next season’s Champions League and it is also known that he is desperate to do so on a regular basis, partly because he is realistic about his chances of playing in major international tournaments with his country. André Villas-Boas, the Tottenham manager, has gone from saying that the club need a top-four finish to keep Bale to presenting a defiant stance that the player will stay regardless. The noises from those close to Bale in recent weeks have softened regarding a possible transfer. But without Champions League football there would be temptation, at the very least and Spurs may come to feel vulnerable. The loss of their superstar would be unthinkable.

End-of-season shortcomings become pathological

In an off-cut from Saturday’s interview in the Guardian, the Tottenham left-back Benoît Assou-Ekotto said that, under Harry Redknapp, the moment that the season’s final whistle sounded, “the muscles just went because you would have played an amazing number of games”. This time out, Villas-Boas has rested and rotated more but there has still been a wobble over the past two months which has recalled the slumps that gripped to calamitous effect under Redknapp towards the end of the previous two Premier League campaigns. Villas-Boas has admitted that, rightly or wrongly, the season will be judged on whether a top-four finish can be secured. Failure stands to bring psychological scars.

Another Europa League campaign would feel like a slog

One of Villas-Boas’s tricks on his debut season at Tottenham has been to rebrand Europe’s second-tier cup competition in the eyes of the supporters. By naming strong teams and making it clear that it was a trophy he wanted to win, he generated momentum and excitement. But it would surely be a tougher sell were he and the club to return to a Europa League group featuring opposition from, say, Greece and Slovenia, as happened this season. With their slick new training ground and the progress (albeit slow) on a new stadium, Tottenham feel like a club that is who are going places. They enjoyed a taste from Europe’s top table in 2010-11 and they are ready for another bite. Contesting the Europa League would be like running to stand still.

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Tottenham’s André Villas-Boas in search of historic triumph at Chelsea | Dominic Fifield

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

Spurs manager returns to Chelsea seeking desperately needed points but can also settle old score with former club

It was in a hallway outside the media suite at White Hart Lane, as satisfied home supporters were still drifting out on to Bill Nicholson Way and the High Road beyond, that André Villas-Boas was asked about the reception awaiting him back at Stamford Bridge. “I have no idea,” he offered, all weary unease as if it was outlandish his acrimonious divorce from Chelsea a little over a year ago might have returned to the news agenda ahead of a first return. “Hopefully the home fans are respectful but, if not, it’s fine too. It makes no difference to me.”

It is safe to assume the locals will have two managers upon which to pour scorn on what could prove to be a defining evening for Tottenham Hotspur’s Champions League pursuit. Spurs travel across the capital on Wednesday two points adrift of Arsenal in fourth as the teams that currently hem in Arsène Wenger’s side play out their game in hand. Ferocious rivalry ensures Chelsea will not want to yield an inch to their visitors even though Sunday’s eye-catching success at Old Trafford has actually afforded them a hint of breathing space. Yet, for Tottenham, this is a crunch occasion. Anything other than victory would surrender the initiative to those currently gracing the top four places with time ticking down on the campaign and very little room for recovery.

There is a delicious irony that it has come to this. Rewind a little over 14 months and Villas-Boas’s reputation was apparently in tatters. He had overseen training at Cobham on a Sunday morning in early March, still groggy from defeat at West Bromwich Albion the previous day, only to be summoned into a meeting by the Chelsea chief executive, Ron Gourlay. He must have realised what was to follow as soon as he found Roman Abramovich, the director Eugene Tenenbaum and the technical director, Michael Emenalo, waiting for him, the hierarchy having already clicked into dismissal mode.

The club’s owner and his board were unanimous in their assessment that the team were heading only one way. There had been only five wins in 16 matches in all competitions. Chelsea loitered three points outside the top four and had been saddled with a two-goal deficit from the chaotic first leg of their Champions League knockout tie against Napoli. Abramovich predicted that, while the Portuguese was in charge, the club’s place in Europe’s elite competition was under considerable threat. The 35-year-old makes his first return this week hoping to see that prophecy come to pass.

How Villas-Boas would love to complete his rehabilitation in English football back on the stage where his career appeared to have been prematurely derailed. Chelsea will find him rather changed from the fresh-faced, clipboard-wielding bright young thing who had cost £13.4m in compensation to prise from Porto. He claims to have learned “a great lesson” from that chastening 256-day tenure back at the club he had previously graced as José Mourinho’s opposition scout. The fall-out from those spats with senior players in a hierarchical dressing room, and a refusal to deviate from the methods that had proved so successful in Portugal, was an education. The setup at Spurs seems more receptive.

His principles may remain intact – he still encourages that patient, possession-based style on the pitch – but there is more flexibility to his approach these days, and more maturity to his dealings with key personnel. Admittedly, he has not had to contend with the same kind of egos at White Hart Lane. He had inherited a squad at Chelsea that had claimed a league and cup double 12 months earlier and could argue their trusted methods would eventually achieve success. But his current players have bought into his ideas more readily, accepting the meritocracy he promotes for the benefit of the collective. His enthusiasm and drive have rubbed off at Spurs where, across town, many merely doubted his credentials to lead.

Now, though, he must oversee a victory that would buck a long-established trend. It is more than 23 years since Gary Lineker, in between centre-halves at the far post from Nayim’s delivery, nodded an 88th-minute winner past Dave Beasant to secure Spurs’ last victory at Stamford Bridge. To put that into some context, that was the weekend when Buster Douglas beat Mike Tyson and, more pertinently, Nelson Mandela walked free from Victor Verster prison. They have secured nine draws from the 25 visits in all competitions since. A win would feel historic.

That is what the manager is targeting, hopeful perhaps that Gareth Bale has saved one last flash of jaw-dropping quality for the biggest game yet of this campaign. The optimist in Villas-Boas will stress that, if Chelsea, Stoke and Sunderland are beaten, Champions League football will be assured. He will place equal importance on each of those fixtures. And yet Wednesday is the contest with the subplot. He may be uncomfortable in the spotlight, but this is the Portuguese’s moment.

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André Villas-Boas says return to Chelsea with Tottenham means nothing

Posted by & filed under Andre Villas-Boas, Chelsea, football, Match Reports, Premier League, Southampton, Sport, The Guardian, Tottenham Hotspur.

• Former Chelsea manager back at the Bridge on Wednesday
• ‘I was another manager that just passed by. It means nothing’

It is the classic break-up line. “It’s not you, it’s me.” André Villas-Boas did not exactly hear it from Roman Abramovich when he was dumped by the Chelsea owner last season, but he has come to see the sentiment.

Abramovich treats his managers mean. He has sacked seven in nine years and when Villas-Boas considers what has happened at Stamford Bridge since his departure and as he prepares to go back for the first time, with Tottenham Hotspur on Wednesday night, it certainly helps him to feel a bit better.

Roberto Di Matteo, the caretaker who won the European Cup to earn the job full-time, was dismissed in November and Rafael Benítez, the interim replacement, will not be upgraded to permanent status. Abramovich is ready to recall José Mourinho in the summer. Upheaval appears as the default setting.

“It’s fine because in the end, sometimes, the only option is for a manager to go,” Villas-Boas said. “I have discussed this at length. You need courage in this difficult moment. At this time, I understand it. Chelsea is going through the same turmoil of managers after I left. So it makes me a little bit calmer to understand how they work.”

Villas-Boas needed to be strong and it took him time to pick up the pieces. But fate has conspired to load tremendous importance on to Wednesday’s fixture and offer him the opportunity to make a point to Abramovich. Not that Villas-Boas sees it that way. He believes that the fight for Champions League qualification ought to be the story, rather than his own individual motivation, which he has been keen to downplay.

“I’m not sure if I passed time enough for me to feel anything [about going back to Chelsea],” he said. “I was another manager that just passed by. I spent three great years on the staff [as the opposition scout] … when I was given more responsibility [as the manager], I wasn’t given time enough so it means absolutely nothing, although I have great friends [at Chelsea], who I don’t want to undermine by what I’m saying.

“For me, it would be excellent but only if we get the three points. At the moment, it means absolutely nothing. Chelsea is just like any other team, it’s about the result and hopefully, at the end, there can be a little bit more satisfaction.”

It feels as though Tottenham have to win but what is clear is that they will need to play a lot better than they did against Southampton, when Gareth Bale provided a lone moment of quality with his fizzing late strike to rescue a collectively flat performance.

Southampton pressed high up the field, did not allow Tottenham to settle and had first-half chances to take control. The defeat, though, meant that they remained shy of 40 points and Wigan Athletic’s victory at West Bromwich Albion has raised the temperature in the bottom half of the table.

“I’m not worried, it just shows that the season is not over,” Nathaniel Clyne, the Southampton full-back, said. “We’re not playing like it’s over. We still have a target to reach. We’ve got to win our last two games [against Sunderland and Stoke City] and if we play like we did here, we will have a chance.”

Man of the match Gareth Bale (Tottenham)

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Tottenham Hotspur v Southampton: squad sheets

Posted by & filed under Features, football, Premier League, Southampton, Sport, The Guardian, Tottenham Hotspur.

It has been a good week for Gareth Bale, what with him cleaning up on the season’s individual awards as only Cristiano Ronaldo had done previously. But the Welshman intends to perform one more party trick in leading Tottenham to the victory that would appear essential for their Champions League hopes. Bale’s stars seem to be aligned – this will be his 200th appearance in Spurs colours against the club where he began his career. Southampton are all but safe from relegation but are determined to finish with a flourish. David Hytner

Venue White Hart Lane, Saturday 3pm

Tickets Sold out

Last season N/A

Referee P Dowd

This season’s matches 21 Y71, R4, 3.26 cards per game

Odds Tottenham 4-9 Southampton 6-1 Draw 10-3

Tottenham Hotspur

Subs from Friedel, Naughton, Gallas, Caulker, Carroll, Livermore, Parker, Dempsey, Holtby, Adebayor

Doubtful Gallas (calf)

Injured Kaboul (thigh, 19 May), Sandro (knee, Aug)

Suspended None

Form guide DWDWLL

Disciplinary record Y50 R2

Leading scorer Bale 19

Southampton

Subs from K Davis, Gazzaniga, Hooiveld, Forren, Ward-Prowse, Do Prado, Mayuka, Richardson, Puncheon

Doubtful None

Injured Chaplow (ankle, Aug)

Suspended Fox, Ramírez (both first of three)

Form guide LDDWWW

Disciplinary record Y40 R2

Leading scorer Lambert 14

Match pointers

• Tottenham have won nine and lost just two of their 11 previous Premier League home meetings with Southampton

• Southampton have gone 281 minutes of away football in the top flight without conceding a goal

• Spurs have gone nine league games without a clean sheet

• Gareth Bale has scored more goals from outside the box (seven) than any other player in the top flight this season

• Saints have won 31% of their matches under Mauricio Pochettino – versus 22% under Nigel Adkins this term

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Gareth Bale will stay at Tottenham next season, says André Villas-Boas

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

• Winger is expected to attract big money bids in the summer
• ‘This is the assurance I have … the player is here to remain’

André Villas-Boas says he has been promised that Gareth Bale will be at Tottenham Hotspur next season even if the club do not reach the Champions League – but the manager admits that he would have no influence over the club’s reaction to any bid.

Bale’s stock continues to rise as he was named the Football Writers’ Association’s player of the year a few days after collecting the player of the year and young player of the year awards from the Professional Footballers’ Association, and Villas-Boas knows that, more significantly, all of Europe’s top clubs admire the Welshman.

Deep-pocketed suitors no doubt want Spurs to fail to finish in the top four in the hope that the financial blow will soften Tottenham’s stance on a transfer and also convince Bale to seek a move in order to feature in the Champions League. However, Villas-Boas says he has been given guarantees that Spurs will stand firm and retain Bale no matter what.

“I would be extremely surprised [if Bale left] because this is the assurance I have,” the manager said. “In football anything can happen, it’s impossible to predict, but this is the assurance I have had from the club. The information that I have from the club is that the player is here to remain independent of the objectives of Champions League qualification being achieved or not.

“We understand that the more awards [Bale wins] the more recognition the player will have, the more media attention, but the club has to move forward by holding on to its best players. With the recognition and the further experience that he has had from this year, next year for Tottenham he will be even more assertive.”

Zinedine Zidane, the former France international who is the director of football at Real Madrid, said this week that he considered Bale the best player in the world and suggested there are several clubs in Europe ready to make transfer offers so astronomical that Tottenham could not refuse. Asked about this prospect, Villas-Boas said such decisions were not up to him. “It’s not up to me to judge the finances of the club – I am the head coach,” he said. “It’s the chairman’s decision.”

Villas-Boas is sufficiently aware of Tottenham’s financial situation, though, to know that he is unlikely to be able to renew his working relationship with the Brazilian forward Hulk, who excelled for Villas-Boas at Porto and has declared his desire to leave Zenit St Petersburg for the Premier League.

“He was my player and scored 36 goals in one season but it’s impossible he will make a move here because of the wages that he earns; they break our balance,” said Villas-Boas of the player who joined Zenit for around £40m last summer and is a reported target for Chelsea. “He may have options in the summer but to a club like Tottenham his transfer fee is also impossible.”

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The real Harry Redknapp

Posted by & filed under Books, Culture, England, Features, football, Harry Redknapp, Premier League, QPR, The Guardian, Tottenham Hotspur.

A year ago, he was tipped to be the next England manager and his Tottenham team were riding high. Today the England job is a distant memory and his new team QPR have been relegated. How disappointed must Redknapp be? Not as much as people might think, writes John Crace

On the morning of 8 February last year Harry Redknapp was cleared of tax evasion; that evening Fabio Capello announced his immediate resignation as England football manager. The timing was hardly a coincidence. Capello had never been a popular manager – particularly with football reporters – and after he had made clear the previous year that he was planning to give up the job after Euro 2012, Redknapp had been almost universally anointed manager-elect. With his acquittal, the only obstacle to the succession had been removed.

The Harry love-in continued for a couple of months, with nearly every current England player and football pundit weighing in to back Redknapp as the ideal man for the job. Even the Football Association appeared to be endorsing him, with board member Phil Gartside telling the BBC that Redknapp would be “an outstanding England manager”. And then, seemingly out of the blue, Roy Hodgson was given the job. If there had been a shortlist, Redknapp hadn’t even been on it, as he wasn’t invited for a job interview. Redknapp was gracious about missing out, but it was a public humiliation.

Worse was to come. Before the trial, Redknapp’s Tottenham Hotspur team had been playing some of the best football in the Premiership. Afterwards, their form fell away and when Chelsea won the European Champions League, Spurs were squeezed out of the top level of European competition for the following season. It didn’t seem quite the time for Redknapp to engage in brinkmanship with Spurs chairman Daniel Levy over the renewal of his contract. And so it proved; rather than negotiate, Levy sacked him in June.

By November 2012, Redknapp was back in business at another Premiership side, Queens Park Rangers, but his magic touch again went awol. At the weekend they were relegated.

Things haven’t exactly been rosy in the England camp, either. Hodgson’s tenure has proved much as expected: methodical, hard-working, but inspiration- and charisma-free. England predictably made hard work of Euro 2012, losing to Italy on penalties in the quarter final, and are no certainty to qualify for the World Cup in Brazil next year. Many England supporters who have been observing Redknapp’s apparent fall from grace at QPR couldn’t help but wonder if Harry wasn’t the second-best manager that England never had (the accolade for best still goes to Brian Clough). What almost no one was thinking was whether it was just possible Redknapp had dodged a bullet.

There was a gag going round the terraces of White Hart Lane last season when it seemed inevitable Redknapp would become England manager. “What’s the first thing Harry will do when he takes over England? Buy a couple of Croatians.” The joke was double-edged, recognising both that the England team looked old and short of quality and that Redknapp’s preferred solution at all the clubs he had previously managed was to buy his way out of trouble. With this being a non-starter for an England manager, the implication was that Redknapp would struggle at international level.

And yet it was equally possible that his weaknesses at club level could have proved an asset for England. “The England manager has to play the cards he is dealt,” says TalkSport presenter Sam Delaney. “While Harry was very good at wheeler-dealering, it could be very distracting. As England manager, his focus would have been maintained on his existing squad. In the same way, an international manager doesn’t have to worry too much about building a squad and developing talent – neither of which are Harry’s strongest points; his job is merely to pick the best players who are available to him. Nor does the team ever play so frequently that the squad needs to be rotated – another often-cited Redknapp weakness.”

It has also often been argued that Redknapp isn’t the greatest tactician – the former Spurs player Rafa van der Vaart once remarked that the tactics chalkboard in the dressing-room was usually kept blank – but he is more than good enough. And his motivational skills would have more than compensated, because at international level a manager is trying to achieve a short-term lift. For a single game or a four-week tournament, Redknapp’s basic enthusiasm and common sense are precisely what is needed. Over the course of a full Premier League season, telling a striker – as Redknapp once did to Roman Pavlyuchenko – “to fucking run around a bit” might end up doing more harm than good, but to get a result over 90 minutes it can be effective street football.

Regardless of the qualities Redknapp may have brought to the job, his time as England manager would, almost certainly, have ended in tears. Because every England manager’s does. The national side isn’t as good as it thinks it is – or, come the major tournaments, as the media hypes it to be – and the inevitable early exit from the Euros and the World Cup is almost invariably followed by recriminations and a sacking. Not that it would have stopped him from accepting the England job had he been asked. Redknapp was 65 at the time and what better way to end your career than taking over the national side?

A more interesting question, though, is just how much Redknapp really wanted the England job. The answer is not what you might expect. Redknapp has been misread by fans, footballers and reporters for years. Despite appearances to the contrary, Redknapp has never been football’s ordinary man; he has always been everyone’s exception. Other British football managers may have had more success, but few have been more universally loved. He is a man with the gift of making you feel as if you know him when you don’t: a national treasure whose weaknesses only add to his charm.

For some, he is the what-you-see-is-what-you-get, always-ready-to-have-a-laugh character out of an Ealing comedy: for others, including the police on occasion, he is the East End working-class wide boy. The archetypal dodgy geezer. Both versions of Redknapp are hopelessly simplistic. You don’t get to manage a Premiership club just by cracking jokes and being charming. A manager who was a soft touch wouldn’t last a month.

Neither does the dodgy geezer caricature stack up. There have been rumours about Redknapp’s financial dealings for more than a decade, but he was cleared of taking bungs by the Stevens inquiry into corruption in football in 2007, released without charge by the police in the same year after being arrested on suspicion of conspiracy to defraud and false accounting, and cleared of tax evasion charges at Southwark crown court in February last year. If there was something desperately dodgy going on, you might have expected it to have emerged by now.

But it isn’t just the Redknapp caricatures that have been misread. It is also the finer, more subtle, points of his personality. Starting with his ambition. When Redknapp became everyone’s firm favourite for the England job, it was generally assumed that becoming manager of the national team must have been the fulfilment of a lifetime’s ambition. And Redknapp did make a few of the right noises. Yet being handed the job on a plate is very different from having a burning desire to do it.

Take a look at Redknapp’s managerial career. He was 45 years old when he was forced out/resigned as Bournemouth manager, the age by which many men hope to have made their mark. He then went on to West Ham as number two to Billy Bonds before inheriting – or possibly manoeuvring himself into – the top job. He stayed in east London for about a decade, before falling out with the chairman and finding himself jobless. He then became “director of football” at Portsmouth – a title he had always previously described as a non-job – before again either inheriting or manoeuvring himself into the manager’s job. Next up, he had a year in charge of Southampton, in which time the club was relegated from the Premier League, before going back to Portsmouth where he achieved his greatest managerial success by steering the team to a first FA Cup for nearly 70 years.

Bournemouth, West Ham, Portsmouth and Southampton were clubs where a little of Redknapp’s stardust would go a very long way and where his managerial weaknesses would not come under too heavy a spotlight. Portsmouth’s FA Cup success caught people’s attention and the big clubs did come knocking.

Spurs were the first truly big team that Redknapp managed and he was over 60 when he took the job. It wasn’t a job he had actually been seeking and a large factor in his agreeing to accept it – apart from the money – appeared to be that London was close enough to his home in Sandbanks near Poole in Dorset for him to commute daily. A lifestyle choice, rather than the realisation of a football dream.

All in all, then, Redknapp’s may have been the career of a hard-working and talented manager, but it wasn’t one driven by the vaulting ambition of a Fergie, Wenger or Mourinho, the alpha males of football for whom anything less than 110%, heart-on-sleeve commitment to being the best is an intolerable admission of weakness. Redknapp wants to do well, he’s prepared to work hard to succeed, but the bottom line is that there are other things that mean more to him than football. Redknapp’s main aim has always been to make a living out of the game, to earn enough money to provide for his family while doing something he enjoyed.

Doing a job he liked and being able to return home to his wife Sandra and the dogs to stare out across Poole harbour through the telescope he had mounted in his living room was all he had ever dreamed of when he first went into management. After he had finished his playing career for the Seattle Sounders in the US in 1979, Redknapp had returned to the UK unsure of his future: he had never made any real plans for a life after hanging up his boots and only drifted into management when his old friend and mentor, Bobby Moore, asked him to be his assistant manager at non-league Oxford City on £120 per week.

Redknapp was grateful for the work but shocked at how far Moore had fallen. “It had never occurred to him that a World Cup-winning captain and football legend could end up managing a non-league side, playing against opponents who openly disrespected his reputation,” says Pete Johnson, a local sports reporter who has known Redknapp since his early days at Bournemouth. “It was a real wakeup call for Harry. If it could happen to Bobby, it could happen to anyone. From that point on, Redknapp was determined he wasn’t going to end up as one of the vast number of bitter ex-footballers who had been spat out and left broke and broken by the game. He was going to keep his wits about him and not let anyone take advantage of him. From then on, whatever career he could make in football was going to be on his own terms as far as possible. And he wasn’t going to end up penniless.”

And he didn’t, though it was a close run thing in the early days. Before he got the job at Bournemouth he considered spending his last £17,000 on buying a cab. Thankfully for football – and the south coast passengers who have been spared his patter – things worked out rather better for Redknapp. The 2012 Sunday Times Rich List in Sport ranked him in 84th place with a salary at Tottenham Hotspur of £4.4m a year and assets of £11m: those who were familiar with Redknapp’s financial arrangements considered £11m to be a very conservative estimate.

Long after most of his contemporaries have retired to the golf course, Redknapp is still at it, doing what he loves best. Sure, he’s disappointed that he didn’t get to manage England, though he is not that sorry to have escaped a lot of the boredom that comes with the job. And sure, he is disappointed he couldn’t prevent QPR from getting relegated, but it is not the end of the world. Redknapp had always been on a win-win bet at Loftus Road. If the club stayed up he would be a hero and collect a £1m bonus; if not, almost all the blame for its predicament would be attached to the former manager, Mark Hughes.

Besides, managing a Championship side isn’t that bad. Redknapp has done it before and he’ll do it again, if necessary. And there is always the chance that come December this year he will get a call from the chairman of another Premier League club – preferably within commuting distance of Sandbanks – who would be looking for him to get the team out of another relegation dogfight. Plus ça change. The sweat, the mud, the adrenalin, the agony, the joy. Who could resist? A footballer is a long time out of the game and Redknapp isn’t planning on going away anywhere sooner than necessary.

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Tottenham’s Gareth Bale wins PFA player of year award for second time

Posted by & filed under football, Gareth Bale, News, PFA Player of the Year awards, Sport, The Guardian, Tottenham Hotspur.

• Winger wins main award and young player of year award
• Bale beats off challenge of Van Persie and Suárez

Gareth Bale has become only the third man to be named both PFA player of the year and young player of the year.

The Tottenham winger, 23, is in good company, joining Cristiano Ronaldo (2007) and Andy Gray (1977) in winning both awards in the same year.

Bale, who also won the main award two years ago, beat off the challenge of Manchester United’s Robin van Persie and Liverpool’s Luis Suárez, who is serving a 10-game ban for biting Branislav Ivanovic.

Van Persie, the Premier League top scorer with 25 goals, was one of four United players to be named in the PFA Team of the Year.

He is joined in the team, which is voted for by the players, by his team-mates David De Gea, Rio Ferdinand and Michael Carrick.

Suárez partners Van Persie up front in the XI, while Bale’s Tottenham team-mate Jan Vertonghen is named in central defence.

Premier League Team of the Year: David De Gea (Manchester United); Pablo Zabaleta (Manchester City), Jan Vertonghen (Tottenham), Rio Ferdinand (Manchester United), Leighton Baines (Everton); Michael Carrick (Manchester United), Juan Mata (Chelsea), Gareth Bale (Tottenham), Eden Hazard (Chelsea); Luis Suárez (Liverpool), Robin van Persie (Manchester United).

Championship Team of the Year: Kasper Schmeichel (Leicester); Kieran Trippier (Burnley), Wes Morgan (Leicester), Mark Hudson (Cardiff), Wayne Bridge (Brighton); Wilfried Zaha (Crystal Palace), Thomas Ince (Blackpool), Peter Whittingham (Cardiff), Yannick Bolasie (Crystal Palace); Glenn Murray (Crystal Palace), Matej Vydra (Watford).

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Callum McManaman’s image gets a makeover in Wigan survival fight

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

When he imagined his full Premier League debut as a youngster, Callum McManaman cannot have factored in growing uncomfortably familiar with the modern news cycle and being confronted by a 48-year-old Geordie.

In a match played out in the perfect storm of the start of an international break, McManaman’s dreadful challenge on Newcastle’s Massadio Haïdara last month and the fallout when he faced no further action from the Football Association, dominated the news agenda.

Newcastle United’s assistant manager, John Carver, attempted to get to McManaman as he made his way off at half-time and the Wigan owner Dave Whelan was ridiculed for his defence of the striker’s tackle.

But after a long fortnight, McManaman, 22, remained in the starting lineup for the 1-0 win over Norwich and is still keeping the Argentina international Franco Di Santo on the sidelines.

Even when McManaman scored in Wigan’s 2-0 FA Cup semi-final victory at Wembley it was overshadowed by Millwall fans fighting one another but there was no hiding his superb first Premier League goal on Saturday. After drifting inside Kyle Naughton, he fired a stinging shot past Hugo Lloris at the DW Stadium.

McManaman is facing with relish the lengthy process of becoming known as something other than “the kid that made the terrible tackle” and remains grateful to his manager Roberto Martínez for keeping him in the team.

“There was a long wait after the game for the next match but what happened didn’t get me down or affect how I prepared myself for Norwich,” McManaman said. “There was a more media attention than I’d had before that point in my career but things happen in football and all you can do is look forward and work hard for the good of the team.

“People around you help but ultimately it’s down to you as an individual to go one way or the other. Having just got into the team I was desperate to get back on the training pitch and make sure I was in the starting lineup for Norwich. When the gaffer put me in that team it was a big moment and from that point onwards I like to think that I’ve progressed and become a stronger part of the team.”

With an FA Cup final against Manchester City to come, and the chance to help haul Wigan to survival once again, there could yet be a happy ending to McManaman’s campaign.

“He’s a strong character. A lot of bad things were said about him but it was a challenge he made to try to win the ball,” said his team-mate James McArthur. “He’s a winner but he wouldn’t intentionally hurt somebody. He’s really lighting up the Premier League now, he’s been a great addition and hopefully he can keep doing that between now and the end of the season.”

Just over two years on from Whelan bursting into the Wigan press room to wish Harry Redknapp and Tottenham luck against “that lot” (Real Madrid), this was a result that did as little for Tottenham’s prospects of returning to the Champions League as it did for Wigan’s hopes of what André Villas-Boas calls “salvation”.

Wigan gifted Tottenham an opening goal when neither Maynor Figueroa, who is set to miss the rest of the season with a groin problem, or goalkeeper Joel Robles was tempted to hoof the ball away. When the latter finally decided to attempt to clear the ball flew in off Gareth Bale’s boot.

They pulled level when Emmerson Boyce headed in from a Shaun Maloneycorner before McManaman received a pass from the excellent James McCarthy and powered a shot past Hugo Lloris from just outside the area.

But in the final minute, more poor defending from Wigan allowed a Tom Huddlestone free-kick to go all the way across the area before bouncing in off Boyce.

Wigan could be five points from safety if Aston Villa beat Sunderland on Monday night and despite being buoyed by snatching a late point, Tottenham may regret missing an opportunity to put pressure on Arsenal and Chelsea, to whom they travel on 8 May. They fell away in 2011 and finished fourth last season only to see their Champions League place taken away when Chelsea won last season’s competition.

Scott Parker said: “People will always ask whether we can handle the pressure and put those questions to us because of what happened in the past but I don’t think it is a mental issue at all. We are showing character.”

Man of the match James McCarthy (Wigan)

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Gareth Bale will stay if Tottenham finish fourth, says Villas-Boas

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

• Spurs manager admits Bale needs Champions League football
• ‘Getting top four is the way to keep our best assets’

André Villas-Boas says he has the assurance of the Tottenham Hotspur board that Gareth Bale will not be sold if the club can qualify for next season’s Champions League.

Bale is one of the game’s hottest properties and Villas-Boas accepts that the 23-year-old needs to play in Europe’s elite competition. Were Tottenham to finish outside the top four, the manager has admitted it would be difficult to satisfy Bale’s ambition at White Hart Lane.

But Villas-Boas took the positive line before Tottenham’s fixture at Wigan Athletic on Saturday when he was asked about Bale’s future and, specifically, whether he had been given any assurances regarding him staying if Champions League football could be secured. “I think so,” Villas-Boas said. “That’s the information that I have from the club. It has come from the club.”

“The club is committed to keeping the best assets,” he added. “That’s the only way that we can ensure that we are in the top four every year. Gareth is part of that project bearing in mind that he has been amazing this season. Hopefully, we can develop him to a greater extent. We get the buzz from working with great players and Gareth has developed into a great player, so I couldn’t be happier.”

Tottenham’s bullishness about their prospects of keeping Bale from the clutches of Europe’s top clubs this summer, chief among them Real Madrid, takes in the player’s happiness at White Hart Lane; the fact that he has youth on his side; the likely presence of interested bidders for years to come; and also their abiliity to price predators out of the market.

The chairman, Daniel Levy, has maintained that it would take Cristiano Ronaldo money even to tempt him to part with his prized asset – a figure of close to the £80m that Real paid to Manchester United for the Portugal forward in 2009. – Levy is not a man to back down from the prices that he quotes and it is unclear whether any club could stretch so high.

Bale is odds-on to be named as the PFA’s Player of the Year on Sunday night, after a stunning season in which he has scored 23 times for Tottenham, plus five more for Wales, and developed his game to include being a threat from a central attacking role. He is under contract until 2016 but the club are expected to offer him fresh terms in the summer to reflect his soaring status. He already earns in excess of £100,000 a week.

Plenty could yet hinge on Tottenham’s final five matches, in which they will attempt to finish above Chelsea, Arsenal or both to reach the Champions League for only the second time, and Bale’s focus does not extend beyond the target.

“Gareth has had a major development this year,” Villas-Boas said. “He has played in so many positions and has had such a big impact in those positions. We are happy that he has been nominated [for the PFA award] and we would be even happier if he was to win.

“Although the recognition is individual, the team have helped him to have this wonderful year and they would feel good for Gareth. They are an excellent group and everything they have spoken about Gareth is with respect.”

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Wigan Athletic v Tottenham Hotspur: squad sheets

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

It may be late April but there will be no end-of-season feel to this contest. Wigan, in their 300th Premier League fixture, will be seeking the win they desperately require to ease their relegation fears while Tottenham remain involved in an intriguingly tight battle for a Champions League qualifying place. Wigan won at White Hart Lane in November but they will be fearing the worst given how Tottenham tore through Manchester City last week en route to a 3-1 victory. Gareth Bale could once again prove the difference. Sachin Nakrani

Venue DW Stadium, Saturday 3pm

Tickets £20-22 (0871 66 33 552)

Last season Wigan 1 Tottenham 2

Referee Martin Atkinson

This season’s matches 21 Y81, R1, 3.90 cards per game

Odds Wigan 14-5 Tottenham 11-10 Draw 13-5

Wigan

Subs from Habsi, Stam, McArthur, Di Santo, Miyaichi, Espinoza, Redmond, Lopez, Henríquez, Fyvie, Golobart

Doubtful None

Injured Alcaraz (hamstring, May), Watson (leg, May), Ramis (knee, Aug), , Crusat (knee, unknown), Pollitt (hip, unknown)

Suspended None Form guide LLDWWL

Disciplinary record Y54 R2

Leading scorer Koné 10

Tottenham

Subs from Friedel, Naughton, Caulker, Carroll, Livermore, Huddlestone, Dempsey, Holtby, Adebayor

Doubtful None

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

Suspended None

Form guide WDWLLW

Disciplinary record Y49 R2

Leading scorer Bale 18

Match pointers

• Wigan have won three and lost seven of their past 15 meetings with Tottenham in the top flight, including a record 9-1 defeat in 2008-09

• Tottenham have led in 13 away games this season, only Manchester United (14) have done so in more

• Wigan have the highest percentage of second-half goals (68%) in the division

• Clint Dempsey has scored more Premier League goals against Wigan than versus any other opponent

• Wigan have exactly the same number of points as they did after 33 games last season – they won four of their final five matches in 2011-12

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André Villas-Boas ‘focused’ on Spurs future despite Real Madrid rumours

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

• Manager ‘flattered’ by speculation he could replace Mourinho
• ‘I was given an opportunity by Tottenham and am very grateful’

André Villas-Boas has described stories linking him with a summer move to Real Madrid as “flattering” and “an honour” but he said that he was focused on continuing at Tottenham Hotspur and beginning a second season at the same club for the first time.

The 35-year-old Portuguese’s whirlwind managerial career has taken him from Académica in his home country to White Hart Lane via Porto and Chelsea but he has not stayed anywhere for more than one season. He lasted only eight months at Chelsea last time out before he was sacked.

Madrid are expected to be in the market for a new manager, with the incumbent, José Mourinho, having dropped heavy hints that his time at the Bernabéu is approaching its end. People close to him have been more forthright and he has been touted for a return to Chelsea when the interim manager, Rafael Benítez, departs in the summer.

Carlo Ancelotti, the Paris Saint-Germain manager, is the favourite to succeed Mourinho at Madrid but the Spanish club have also taken note of the job that Villas-Boas has done in his debut season at Tottenham, where he has led a squad in transition to the Europa League quarter-finals and top-four contention. Villas-Boas, who is under contract until 2015, resumes the mission to finish above Arsenal, Chelsea or both in the Premier League at Wigan Athletic on Saturday.

“At the moment I am very, very focused on trying to get another year at one club … the same club,” Villas-Boas said, with a smile. “It’s very … obviously flattering but everybody is being linked with the Real Madrid job at the moment because there are now lots of coaches around.

“I have a contract. I was given an opportunity [by Tottenham] and was extremely grateful. The speculation about Real Madrid comes from the coach having speculation all over the world about his exit. The fact he made it public that he is looking for an exit has ended up with a lot of speculation. For me it is always an honour but I am completely focused.”

Villas-Boas has always said that he would like to keep his managerial career short and also use it to travel the world to experience interesting places; for example, in South America. “Yes, definitely, Brazil … my feelings are the same,” he said, before sparking a moment of alarm. “I would definitely move very, very soon to a club in a different league.” It was later suggested that Villas-Boas confused the notions of “soon” and “one day” in his English language.

Villas-Boas talked about his desire to see Tottenham finish above Arsenal for the first time since 1995 but he said that the striker Olivier Giroud’s three-match ban for his red card at Fulham would not adversely affect the rival north London club.

“Giroud is key but Arsenal have the option of Gervinho, who has finished his last fixtures very well,” Villas-Boas said. “Lukas Podolski offers that too, and they have the chance to put him through the middle. He can have an impact, as we know how desperate he is to play through the centre. Theo Walcott as well. There is that motivation for those two players to get back in the middle. That will help Arsenal in some way.

“There are lots of games still to play. We can give you a better perspective later but at the moment it is completely open. We are still chasing, although we have the destiny in our hands.”

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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 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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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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Fourth place can ‘salvage’ our season, says Tottenham’s Clint Dempsey

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

• USA striker phlegmatic after shootout defeat by Basel
• ‘We’re frustrated but we have to regroup’

Clint Dempsey says that Tottenham’s season can be considered a success only if they qualify for the Champions League as he looked to move on from the anguish of the penalty shootout defeat by Basel in the Europa League quarter-finals on Thursday night.

The USA forward, who scored both goals in the second leg, the second of which forced extra time, suggested that the margins over the decisive weeks of the season will be similarly tight. But he acknowledged that the difference between finishing on either side of them would be marked.

“We’re frustrated that we’re not in the Europa League any more but we have to regroup and focus on the league,” Dempsey said. “We have to make sure we finish in fourth place and make sure we’re in the Champions League [qualifying round] next year. That’s the only thing we can do to salvage this season and say that we’ve had a good year.

“It is as black and white as that because the Champions League has been the goal for the season. We wanted to go as far as we could in all of the competitions and try to win something but we haven’t been able to do that in any of the cups and so now the only thing left to play for is the Champions League.”

Tottenham will enter next week in fifth position if Arsenal beat Norwich City at home on Saturday and having played a game less than Chelsea, who are already ahead of them. Their next match is at home to Manchester City on Sunday week and the tension is extreme.

Dempsey admitted that he and his team-mates had been “dead when it came to penalties” against Basel, after playing extra time with 10 men following the dismissal of Jan Vertonghen, but he believes that the spirit they showed can sustain them over the final six matches, which also include a trip to Chelsea.

Tottenham hope to be boosted for the City game by the return from injury of Gareth Bale, Aaron Lennon and Jermain Defoe. “You’ve got to keep fighting,” Dempsey said. “We’ve got a lot of depth in our squad. We have a lot of key players who missed the Basel game and we were still able to take the game to them. We’re hoping to get those players fit to help us with that push towards the end.”

The substitute Tom Huddlestone saw his penalty saved by the Basel goalkeeper Yann Sommer and when Emmanuel Adebayor lifted his kick over the crossbar, the game was effectively over for Tottenham. Adebayor was phlegmatic. “I always take penalties for Tottenham, I have taken them for Arsenal, for Real Madrid, so it’s a gamble,” he said. “You miss or you score. I missed and I’m very disappointed but that’s football for you. What do you want me to tell you now? You just have to keep going and keep focussed.

“It’s a tough one. You run around for 120 minutes, you give everything you have in your stomach, you play with 10 men, you are tired and on top of that, you have to take a penalty. The pressure is there when you take the ball. It’s not the reason why we missed but it’s not easy for us.”

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André Villas-Boas hails Tottenham ‘heroes’ after defeat on penalties

Posted by & filed under Basel, Europa League, football, News, Sport, The Guardian, Tottenham Hotspur.

• Manager says team ‘set an example for English football’
• But exit will mean ‘longer weeks’ to play League games

André Villas-Boas described his Tottenham Hotspur players as “heroes” who had helped to “set an example for English football” in the Europa League, as he digested the bitter pill of a penalty shootout defeat by Basel in the quarter-final.

Chelsea will be the Premier League’s sole representative in Friday’s semi-final draw after they defeated Rubin Kazan on aggregate, with Newcastle United going out to Benfica. But the drama came in Switzerland, where Tottenham scored a late equaliser through Clint Dempsey to force extra-time. They lost Jan Vertonghen to a 90th-minute red card and kept Basel at bay in the additional 30 minutes but they were broken by the penalties, when the substitute Tom Huddlestone and Emmanuel Adebayor missed.

“I think we set a great standard and a great example this season for English football for the way that we approached this competition,” Villas-Boas said, with a nod towards his consistently strong selections and regularly stated determination to win the tournament. “I would like to compliment the players because changing the mentality towards the competition is difficult. They played like heroes.

“It has never been an excuse for the way we’ve played in the Premier League but I think it has changed the way some other English clubs have approached and played the competition. I’m proud of the players. We’re extremely disappointed but it’s a great honour to have managed the players in this competition the way we did. We had such great ambitions and we tried to go for it but when we lost Jan, it didn’t go our way.”

Villas-Boas said that Tottenham had practised penalties but it was impossible to legislate for the highly charged atmosphere or the nerves. Gylfi Sigurdsson was Tottenham’s only success from the spot while each of Basel’s four takers scored.

“Penalties are always very difficult,” Villas-Boas said. “We had assigned the strongest penalty-takers and we practised the penalties. You can never recreate the same stress and emotion in training. In the end, we could have done better in the home leg. We played a better game this time round but in penalties, anything can happen. It wasn’t our day and it’s part of the game.”

Tottenham’s season has come down to six Premier League matches and a fight to finish above Chelsea or Arsenal to qualify for next season’s Champions League. Chelsea’s remorseless schedule continues unabated and there was the sense in Basel that Tottenham might at least have some beneficial breathing space now that their European adventure is over.

“The fact we are not in it will allow us longer weeks to play the Premier League games,” Villas-Boas said. “If it’s going to serve as something good, it will definitely allow more time for the players to rest. But we wanted to be in the semi-finals. We have six games remaining and we need to be fully ready to respond.

“It’s different now. But motivation and desire is something we have never lacked so we go back into the Premier League with the objective of trying to qualify for the Champions League. The players are very driven to achieve success and, hopefully, it will be an easy task. They can reflect and I’m sure we will prepare strongly for our next game against Manchester City.”

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Basel 2-2 Tottenham Hotspur (4-4 on agg; Basel win 4-1 on pens) | Europa League

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

After Lyon and Internazionale, it might have felt as though Tottenham Hotspur had wrung every last drop of drama from their involvement in the Europa League’s knockout phase. As it turned out, the nerve-shredding victories were only the prelude.

Adversity looked like the default setting for André Villas-Boas and his players on a rain-swept night in Switzerland. Never mind the injury absences of Gareth Bale, Aaron Lennon and Jermain Defoe, the team’s attacking trident, they had to play extra-time with 10 men following the 90 th-minute dismissal of Jan Vertonghen for a last-man foul on Marco Streller. Tom Huddlestone dropped back as an emergency centre-half. Young Tom Carroll emerged with honours in midfield.

Tottenham’s courage was stirring. They refused to accept that they were beaten in normal time, when they trailed for the majority of the second half. Clint Dempsey’s late equaliser, his second goal of the night, was a symphony of technique and composure.

The Basel midfielder Mohamed Elneny hit the outside of the post in the first period of extra-time and, in the second, the substitute Alex Frei spurned a glorious chance to win it only for Brad Friedel to block. The pressure was stifling but Tottenham clung on.

Their resilience, though, did not stretch to the penalty shootout, when Huddlestone and Emmanuel Adebayor failed to score. It was galling that Adebayor’s skied shot did not work the goalkeeper, Yann Sommer. Flares burst to life behind the goal as Basel celebrated a first ever European semi-final. Tottenham’s efforts deserved better and they were left to nurse broken hearts.

For much of the second half at a rain-swept St Jakob Park, it felt as though it might not be their night. Rank bad defensive errors had pinned them on to the back foot. And yet this team does not know when it is beaten and they showed tremendous character, allied to no little quality, to battle back to force extra-time.

The substitute Tom Huddlestone’s raking crossfield pass exposed Basel and with only eight minutes remaining and Tottenham starting into the abyss, Clint Dempsey took an assured touched with his chest and finished with a devastating stab of his left boot. Villas-Boas leapt with delight on the touchline.

Dempsey’s first goal of the evening had followed a shocking aberration from the Basel centre-half Fabian Schär but Tottenham were also nervous at the back. Mousa Dembélé, who for much of the season has been outstanding, erred with a poor pass that set in motion Mohamed Salah’s equaliser while Brad Friedel’s parry from a corner paved the way for Aleksander Dragovic to finish. But Tottenham kept their composure and as Basel lost theirs, they forced the extra period.

Basel had been able to smell the semi-finals after the result at White Hart Lane and the excitement among their supporters verged on the feverish. The big-match atmosphere was set at the outset, as the rain teemed down and Basel chased history. Never before had they reached the last four of a European competition. No Swiss club had achieved the feat since Grasshoppers Zurich in 1978.

The absence for Tottenham had been almost as long, dating to 1984, when they won this tournament in its previous guise of the Uefa Cup. The yearning for a repeat has driven Villas-Boas and coloured his debut season in north London. The stakes were tantalising and Tottenham’s determination, having come this far, was palpable.

Tottenham have found it more difficult away from home in the Europa League this season than they have domestically, largely because European teams do not trade in the blood-and-bluster of the Premier League and they tend to ensure that they do not over-commit to leave themselves vulnerable to quick counters. The big pre-match question for Basel, as they held the upper hand with their away goals, was whether they would stick or twist.

There was a caginess, an edginess, about the early running, influenced by the fear of making a mistake. The pitch did not help. Surface water and cut-up tufts meant that the players had to watch their footing and concentrate on the basics.

The conditions played a part in Tottenham’s unpicking of the deadlock, although Schär will nonetheless have bad dreams about the manner in which he misjudged his sliding challenge as he attempted to cut out Vertonghen’s throughball, which was intended for Dempsey.

Schär succeeded only in teeing up Dempsey who, with Yann Sommer committed, kept his composure to round the goalkeeper and roll home with his left-foot.

The lead did not last. Dembélé, who was pressed higher up the pitch than has been typical, had settled well and he caught the eye when he stepped past challengers. But it was a loose square ball from him that allowed Basel to spring forward to equalise.

Marco Streller ushered in Mohamed Salah, whose desire to unload quickly and without backlift made for a toe-poked effort. It was highly effective, with Friedel beaten low to his left. Flares lit the scene. The game had come to life.

Salah was the danger. He almost tiptoed through after his equaliser and Kyle Naughton was later booked for pulling him back. Dembélé forced Sommer into a flying 36th-minute save and it was too close to call at the interval.

The no-holds-barred commitment was epitomised by Serey Die, who was quite happy to leave markers on his opponents while Michael Dawson, characteristically, gave no quarter. Kyle Walker was accused of treading on Park Joo-Ho as he recovered his position in the first half but the Basel full-back was not hurt. The game was niggly and the referee, Olegario Benquerenca, was busy.

Disaster struck for Tottenham shortly after the restart and if the first concession had felt avoidable, there was a grisly undercurrent when they fell behind. From Valentin Stocker’s near-post corner, Schär flicked on in front of a pack of white shirts and Friedel could do no more than pat the ball out to Dragovic, who scored from close-range. It is safe to say that there are one or two mountains in this country. Tottenham had another one to scale and the penalty shoot-out proved a step too far.

Basel might have finished the tie in the 58th minute when Dragovic’s towering header from a free-kick had Friedel rooted. All eyes watched for the corner of the net to swell yet the ball drifted wide. Emmanuel Adebayor plugged away up front, as he fed on scraps and yet Tottenham remained within a puncher’s chance of salvation. Dawson’s header from a Gylfi Sigurdsson corner led to fluttering hearts but Sommer saved.

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