Kevin
Nostrodamus of football
- Joined
- Jan 8, 2002
- Messages
- 13,812
What is this? Strangely funny thhoughMonstered at home
What is this? Strangely funny thhoughMonstered at home
The fecking state of affairs.
The only positive I take from the game is that it seems that more people are finally waking up to the fact that Jose can not be the manager of Spurs.
I am starting to get used to losing again, after some wonderful years of greatness, I guess I can come to terms with us being a mid-table team again, but I can not fecking stand the football we are playing. It is disgraceful.
I hope people see now what we had. What we have lost due to ungrateful whining and demands for more, for silverware, for titles. Demands for a plan B, a plan B that caused our managers to lose focus on our once brilliant plan A.
We stopped playing with AMs who could actually play football to add players who could run and dribble. Now we can not control a game, we can not outplay a team, all they have to do is deny us space in behind and we have nothing.
We have a manager now that is only here because of cries for titles. He adds nothing of value. Maybe a bit of cynicism, but that is all. He has no idea how to organize and implement an attacking plan. He places no value on creativity. He does not care to play positive football. And his ability to get the best out of players and teams died years ago.
Unfortunately for us, we were fortunate last season. If you look behind the points we got, the numbers are mostly atrocious. We were often dominated in possession, shots, shots on goal, xG and xPts, even when we won games.
In the summer we made the least exciting signings I can remember us doing, and today we got the first piece of evidence that Doherty and Hojbjerg will only make us worse.
We will keep deteriorating for as long as the current manager is in charge. We need someone who will be brave enough to clean up our squad and have us start playing actual fecking football again.
Sadly, I think we can not afford to fire Jose due to the whole Covid situation. fecked if we do, fecked if we don't.
The fecking state of affairs.
Monster sby = Dominate - i agree its pretty funnyWhat is this? Strangely funny thhough
Still trollingIf we miss CL he will surely be gone. With Chelsea improving and other teams too that look like it could happen.
We should really be challenging for the league with what we got, but can't see it under Ole.
He should last longer than Mourinho and Moyes though.
I can’t stand him these days and thought from the start he’d be a bad appointment for United, but I don’t think this is really accurate.
Pretty much the only enjoyable thing about his tenure was our fairly regular comebacks. Which seemed to indicate that either the players didn’t hate him as much as the Jose haters thought, or they were a lot more dedicated and professional than his fanboys would have them be.
It does look that way at Spurs, though some reckon the players had already given up under Poch.
There was another game, West Ham at home. Down to ten men, goal down and they powered through 4-1.I remember Chelsea being 1-0 down at home to Bolton in the first half, in his first spell at Chelsea. He took off a defender at half time, replaced him with an attacker and went with three at the back, then overwhelmed Bolton with 5 second half goals. That was in the days the 4231 still seemed exotic. Swapping a defender for an attacker was just so daring, and whenever he tried something, it paid off. Nowadays he still makes changes, but they don't seem to have any logic to them and don't influence the game. Like he's going on muscle memory but can't remember why it used to work anymore.
2-2 at home to Burnley. Messe LingodI think the comebacks were there only after the Sevilla game,
I’m not gonna argue with you there!and I don't think they were because of him, but in spite of him.
£30m BaillyHow did anyone think this was going to work?
This is is a guy who was complaining about us not backing him after we spent £100s of millions on signing players for him. Then he went to a club who often spend absolute feck all.
The amount Spurs have spent this summer on Doherty and Hojbjerg is about the same as he's used to spending on players he just wants to stop his rivals from getting without any real use for them.
Because in Pogba, de Gea, Martial and even Sanchez we had some ungodly talent with professional pride.I think the comebacks were there only after the Sevilla game, and I don't think they were because of him, but in spite of him.
Everton's first away win against a Top Six side in 40 attempts. Kane only having two touches inside opposition box.
Not a good start for Jose and Spurs. Flip side is that Everton are managed by a champions league winning manager and not some average manager.
Not a great start, but he could pull it back quickly. Once he starts throwing his players under his bus, it will begin to fall apart. Slowly but surely like clockwork "our" Jose.If I had to make a bet, I would say he will be gone before Christmas. He will not get the necessary backing in the market, some of the key players do not look like themselves and the playstyle looks shite. It could turn sour pretty quickly.
£30m Bailly
£27m Mikhitaryan
£89m Pogba
£75m (rising to £90m) Lukaku
£31m Lindelof (As a pundit he went on TV and slagged him off saying he can't head the ball)
£40m Matic
£19m Dalot
£50m Fred
£1.5m Grant
and untold millions spent on Zlatan and Sanchez
That's not counting turning up in a hoodie to the Munich memorial, questioning Martial's decision to be with his newborn, Luke Shaw's mid game brain transplant and of course, Errrrrrrrrrrritage.
Looking back, did he improve a single player in our squad? By the end his tactics amounted to lumping it to Fellaini. He was a truly great manager. Was. We got the B-Tec version.
Because in Pogba, de Gea, Martial and even Sanchez we had some ungodly talent with professional pride.
From 28 November to Boxing day Spurs play Chelsea, Arsenal, Palace, Liverpool, Leicester and Wolves. I look forward to it.
I think it’s time he retired and we got pundit Mourinho. He has such great experience in the game and is so knowledgeable. I think he elevates any studio conversation he is a part of and would like to see him in that role.
Cracking post.£30m Bailly
£27m Mikhitaryan
£89m Pogba
£75m (rising to £90m) Lukaku
£31m Lindelof (As a pundit he went on TV and slagged him off saying he can't head the ball)
£40m Matic
£19m Dalot
£50m Fred
£1.5m Grant
and untold millions spent on Zlatan and Sanchez
That's not counting turning up in a hoodie to the Munich memorial, questioning Martial's decision to be with his newborn, Luke Shaw's mid game brain transplant and of course, Errrrrrrrrrrritage.
Looking back, did he improve a single player in our squad? By the end his tactics amounted to lumping it to Fellaini. He was a truly great manager. Was. We got the B-Tec version.
Because in Pogba, de Gea, Martial and even Sanchez we had some ungodly talent with professional pride.
From 28 November to Boxing day Spurs play Chelsea, Arsenal, Palace, Liverpool, Leicester and Wolves. I look forward to it.
I have a different opinion.
You know, everyone's career is a journey. Not just pro athletes and coaches, but you and me. There's a lot you go through in your working life over the decades -- after all, it's probably about half of your waking life from age 20 onwards. You learn a lot, you suffer a lot.. and you come to face with whom you really are. Sometimes people deny it and just slink into the darkness. Sometimes they embrace it and reach new highs (see Trump). Sometimes it takes a while before they get it right (see Steve Jobs). And sometimes they transform themselves into something new and better.
Mourinho is at a crossroads now, and he really will have to pick his path. I think he's the most fascinating case of all in current world football, because no one is saying similar about Pep. And Zidane doesn't have the track record for issues to start cropping up. Ancelotti at Everton is another interesting one -- but I'm not quite sure how that story is going to play out.
Given how Mourinho has knuckled and doubled down, it's hard to imagine a redemption arc but that's precisely what would make a redemption arc an incredible thing to see in world football.
I have a different opinion.
You know, everyone's career is a journey. Not just pro athletes and coaches, but you and me. There's a lot you go through in your working life over the decades -- after all, it's probably about half of your waking life from age 20 onwards. You learn a lot, you suffer a lot.. and you come to face with whom you really are. Sometimes people deny it and just slink into the darkness. Sometimes they embrace it and reach new highs (see Trump). Sometimes it takes a while before they get it right (see Steve Jobs). And sometimes they transform themselves into something new and better.
Mourinho is at a crossroads now, and he really will have to pick his path. I think he's the most fascinating case of all in current world football, because no one is saying similar about Pep. And Zidane doesn't have the track record for issues to start cropping up. Ancelotti at Everton is another interesting one -- but I'm not quite sure how that story is going to play out.
Given how Mourinho has knuckled and doubled down, it's hard to imagine a redemption arc but that's precisely what would make a redemption arc an incredible thing to see in world football.
What happened to Jose? He was a world class manager. You do not win two CLs, PL, Serie A and the La Liga if you are not a world class manager. But he seems to have lost everything he has as a manager.
shhhh we don't want those ideas to get to woody...Still find it utterly insane that he went and got Höjbjerg and put him right into the team. He is incredibly mediocre, not even close... perplexed to say the least. Is this the level Spurs want to be at? It would be like United going after Albrighton on the right side instead of Sancho. I understand Spurs are skint and struggle to attract players, but still.... why not go after Iheanacho and Mustafi while still at it?
Haven't seen him for a while. I hope his well.
I have a different opinion.
You know, everyone's career is a journey. Not just pro athletes and coaches, but you and me. There's a lot you go through in your working life over the decades -- after all, it's probably about half of your waking life from age 20 onwards. You learn a lot, you suffer a lot.. and you come to face with whom you really are. Sometimes people deny it and just slink into the darkness. Sometimes they embrace it and reach new highs (see Trump). Sometimes it takes a while before they get it right (see Steve Jobs). And sometimes they transform themselves into something new and better.
Mourinho is at a crossroads now, and he really will have to pick his path. I think he's the most fascinating case of all in current world football, because no one is saying similar about Pep. And Zidane doesn't have the track record for issues to start cropping up. Ancelotti at Everton is another interesting one -- but I'm not quite sure how that story is going to play out.
Given how Mourinho has knuckled and doubled down, it's hard to imagine a redemption arc but that's precisely what would make a redemption arc an incredible thing to see in world football.
Why do his teams play like they’re unfit? This never used to be the case but with us and now Spurs, it’s as if the players have never ran before
Why do his teams play like they’re unfit? This never used to be the case but with us and now Spurs, it’s as if the players have never ran before