As Big Ben
strikes 11, the footballing arms race is put on hold until the New Year. The
summer transfer window of 2014 has been disappointing by some people’s
standards, but it’s not all doom and gloom.
Many people
entered this season with the mindframe that we won’t finish in the top four,
and that we shouldn’t tinker with the squad too much. Just three weeks later,
and some are berating Daniel Levy for not opening his pockets to sign a player
we don’t need but want after being beaten by a rampant Liverpool side.
We didn’t
need Welbeck, nor would it have been one that was financially beneficial. Should
Welbeck have been a striker, we’d have four of them, each of a similar calibre.
Emmanuel Adebayor may be going to the African Cup of Nations, yes, but it’s
possible Pochettino has something lined up in January. A lot can happen between
now and then, too. Adebayor could lose form, Roberto Soldado may have found his
golden touch again, young Harry Kane may
be on the verge of an England call up- you never know. Welbeck as a winger
would be no upgrade on what we have either; not much more than a week ago were
people in awe of Nacer Chadli’s demolition of the Queens Park Rangers backline.
People wanted
Welbeck as they believed he was a player with a big reputation who’s an upgrade
on what we have. When he suddenly
made the switch to Arsenal, people felt like their hearts were ripped out. One
lost deal on transfer deadline day made us believe we’re falling behind our
rivals. We really won’t look back in anger at this deal.
Another
deadline day transfer no-go was the departure of Andros Townsend. Opinions of
him were split after last season, with some calling him one dimensional, and others
calling him a great prospect. I get why so many people are ready to write
Andros off, but surely things can only get better for him after the Liverpool
game? Let’s not forget, most people would have thought Jay Rodriguez was bang
average before last season, and some of you were willing to throw £15m PLUS
Andros in exchange for him. Poch has arguably what made Rodriguez the player he
is today and made Adam Lallana a £25million player; why can’t he have the same
effect on Townsend?
There has
never been a nickname of a Spurs player more cringey than ‘The Beast’. Sandro’s
personality was a smokescreen for his faltering ability in recent months. Of
course, there was a time where Sandro could have been world class, but those
days have gone. Ironically, he never really recovered from that injury vs QPR.
Since then though, he’s been off the pace, a little slow to react and time
challenges. At the time of his sale, he was worse than Etienne Capoue, and we
already had a replacement in Benjamin Stambouli. We’ve missed Sandro’s form for
a long time- it’s only now we’ll miss his character.
Stambouli’s
transfer was rather overshadowed by angry fans bemoaning the lack of other
signings- how do we not know Stambouli will be a shrewd signing and a player
when pretty much no one has seen him play? No one had heard of Luka Modric when
he signed.
The
possible signings of Mateo Musacchio and Morgan Schneiderlin were simply beyond
the realms of financial possibility; if we had signed them, we would have spent
nearly £60million. Don’t have a go at the people upstairs for not splashing the
cash; you’d only be eating your words. Don’t act like we didn’t spend
£107million last year and are still adamant on keeping those players (none of
which we sold). We don’t have a net spend in preparation for the stadium move
in the next few years, instead of having to hold back when we do move in (a la
Arsenal and the Emirates). Would you rather hold back now and stabilise, or become a real force upon moving into a new state-of-the-art stadium? Levy wants to win the Premier League- he will have to spend at some point.
So, here’s
what’s been good about this summer:
- We’ve tied down Hugo Lloris, one of the best goalkeepers in the world, to a new contract.
- Christian Eriksen and Erik Lamela are two of the world’s best young prospects.
- We’re still in a good financial situation.
- Our squad is still looking good and on course for another top six finish as expected, whilst also retaining an average age of 24.4 years (23.7 without Brad Friedel).
- We weren’t forced into panic buying anyone.
- We reinforced at the back, acquiring players in each defensive position possible.
- We have a young manager with bright ideas and is
convincing players Tottenham Hotspur have ambition.
Just like a
mother telling her son upon returning to school, it’s never as bad as you think
it will be- we’re going to be okay.
Sandro paragraph on point imo.
ReplyDelete7.5/10 imo.
ReplyDelete