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I liked Erik Lamela before it was cool

Pochettino surely must take a huge amount of credit for his level of improvement. The perfect character to bring a player out of his shell -- demanding, but knows when to lighten the atmosphere and is never a dісk about it. Serendipity plays its part, though. To think how close he was to being sent away on loan in the summer....

Bale was going to be sold in January 2010, wasn't he? Before BAE suffered an injury and history was subsequently made, that is. :p There's always serendipity involved in these things.


Found it:

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/fo...ngham-boss-Alex-McLeish-eyes-3m-defender.html
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/fo...eals-close-signing-Birmingham--EXCLUSIVE.html

Bonus: smarmy Arsenal fan in the comments on that first article. Utterly priceless, in hindsight. :)

ScotchEggsRule, London, 6 years ago

LOL They paid £10 million for that gimp! Only Sp*rs could waste that kind of money. Maybe they should take Wenger's perspective on left backs and grow their own like Gibbs, Cole, Traore. Or purchase young bargains like Silvinho, Clichy for peanuts. But probably not, more money than sense that club.
 
Bale was going to be sold in January 2010, wasn't he? Before BAE suffered an injury and history was subsequently made, that is. :p There's always serendipity involved in these things.


Found it:

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/fo...ngham-boss-Alex-McLeish-eyes-3m-defender.html
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/fo...eals-close-signing-Birmingham--EXCLUSIVE.html

Bonus: smarmy Arsenal fan in the comments on that first article. Utterly priceless, in hindsight. :)
That goon comment is priceless on so many levels!!
An actual thing of beauty
 
Lamelamanlover69 - i mean Spursfan7891 must be slipping, didnt see him link to this article, some good quotes in there

http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/erik-lamel...ential-new-spurs-deal-his-title-hopes-1554236

Lamela added: "I hope that everyone can renew and stay here because it is pleasant to train and play with these players. All are very important in this team. Even those who do not play and those who don't make the bench. The team is very united, the people who work at the club are also key. They are all very important for us to be working as we are doing on the pitch."
 
This Tottenham star could be next year’s Riyad Mahrez

Tottenham star Erik Lamela could blossom into a Riyad Mahrez type player for Spurs next season

Leicester City occupies the top spot in the Premier League in large part due to Riyad Mahrez’s sterling wing play. Tottenham attacker Erik Lamela could provide his club the same sort of impact next season if he continues his current rate of development.

I know that a certain number of Tottenham fans out there refuse to acknowledge Lamela’s improvement this season. They still want to talk about his 30 million pound price tag and the immense struggles he had adapting to life in England. If you are one of “those” Spurs fans, you might want to stop reading this piece now.

If you are one of the Tottenham fans who watches the team with some measure of objectivity, you can see that Lamela is a changed player this season. One can’t be certain what Mauricio Pochettino said to him over the off-season but he came into this year with a completely new mindset.

Instead of solely focusing on skill and trickery with the ball, the Argentinian attacker has dedicated himself to hard work on the pitch. Those who watch Tottenham on a regular basis can easily see that Lamela has one of the side’s strongest work rates and he’s an absolute nightmare for the opposition. Sure, he might commit too many fouls for some fans, but you can’t argue that he isn’t one of the hardest working members of Pochettino’s high press.

In fairness, his work rate has been considerably better than his end product for much of the year. It’s fair to criticize him for his low conversion rate of scoring opportunities or even his propensity to give the ball away at inopportune times. He still has significant room for improvement in terms of his finishing and ability to hold on to the ball.

The good news for Lamela and his supporters is that those are parts of his game that he can certainly continue to develop. If he does moderately improve his finishing rate then he has a chance to become a true Premier League star.

Consider the fact even with his difficulty finishing chances, he’s posted aWhoscored.com player rating of 7.09 in 29 Premier League appearances this season. Finishing off just a couple more of his golden opportunities at goal would easily send that rating skyrocketing near 7.50. That’s just the sort of rarefied rating that stars like Leicester City’s Riyad Mahrez post in their best seasons.

In fairness, Mahrez is having the season of his life at the moment and is posting thehighest Whoscored.com player rating in the Premier League at 7.81 through 32 appearances. It’s not a stretch to say that he’s been the Foxes’ most valuable player even over Jamie Vardy.

What might interest you is that Mahrez posted a Whoscored.com player rating of just 7.16 last season. He was still an excellent player for Leicester, but the fact that he only managed to score four goals on the campaign prevented him from being a real star. That player rating, and scoring total, are nearly identical to what Lamela has posted for Tottenham this season.

Now let me be clear, I don’t necessarily think that Lamela is going to become Riyad Mahrez. The Algerian has exceptional talent and his finishing ability is far and away better than Lamela’s at the moment. However, I am saying that Lamela could have as large an impact on Tottenham next year as Mahrez has provided for the Foxes this season.

To do that, Lamela only needs to moderately improve his ability to put the ball in the back of the net. That’s a reasonable expectation for a player with so much talent. We’ve seen him score some outrageous goals during his time at Tottenham, so he really only needs to improve his conversion rate on more “ordinary” opportunities.

He doesn’t need to score 20 goals for Pochettino to provide Spurs the same boost Mahrez gives Leicester. A solid return of around 12 goals and 10 assists would give his team an immense lift. Combine that offense with his outstanding work rate and you’d have a player producing as much as any other attacker in the Premier League. Remember, Tottenham have more attacking talent to play around Lamela than Leicester have around Mahrez, that means he won’t need to shoulder as much of the offensive load.

Really Lamela’s performance against Manchester United was a prime example of what he can do for Spurs. He completely botched a golden scoring chance in the first half, but he didn’t let that miss define his effort on the day. Instead, he came back to play a brilliant second half that saw him register both a goal and assist. For me, he was the Man of the Match in the huge win over United.


Erik Lamela haters should be shaking in their boots when thinking of what the Argentine player might blossom into next season. If he continues his current career development, he’ll be mentioned in the same breath as world-class attackers like Riyad Mahrez next season.

https://playingfor90.com/2016/04/13/this-tottenham-star-could-be-next-years-riyad-mahrez/

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Not really sure if it is a compliment for Lamela to be compared to a player no one heard about until this season ! And Mahrez is playing for a team who no one cared about until this season as well. Don't think Mahrez is world class yet. He needs to prove his worth for more than 1 season at a much bigger club ! Remember, unlike Mahrez, Lamela has overcome a lot of pressure of expectations to be where he is now.
 
Photo: Erik Lamela enjoys lunch with his girlfriend in Italy ahead of Stoke v Tottenham

Erik Lamela enjoys a trip to Italy with his girlfriend after helping Tottenham thrash Manchester United

Lamela2.jpg


Erik Lamela was all smiles with his girlfriend as he enjoyed some lunch during his trip to Italy this week.

The Tottenham Hotspur playmaker has been enjoying some downtime after Mauricio Pochettino gave his squad some well-earned time off after their impressive 3-0 win over Manchester United at White Hart Lane on Sunday afternoon.

Lamela played a pivotal role in that victory by scoring one and setting up another as Spurs ran riot in the second half against the Red Devils in north London.

Tottenham will now turn their attentions towards their Premier League trip to Stoke City on Monday night as they look to keep their title bid on track.

Before that, however, Lamela seemed to be enjoying his trip to Italy with his other half, as he posted the picture above on his personal Instagram account on Tuesday afternoon.

Tottenham’s win over United left Spurs in second place in the table and seven points behind leaders Leicester.

http://www.thesportreview.com/tsr/2...rlfriend-in-italy-ahead-of-stoke-v-tottenham/

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Can understand Lamela still being fond of Roma after playing there before. But don't think it is a good idea for Pochettino to let players go on long trips like this during this crucial part of the season.


 
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Ermm .. I prefer Lamela to Mahrez...

Mahrez has had an amazing season, but for me, Lamela has two things going for him

- He is a Poch player, committed, both defense/attack, every game
- There is an argument that Lamela still is a way off his potential
 
Mahrez has had an amazing season, but for me, Lamela has two things going for him

- He is a Poch player, committed, both defense/attack, every game
- There is an argument that Lamela still is a way off his potential

Completely agree with this. Lamela has much more to give as does Alli, Son, Eriksen and Dier.
 
Photo: Erik Lamela enjoys lunch with his girlfriend in Italy ahead of Stoke v Tottenham

Erik Lamela enjoys a trip to Italy with his girlfriend after helping Tottenham thrash Manchester United

Lamela2.jpg


Erik Lamela was all smiles with his girlfriend as he enjoyed some lunch during his trip to Italy this week.

The Tottenham Hotspur playmaker has been enjoying some downtime after Mauricio Pochettino gave his squad some well-earned time off after their impressive 3-0 win over Manchester United at White Hart Lane on Sunday afternoon.

Lamela played a pivotal role in that victory by scoring one and setting up another as Spurs ran riot in the second half against the Red Devils in north London.

Tottenham will now turn their attentions towards their Premier League trip to Stoke City on Monday night as they look to keep their title bid on track.

Before that, however, Lamela seemed to be enjoying his trip to Italy with his other half, as he posted the picture above on his personal Instagram account on Tuesday afternoon.

Tottenham’s win over United left Spurs in second place in the table and seven points behind leaders Leicester.

http://www.thesportreview.com/tsr/2...rlfriend-in-italy-ahead-of-stoke-v-tottenham/

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Can understand Lamela still being fond of Roma after playing there before. But don't think it is a good idea for Pochettino to let players go on long trips like this during this crucial part of the season.


Doesn't take a genius to figure out which Spurs player gets your vote for our player of the season.
 
Mahrez has a better end product.

All the players look like that when they are playing for small clubs with no pressure of expectations. Once they move to big clubs for big money, they will end up struggling. Just look at all those midfielders who flopped at Spurs over the years : Bentley, Pienaar, Palacios, Jenas, Paulinho, Holtby etc. Once they move to Spurs, their past record means nothing and they have to start from scratch !
 
There’s so much more to Erik Lamela than meets the eye – and you won’t see it in YouTube compilations

The Argentine has proved himself one of Tottenham’s most improved players over the last season, writes Seb Stafford-Bloor – made all the more impressive by an often-testing history…

It's late June 2011 and El Monumental has descended into chaos. Following a 3-1 loss to Belgrano over over two legs, R i v e r Plate have been relegated for the first time in their 110-year history. The stadium is a physical representation of trauma: police fire water cannons at mutinous supporters, hooded youths are throwing unidentifiable objects towards the pitch and, encircled within a ring of stewards, R i v e r's first team sob uncontrollably.

Within that ugly spectacle, crouched over and in tears, was a teenage Erik Lamela. Having reached the end of his first full season with his boyhood club, it would be the last time he wore the team's iconic No.10 shirt.

lamela_river.jpg


Lamela's early experiences included one of football's all-time relegation shocks


Two months later, he had moved to Rome to begin life in Serie A. By August 2013, Lamela had hot-footed again and begun what would ultimately be a trying 18 months at Tottenham. The Argentine was willowy and wasteful, frail and fragile, clearly blessed with the technical ability to command a £30m transfer fee but with not nearly enough Premier League suitability to justify it.

Edited personality

Lamela’s story between then and now has been frequently recited. Injured under Andre Villas-Boas, distrusted by Tim Sherwood and eventually restored by Mauricio Pochettino, Lamela is a different beast these days. The old flecks of imperfection remain and traces of his flair heritage can still be spotted, but now iron-willed and nasty, the Argentine has become a teflon cog within Pochettino's relentless mechanism.

Lamela has been spoken about for a long time. A gem of R i v e r Plate's youth academy who attracted serious interest from Barcelona as a teenager, he has been assumed destined for the top of the game as long as his name has been known. What nobody realised then, however, was that it would be his personality rather than his flashy frills which would give him traction at the top of the sport.

In 2016, every player in the world seems to have his own YouTube compilation. Airbrushed and edited – and inevitably soundtracked to some EuroTrance nightmare – they are banal videos which make everyone look like a star.

image: http://cdn.makeagif.com/media/8-24-2015/CLPGg1.gif

CLPGg1.gif


(OK we know, but this really was great.)

So, when Lamela was signed by Tottenham and their supporters clamoured for a look at their new record signing's back catalogue, they saw a flashy winger with a millennial's haircut and big bag of tricks. That may not have been an entirely inaccurate depiction of Lamela, but what those videos were never able to show was his texture.

The qualities which have allowed him to rediscover his equilibrium at White Hart Lane are those which are exposed in tiny snippets, like in this extract from a Guardian interview in November 2014.

lamela_2013.jpg

Lamela's first season at Spurs was a fraught one


“There was talk, not only in the summer, but in December – people had spoken about me in Italy and stuff,” Lamela recalled. “But I’d spoken with my family and my girlfriend and we were all convinced that my time would come, that once I got over this injury I would be able to show what I could do. We were never going to leave this challenge.”

True grit

Lamela, you see, is not an ordinary footballer. The 24-year-old is betrayed by both his appearance and his technical proficiency: he is neither a flouncing, flakey show-boater, nor someone overly-enamoured with his own ability. His failures appear to make him stronger and his appetite for self-improvement is, in this age of entitlement and exaggerated self-worth, quite remarkable.

Dive through social media for long enough, for instance, and you'll find the videos showing him on the pitch in deserted stadiums after games, dancing with footballs under the dimming floodlights and honing his technique. They're sequences which belong in stylised Hollywood montages, but are rarely seen in the three-dimensional world.

lamela_pochettino.jpg

Lamela's defensive work has improved notably (not difficult judging by this picture)


But to appreciate Lamela’s reclamation project, it's important to appreciate the atmosphere within which it has occurred.

For a long time, he was unpopular at White Hart Lane. His errant touches would draw audible frustration from the stands and, actually, there were times when the relationship between the player and the supporters became distinctly uncomfortable – almost mutinous. When Marseille were rumoured to be close to signing him on loan in August 2015, his imminent departure seemed merciful. He had, by anybody's reckoning, suffered enough.

There’s a world outside

But then, that was to underestimate him and also, maybe, why that traumatic afternoon at El Monumental remains pertinent. English football culture is very insular and we consider our own Premier League, quite wrongly, to be an ultimate proving ground in which pressure and expectation collide at a terrifying apex.

But think of what Lamela endured and was exposed to – or, more specifically, consider the hardening effect of feeling such fierce footballing acrimony as a teenager? In sport, as they are in life, vivid experiences tend not only to linger in a person's consciousness, but also to shape their personality and guide their future.

Facing the same discontent, many other players would have left Tottenham at the earliest opportunity. Rather than pushing through the fire, they would have abandoned the challenge in England and re-glorified themselves in a more forgiving league. Lamela didn't and that, perhaps, is something too commonly overlooked.

While Pochettino and his coaching staff have had a profound influence on the player's trajectory, none of their instruction, direction or faith would have been worth anything had he himself not been receptive to it.

Change is good

And there has had to be a lot of change. In August 2013, after Lamela's move to England had been completed, journalist Paolo Bandini wrote: "Lamela still has room for improvement… most notably in the defensive side of the game. He was lax at times in tracking back for Roma, and it will be up to Villas-Boas whether to demand more from him in that department or simply position him in such a way that his responsibilities are reduced.”

When a perception like that exists, it's rarely corrected. Most players who fall into that category spend their entire careers being accommodated and are generally tolerated for who they are.

The counter-example that Lamela provides is rare. His improvement has been enabled by not only an unusual tolerance for adversity, but also a willingness to be broken down and rebuilt.

lamela_man_united.jpg

Lamela starred with a goal and an assist against Manchester United

That malleability may be typical in more mundane players who regularly have to contort their shape for the sake of just having a career, but it's scarce in someone who was an Argentina international before his 20th birthday.

That kind of player floats to the top of the game, expects to be indulged and rarely takes on the mid-career challenge of altering his habits and traits. When asked to get fitter and work harder, that kind of player usually cannot call his agent quickly enough.

You’re so very special

It takes a special manager, then, to oversee such a change – but also a special person to be understand its necessity.

So Lamela is special. Maybe not in the dazzling Gareth Bale way that was anticipated but, through his range of career experiences and his personality blend, he has become something precious at White Hart Lane. He is the locking mechanism at the top of the formation, an attacking flourish when needed and also one of the hardest working flair players the Premier League has ever seen.

Maybe that fractious 2011 day in Buenos Aires meant nothing, maybe everything. Regardless, Lamela has allowed himself to be a symbol of the changing times at Tottenham: he is both his manager's and his own finest achievement.

Read more at http://www.fourfourtwo.com/features...e-it-youtube-compilations#gwp63uc6fwzcCjOD.99

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It seems, all the media are trying to appreciate the contributions of Lamela this season ! Just imagine what a player he could be if he can score more league goals !
 
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Former Tottenham striker Jermain Defoe admits he's delighted to see Erik Lamela doing well at White Hart Lane

Jermain Defoe has admitted that he is delighted to see Erik Lamela proving his doubters wrong by playing an important role in Tottenham's title challenge, Sky Sports reports.

The 24-year-old endured a poor start to his time in the Premier League, but he has started to show this season exactly why the club signed him in the first place.

And after playing alongside the attacking midfielder from when he first arrived from Roma in 2013 until Defoe left for Toronto the following year, the Sunderland striker insisted that he was pleased to see his former teammate doing so well.

"It's nice to see someone like Erik Lamela doing so well because I was there with Erik and there were times when there was a lot of pressure on him," he told Sky Sports.

"He'd come to the club for a big fee and you could see at times it was really getting to him because he wanted to do well but the Premier League's a difficult league.

"But now seeing him do well is unbelievable."

Lamela has scored four goals and contributed seven assists in the league to help Mauricio Pochettino's men move into the title picture in the top flight.

It is perhaps his consistency that has been such a revelation in recent times. While Spurs fans were often treated to moments of brilliance - such as the rabona goal in a Europa League game in 2014 - they were arguably too few and far between for him to be relied upon to be a key player for the club.

However, this season he has been influential on a much more regular basis, so will surely be one of the men that Pochettino looks to to help the side overturn the five-point deficit to Leicester at the top of the table.

http://www.hitc.com/en-gb/2016/04/2...iker-jermain-defoe-admits-hes-delighted-to-s/

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It is nice to see Lamela getting appreciated more for all his contributions this season. He now has 4 goals and 7 assists in the league and 10 goals and 8 assists in total. But for all his workrate and skills, Lamela should have scored more league goals. He really should have been more greedy and scored the goal himself against Stoke instead of passing to Kane for our third goal.
 
It is nice to see Lamela getting appreciated more for all his contributions this season. He now has 4 goals and 7 assists in the league and 10 goals and 8 assists in total. But for all his workrate and skills, Lamela should have scored more league goals. He really should have been more greedy and scored the goal himself against Stoke instead of passing to Kane for our third goal.

Like when he didn't pass it to Dier who was making a bursting run through the middle just 50 yards out and the two almost got into a fight afterwards.
 
Like when he didn't pass it to Dier who was making a bursting run through the middle just 50 yards out and the two almost got into a fight afterwards.

It was Dier, eh ? Thought it was Kane who he had arguments with. Not sure why Dier was angry about. Lamela was right to try to score himself as he was the nearest to the goal. I think it is Lamela who should be more upset as other players have failed to pass to him many times despite him being in goal scoring positions. Just look at the open-goal chance that Alli missed ! Alli should have passed to the unmarked Lamela instead of trying to score from the difficult angle and hitting the post in the process.
 
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