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Lennon's back baby!

His all round game has notably improved this season, especially the defensive work. Didn't think he did that well against QPR but having watched every minute of every game this season I can definitely say he has been instrumental in our successful season thus far.

I think it's more a case that people are noticing it more this season. Lennon's defensive work has been very good for a good few seasons now. Lennon is crucial to our play. That was demonstrated last season when he got injured.

Is he better this season? No, I don't think so. I do think he has maintained the high standard he has been playing for the last three or four seasons.
 
Lennon's always been pretty good defensively, but had to be to cover Walker this year and he's definitely been better than gareth 'I think I'm ronaldo' bale in supporting his full back more regularly.

What he has most definitely added to his game is cutting inside more. The lil fella has always been a pretty good dribbler with quick feet and avb has clearly told him to cut inside if he's blocked off down the line, and he's definitely having more shots at goal- surely there's some stats to support this somewhere.

He's benefitting from all the attention on Bale, but we do still under use him. But loving the performances at the moment and must be up there and the best RW in the league at the moment surely?
 
I think it's more a case that people are noticing it more this season. Lennon's defensive work has been very good for a good few seasons now. Lennon is crucial to our play. That was demonstrated last season when he got injured.

Is he better this season? No, I don't think so. I do think he has maintained the high standard he has been playing for the last three or four seasons.

His defensive work has been very good for a very long time. I agree fully.

I think he's been better this season, if this is down to him playing more and staying injury free, him developing a better understanding with Walker, or something AVB is doing I'm not so sure about.

It does seem that AVB wants him to cut inside more as it seems that he's been doing that consistently and it's been working well.

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To bring up something slightly negative. Against United he could have played Dempsey in alone with the goalie, but instead chose to shoot from 20 yards with his left foot, that was just terrible.
 
I think Lennon's play in the whole this season has really surpassed his wide play. He is spinning his marker with ease centrally and drives forward at the heart of the defence, because they back off him it really gives him an opportunity to pick a pass well as we saw in this game. His accuracy of short passing has always been underrated. I always thought he would play better as an AM rather than a winger. I would quite like to experiment and see what it would be like having him central and Townsend and Bale on the wings.
 
Found this article interesting - we really schrewed Leeds back then :lol:

Leeds United v Tottenham Hotspur: Lennon was sold on the cheap - Deane

Published on Tuesday 22 January 2013 12:05

Amid the great give-away at financially-ravaged Leeds United in the mid-noughties, one outgoing deal glaringly stood out for its outlandish benevolence, some would say plain craziness.

A litany of players left Elland Road in the fire-sale to end them all following the wanton largesse of the Peter Ridsdale years. But you can bet your bottom dollar that the one which still has Whites supporters shaking their heads at the incredulity of it all involves a quietly-spoken lad from Little London, who reluctantly left his hometown club for the capital on June 15, 2005.

Then just a couple of months past his 18th birthday, Aaron Lennon moved to Tottenham Hotspur for a mere £1m – even taking a wage cut to move to White Hart Lane – with United, at the time, insisting they effectively had no choice due to the teenager’s contract and the money they would have to pay him if he stayed.

That did not stop fans venting their fury at the decision, especially with Lennon keen to stay, and what has happened in the career of the prodigiously talented wingman since has only added to their ire – with Spurs quite possibly laying a justifiable claim to pulling off one of the greatest deals in Premiership history.

Lennon makes his first return to Elland Road with Spurs for a televised FA Cup fourth-round encounter this Sunday, having missed out on locking horns with his former club when the two clubs met twice at the same stage of the competition back in 2009-10 due to a groin injury.

It is likely Lennon, who spoke about the club always being in his heart immediately after his transfer south, will get a generous reception from home supporters.

But expect a few to be muttering the ‘if only’s’ following a cut-price transfer which perplexed not only fans, but players.

Just ask a man who lined up along him during his breakthrough 2004-05 campaign with United in Brian Deane, a famous sporting son of Chapeltown.

Deane, who left United towards the end of that season for Sunderland, told the YEP: “I knew at the time Leeds would struggle to hang onto him with the financial situation. But when I heard he had left for a million, I was amazed, flabbergasted.

“I had not seen someone with as much natural talent as that, for someone so young, ever.

“Talent identification is massive in the game and looking at Aaron at that time, there was no-one like him in the country.

“It was such a surprise for me that he left for such a small amount of money, bearing in mind what money the club got for the likes of Tom Taiwo and Michael Woods. I couldn’t believe it. I think it was one of those where he was more of less pushed out. I think Leeds were just desperate for the money, although they could have got more for him.

“A year later, he was valued at around £20million quid and I remember Chelsea being interested in buying him and that was the figure banded about.

“Whoever made the decision (to sell Lennon), it was not based on knowing how good a player he could be.”

Lennon may have first shot to prominence in the infamous relegation season of 2003-04 at Elland Road, but it was the following year that he became a man in a footballing sense in the second-tier along seasoned pros such as Deane, who soon appreciated that the young winger’s talent was truly special.

His explosive pace may have been his most marketable and obvious asset, but Deane insists he possessed the full package of skills required to be a top-class wide player from an early age, namely game intelligence, close control and crossing ability, with the notion that he was a flier without method in his early days something he instantly scoffs at.

And Deane pinpoints a famous 3-2 Boxing Day victory at the Stadium of Light as the day when Lennon really came of age.

“His feet were just so quick and the idea was just to get the ball to him as soon as possible as Aaron isolates people one-on-one. He was just always took rival players to task,” he said.

“For me, he had an old head on young shoulders. I remember in a game against Sunderland when me, him and David Healy scored and we beat them 3-2 up there, that he did a move that you rarely see in someone so young.

“He was just so switched on about football. I remember he brought the ball down, flicked it inside to me and played a one-two and went to the other side all in one movement and I just thought: ‘Wow, that is somebody who is always thinking about his game and is attentive.’ But it wasn’t just about pace with him. I know people did say: ‘His final product wasn’t this and wasn’t that.’ But that was nonsense for me; it quickly evolved. People think with wingers, it is about getting to the by-line and whipping a ball in.

But it is also about link-up play and Aaron has all of that in abundance.

“Looking at Aaron, you could play him anywhere across the front line now, although that would probably not be a long-term plan.”

Lennon has already achieved plenty in his career so far, for both club and country and at just 25, his peak years are arguably still to come.

The Leeds lad is also refreshingly modest and courteous off it, according to Deane –– and far removed from the ‘big-time Charlies’ who pervade the game at many of the country’s blue-riband clubs.

He said: “When we were at the club, I looked out for Aaron, with him being a Leeds lad, like me. His cousin Milton is also a really good friend of mine, while I know quite a few of the family. My brother Tony was also Milton’s best man at his wedding.

“Aaron was very popular in the changing rooms and for a young lad, he was very respectful of the older players in there as well. We all had a good relationship with him.

“I remember seeing him a couple of years after he moved in a bar and he came up straightaway and offered me a drink and I thought that was really nice.

“I am sure he will get a good reception on Sunday. Although I do not think I would fancy being the left-back playing against him!”

He added: “I knew Aaron was good, but he has probably surpassed how I thought he would do, really.

“To see that potential and for him to sustain it at the levels he has is credit to him.

“People talk about Gareth Bale at Spurs, but you have got to say at this moment, Spurs have two of the best wide players in Europe who would get into any team.”

http://www.yorkshireeveningpost.co....-lennon-was-sold-on-the-cheap-deane-1-5340783
 
Good article. The last 2/3 season he has been immense and when he has been injured we have suffered. Great player, and doesnt get the recognition from other teams in the premiership I dont think. Also weird that he hasn had a looking at the England set up but I think he will be in the next squad.
 
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'It took me three seconds to spot Aaron Lennon's talent, now he's a 90-minute hit'


Former Leeds coach Greg Abbott pays tribute to Spurs star ahead of hometown return

Tom Collomosse

24 January 2013

How about this for a transfer deal — £500,000 up front for a player who would become one of the best wingers in England, make nearly 300 appearances for his club before the age of 26 and compete in two World Cups.

It seems too good to be true but those at Elland Road for Sunday’s FA Cup fourth-round tie will know otherwise. Seven-and-a-half years after leaving Leeds United, Aaron Lennon should play against his hometown team for the first time since he made the move to Tottenham for that initial £500,000 fee, payable because although Lennon was out of contract, he was only 18.

Although Lennon was excellent during 2009, Harry Redknapp’s first full year at Tottenham, his eighth season at White Hart Lane is shaping up to be his most impressive.

Dangerous, diligent and destructive, the 25-year-old seems more confident in his talent than he ever has been. Three goals and many chances created tell only a part of the story, as his defensive work and tactical aptitude have been exemplary.

Sources speak of Lennon’s healthy relationship with manager Andre Villas-Boas. The winger is thought to appreciate the clarity of the head coach’s instructions, his honesty and insistence on being always available for individual conversations.

Similarly, Lennon is said to have “come out of himself” and assumed greater responsibility within the dressing room, as befits one of Tottenham’s longest-serving players. He signed a new four-year contract nearly five months ago.

It was not always thus. Greg Abbott, a former coach of Leeds’ youth sides, needed “three seconds” to spot Lennon’s ability in an Under-14 match in 2001 but wondered whether a move to London would represent too much, too soon.

Abbott, now manager of League One side Carlisle, told Standard Sport: “Planting him in London was probably done a year too early. Manchester United and Liverpool wanted him and they are much closer to his family in Leeds.

“I believe he found it hard work in London because Aaron is a family boy but he got over it. At Leeds I made sure I was always there for Aaron and his family if there were any issues.

“I went to his house and drove him to games to make sure we weren’t caught out by interest from other clubs. We got him to sign a pro contract with Leeds, he played 43 games and got his move. I spoke to him before our Capital One Cup game against Spurs last September and he was still so grounded. He wasn’t talking about his success or lifestyle but about his family and time at Leeds. He gave me a signed shirt and it has pride of place.”

Before this season, Lennon’s form ebbed and flowed. Then as now, one of few consistent traits was a reluctance to discuss his job with the media. To some who don’t know him, Lennon can appear taciturn, even brusque. Those who are better-acquainted say he is shy and, like Manchester United’s famously reticent midfielder Paul Scholes, unwilling to be the centre of attention.

Yet Lennon’s displays have ensured he stands out from the crowd. The improvements in his passing and in the use of his weaker left foot have convinced Abbott that Lennon could one day play as a central attacking midfielder.

Frank Arnesen, who brought Lennon to Spurs, left for Chelsea before he could work with his signing but is still proud of the transfer. “We paid about £500,000 for Aaron and he and Tom Huddlestone cost a combined £1.1million initially,” said the Hamburg sporting director. “To sign him for that amount was a no-brainer. In January 2006, Arsenal did a £12m deal for Theo Walcott but we’d taken Aaron for much less. I saw him for Leeds at Watford and he didn’t play his best but I could see the material — the pace, the dribble, the cross.

“I was involved in deals for Ronaldo, Arjen Robben, Jaap Stam and Ruud van Nistelrooy at PSV Eindhoven but Aaron is up there with the best, when you look at the fee and what he has produced.”

Arnesen also recognised the problems Lennon might face in adapting to life in the capital but, as the player prepares to return to Leeds, where he grew up in the inner-city suburb of Little London, Lennon’s next challenge is to unlock all his potential.

“I still don’t think he realises how much of a threat his pace and quality can be,” said Joe Jordan, Spurs’ first-team coach under Redknapp.

When that happens, Lennon will be a terrifying opponent indeed — and that £500,000, rising to £1million, already looks like some of the best money Spurs have ever spent.

Frank Arnesen on Lennon

I was involved in deals for Ronaldo, Arjen Robben, Jaap Stam and Ruud van Nistelrooy but Aaron is up there with the best.

Greg Abbott on Lennon

He’ll always go past people but I can see him playing just behind a centre-forward in a 4-2-3-1. His vision is better than he gets credit for.

Joe Jordan on Lennon

He’s still improving — people forget he’s 25. It’s difficult for wingers to get into the game but he is finding a way more and more.

AVB on Lennon

He has been massive. Sometimes he lives in the shadows but he recognises he can be at another level in terms of his performances.

http://www.standard.co.uk/sport/foo...ns-talent-now-hes-a-90minute-hit-8464721.html
 
The one thing im so glad about is that we've hung onto lennon over the years. Always thought his contribution has been underrated at England level, for me he should be starting every game. Hope he can keep the form up, clearly a talented lad but great to hear he's well grounded.
 
unfortunately was expecting lennon to do more at Leeds and Norwich.
what does he need to do to be more consistent?
 
300 Up for Aaron Lennon

AARON JOINS THE 300 CLUB

Aaron Lennon became only the 41st player in the club’s history to reach 300 competitive appearances when he featured in Sunday’s win at West Bromwich Albion.

And even more impressively, our flying winger is the third-youngest player ever to reach that tally of games.

Steve Perryman, our all-time leading appearance holder, played his 300th game for us aged 23 in 1975, while Glenn Hoddle did likewise in 1982, a week after his 25th birthday. Aaron has reached his 300th appearance at the age of 25 years, 293 days.

'Azza' joined us from Leeds United in July, 2005, and made his debut against Chelsea a month later on August 27. Since then, he has featured in 221 Premier League games for us, scoring 24 times, and played 79 cup matches, scoring four goals.

Legendary former players Robbie Keane (306), Len Duquemin (307), Ossie Ardiles (311), Bobby Smith (317) and Dave Mackay (318 ) are next in his sights.

Andre Villas-Boas has been full of praise for the influential winger. “Aaron has been in excellent form and he’s such a responsible player," said Andre at The Hawthorns. "He’s a big influence in the dressing room as well."
 
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Re: 300 Up for Aaron Lennon

He'll get a Man of the Match Award against Saudi Sportswashing Machine. Top player, who I've always been happy to have at the club, even if some others would have been happy for him to have left in the past.
 
Re: 300 Up for Aaron Lennon

Amazingly enough, Spurs have never lost a match in which Aaron Lennon has scored...

P0166_zps17a990b5.png


...that's 24 wins and three draws.

Aaron Lennon Stats
 
Re: 300 Up for Aaron Lennon

Love him. Long may he continue at the club.

Funny that he was homesick at the beginning but I guess as a kid it is expectable.
 
Re: 300 Up for Aaron Lennon

He will be a better player than Bale if he can improve his finishing. That's one part he has failed to improve much since joining us.
 
Re: 300 Up for Aaron Lennon

He will be a better player than Bale if he can improve his finishing. That's one part he has failed to improve much since joining us.

Lennon's finishing is good but he barely shoots. I'm sure he has a decent shots to goal % maybe better than Bale's. I do think Lennon's longer range shooting is worse though as he tends not to strike through the ball very well. He did score a goal v Hull, I think, from outside the area though.
 
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