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Cristian Romero

I think his agent is touting him around no doubt, but realistically who is going to sign him? Quality player but VAR is the end of players like Romero. No prem team would take him because of his reputation.

Signed a new contract last season and I’d be surprised if there was a buyout clause as Levy would’ve been involved in negotiations. He’s not going to go cheaply so limits which clubs around Europe can sign him. We could be in the position where he wants out, club have agreed he can leave but there are no offers on the table. Would be some instagram post he makes should that happen

He can manage it if he wants, he doesn't get carded anywhere as much for Argentina, and IIRC in one of the Ange season's he turned it down.

Do agree it's his agent showing around, but the club must feel there is a chance for a number we will accept since we are buying Senesi & JVH, and will be evaluating Vuskovic.
 
The thing with Joelinton is he's rarely rash he makes strong challenges that sit on the border and yes he is given that benefit of the doubt. Romero makes rash challenges and that's why he gets judged the way he is (often unfairly imo)

The problem is how do you measure this? The majority of decisions have a large degree of subjectivity and context to them. Even on this board we don't all agree on whether something was a pen or a foul etc even if it's in our favour. So what would these referee decisions be judged against? It's not really possible to determine a specific foul objectively because there will always be subtle differences between any specific challenge.

There is nothing subtle about Joelinton.
 
I think his agent is touting him around no doubt, but realistically who is going to sign him? Quality player but VAR is the end of players like Romero. No prem team would take him because of his reputation.

Signed a new contract last season and I’d be surprised if there was a buyout clause as Levy would’ve been involved in negotiations. He’s not going to go cheaply so limits which clubs around Europe can sign him. We could be in the position where he wants out, club have agreed he can leave but there are no offers on the table. Would be some instagram post he makes should that happen
I think we'll have to take a realtively cut price deal to offload; maybe £35-40 million, which I think we will accept if it's offered.
 
The data is already visible. PGMOL publish stats about how many VAR calls are deemed right and wrong. Even then, as @Bishop says, there is subjectivity with some decisions. You can see that when the 5 man panel reviews the decisions - it's often 3-2 or 4-1.

The pitch side analyst? Ah stop. The refs already explain some of the decisions and, to be honest, it's a bit of a charade. On TV, the commentators are always made aware of why a decision has been made by VAR.

How would the club make "objective public assessments"? They have a vested interest.

I find your posts interesting generally and hate playing the man rather than the ball but your obsession with Howard Webb and PGMOL is a bit much IMO.

You ever worked in a job where the fox is watching the henhouse with their KPIs. Go look closely at those PGMOL measurements and you'll see exactly that. This is one of the biggest root cause of where we find ourselves. They've made VAR the denominator and measured the refs decisions the numerator. I bet they come in at 99%+. We need the laws to be the denominator. That is the only thing referees should be measured against. We can all come up with stupid metrics in our jobs to make ourselves look good.

I'm deadly serious about Spurs hiring an analyst that has a focus on the the laws and the refereeing. I'm a little tongue in cheek about the YouTube stuff but I would absolutely have our analysts pitch side just for the optics of us watching Webb like a hawk. We need to fight the system on this one and if it means mic'ing them up and going online then so be it. It would be a load of fun watching them squirm as we called them out on every incident.

I think most people know I see refereeing as governance and that belongs with our FA. The other big root cause is that Sky and the PL run the referee show. Take our last game of the season. What happens in the last quarter of the game if their is an Everton penalty shout? We all know WWE rules would apply and whatever decision made it the most entertaining for the viewing public would define the decision. I would place my mortgage on it being a penalty to Everton just to keep the PL relegation battle alive. This is where we find ourselves.
 
Who’d have thought that the dirty Argies would be the first fans to get involved in fighting at the World Cup…

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https://sports.yahoo.com/articles/report-tottenham-hotspur-star-wants-193000045.html

Cristian Romero

Credit to Sports Boom for the original report, which claims Cristian Romero has informed Tottenham Hotspur chiefs that he wants to remain in North London and help drive the club’s revival.

After a bruising campaign in which Spurs “flirted dangerously with relegation” before surviving “by the skin of their teeth on the final day”, this represents a significant development for Roberto De Zerbi. Tottenham need stability, authority and players who understand the weight of the shirt. Romero, for all the debate around his discipline and availability, remains one of the few figures in the squad with genuine elite level presence.

Leadership amid uncertainty​

Sports Boom report that Romero believes he has “unfinished business in North London” after four seasons with the club. That phrase matters. Tottenham’s rebuild cannot be built solely on new arrivals, tactical ideas and promises of change. It also requires senior players to buy in.

Romero made 23 Premier League appearances last season and scored four goals from centre back. Those numbers tell only part of the story. At his best, he gives Spurs aggression, front-foot defending and a competitive edge. At his worst, disciplinary issues and absences leave the side exposed.

That tension explains why this is not a simple case of celebration. Tottenham should welcome Romero’s stance, but they must also demand more consistency from him.

Recruitment assurances key​

The report adds that Romero’s commitment is linked to “assurances over the club’s direction”, including recruitment plans and the long-term vision. That detail feels especially important under De Zerbi.

The Italian’s football demands brave centre backs, technical clarity and emotional intelligence. Romero can fit that model, but Spurs must surround him with the right profiles. A defender of his style needs structure around him, not chaos.

Interest from Manchester United, Brentford and Crystal Palace underlines that Romero remains admired across the Premier League. Sports Boom state those clubs are monitoring developments, but Romero’s “preference is to remain with Spurs”.

De Zerbi rebuild needs anchors​

For Tottenham, this could be one of the more important decisions of the summer. A rebuild without Romero would leave another leadership gap. A rebuild with Romero gives De Zerbi a defensive pillar, provided the Argentina international embraces the standards required.

The final line from the report is telling, Romero “wants to stay, he wants to compete, and he wants to help drag Spurs back towards the upper reaches of the Premier League.”

That is exactly the kind of message Tottenham supporters needed to hear.

Our View – EPL Index Analysis​

From a Tottenham perspective, this report is intriguing rather than straightforwardly reassuring.

Romero staying sounds like good news, because Spurs cannot keep losing serious players and then pretend every reset is progress. He is aggressive, experienced and still has the aura of a World Cup winner. In a De Zerbi side, that matters. You need defenders brave enough to play forward, squeeze high and live with risk.

But supporters will also remember last season. The frustration was not invented. Missing such an important final Premier League game hurt, especially when Tottenham were fighting for survival. Romero now has to repair that connection through performances, not statements.

If he wants guarantees over recruitment, fair enough. Spurs fans want the same thing. They want a proper plan, not another vague promise of a project. De Zerbi needs players who suit his football, but he also needs leaders who can survive difficult periods without the whole dressing room wobbling.

Romero staying should be treated as a starting point, not the solution. Keep him, back the manager, improve the squad and demand standards. Then Spurs might finally have something real to build around.
 
No one of any note is interested in him then
At the very least not prepared to pay decent money for him, almost as if clubs have seen what a liability he can be :rolleyes:

Assuming he is here and when fit, surely we would have to be looking at playing 3 CBs - Senesi, VDV, Van Hecke, Romero, Danso to choose from. Otherwise we would be having 3 CBs on the bench. Could have VDV at LWB perhaps if playing 3 CBs but that's probably pie in the sky stuff....
 
At the very least not prepared to pay decent money for him, almost as if clubs have seen what a liability he can be :rolleyes:

Assuming he is here and when fit, surely we would have to be looking at playing 3 CBs - Senesi, VDV, Van Hecke, Romero, Danso to choose from. Otherwise we would be having 3 CBs on the bench. Could have VDV at LWB perhaps if playing 3 CBs but that's probably pie in the sky stuff....

I think there are so much undone transfer business it's difficult to have a clear opinion on how we will line up next season. Hopefully we will get at least 2 players who command a starting place in the team. DeZebri will have more to pick from than our last 2 managers if all our injured players return and possibly allow greater flexibility in his system. Still a long time till pre season and we'll have a better idea in what we can expect.
 
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