My daughter sent me this from a forum she goes on, thought it made more insight then the usual slagging off that Romero gets from some on here.
Argentina have played 58 games since June 2021. Romero has played 40. That's 69% of games.
Spurs have played 187 games in the same timeframe. Romero has played 112. That's 60% of games.
Fair enough, point proven, you might think.
I mean, it's not exactly on the level of, say, Darren Anderton, who, IIRC, played more minutes for England than he did for Spurs between June '95 and June '96, but, still, there's a fair old gap there.
However, up until the Chelsea game where he got injured, Spurs had played 167 games.
Romero's 112 at that point therefore gives us an availability of 67% of games.
And, frankly, the difference between 67% and 69% availability is not much more than a rounding error.
And certainly not enough to justify all the carping and bleating about Romero only ever being available for Argentina that I read on here for a good couple of years before that Chelsea game.
But, hey, never mind the facts.
No, let's instead let this utterly baseless, long-standing, pant-wetting hysteria about his availability infect the discourse of this thread so that, in the run-up to the squad being announced, there are several variations of 'fudging hell, I bet Romero will be fit for Argentina', just so everyone could shout 'boo, hiss, fudge it, sell him now' because, horror of horrors, an Argentine international has been called up by Argentina's national team.
For me, it's quite simple.
There are several reasons why top class players might want to leave Tottenham in its current state.
I'd rather that we didn't add 'chased out of the club in a fit of pique by a bunch of hysterics who failed remedial maths' to the list please.
Thanks.