NYSpur
Hossam Ghaly
With our defensive issues, a comment in The Glory Game by Bill Nick has been resonating with me. I went back to find it and found a couple of pertinent extracts (I tried to attach in jpg format but it says they are too large -- any suggestions to shrink/attach and I will do so).
In one, he notes that the game has become more defensive and that the "first rule in a manager's bible is "don't lose"'. Clearly Ange is operating from a different version of this 'bible"! For Nicholson, there had to be some pragmatism for, as he notes in the same passage, "supporters aren't interested in good teams that lose." My fear remains with Ange that we are a "good team" in patches but our well documented vulnerability defensively will be our undoing. Our system relies on our defenders being perfect because it offers opponents good opportunities by its very nature. On occasions where errors creep in, we are undone. For all their good qualities, we have seen enough to know that it is unreasonable to expect perfection from our back line.
Separately, in the category of "it was always thus", the other extract is rather reminiscent of our recent history, noting that Spurs have a "habit , especially away from home, of crumbling before a hard but inferior team."
In one, he notes that the game has become more defensive and that the "first rule in a manager's bible is "don't lose"'. Clearly Ange is operating from a different version of this 'bible"! For Nicholson, there had to be some pragmatism for, as he notes in the same passage, "supporters aren't interested in good teams that lose." My fear remains with Ange that we are a "good team" in patches but our well documented vulnerability defensively will be our undoing. Our system relies on our defenders being perfect because it offers opponents good opportunities by its very nature. On occasions where errors creep in, we are undone. For all their good qualities, we have seen enough to know that it is unreasonable to expect perfection from our back line.
Separately, in the category of "it was always thus", the other extract is rather reminiscent of our recent history, noting that Spurs have a "habit , especially away from home, of crumbling before a hard but inferior team."