glorygloryeze
Tom Huddlestone
Hello mate...it is nothing more than a hunch. And I think logic left the building!
Sitting on my porcelain throne using glory-glory.co.uk mobile app
Thanks for bursting what little hope i had then...
Hello mate...it is nothing more than a hunch. And I think logic left the building!
Sitting on my porcelain throne using glory-glory.co.uk mobile app
Don't see how you can say that, modric, bale and walker, our last three big sales all agitated for a move. Its not like we actively tried to flog them.
Source is clip of an interview with him today on TalkSPORT. He said he’s part of a project and he is helping the players at Tottenham to improve every day but if something were to happen it would cost a lot of money as he is under contract. I’m paraphrasing but that’s the full gist, I think.
Is there ever a good time to take over at Real? Due to the nature of the beast they are always going through some upheaval. I think this ‘bad time’ to manage Real is over egged tbh...I think we all hope, he can see that its a really bad time to take over at Real, He can hide behind the "Levy wont let me go" Hopefully for another 18 - 30 months, allowing the minor rebuild we require over next 6 months
Those players aren't relevant in this context: none of them got to the position that Eriksen is currently, i.e. got to a position whereby they had a year left during a summer window.
Since Sol BleepBall, how many of our key players have ENIC/Levy allowed to get their contract down to only a year left AND NOT sold them?
So what are you saying, let contracts run down to where players have us over a barrel and then don't take what cash we can to replace them?
We can't make players sign, and we certainly shouldn't be offering any more than is prudent.
I think that would be sensible, not what we want and imo unlikely, but if he doesn't sign soon we have to move him on.Absolutely; i'm just saying you cannot compare the situations of the 3 you mentioned to Eriksen's current position and that we should be prepared for him to be sold if we don't get him to sign an extension by the summer...
Funny isn't it. Those two were all over us until just recently. But no sooner do we enter a spell when several of our lynchpin players are either injured (Dele. Eriksen, Vertonghen) or suffering a dip in form (Lloris, Toby, Dier, Kane) than the knives come out. And that after a narrow 0-1 defeat to a team that has hired the world's best club manager and spunked a nett £500m more on players.It's not often Martin Samuel is standing up for Spurs. Good perspective in that piece.
Would love for someone to read that to Jamie Carragher or Gary Neville.
Funny isn't it. Those two were all over us until just recently. But no sooner do we enter a spell when several of our lynchpin players are either injured (Dele. Eriksen, Vertonghen) or suffering a dip in form (Lloris, Toby, Dier, Kane) than the knives come out. And that after a narrow 0-1 defeat to a team that has hired the world's best club manager and spunked a nett £500m more on players.
C'est la vie.
It's not often Martin Samuel is standing up for Spurs. Good perspective in that piece.
Would love for someone to read that to Jamie Carragher or Gary Neville.
Is there ever a good time to take over at Real? Due to the nature of the beast they are always going through some upheaval. I think this ‘bad time’ to manage Real is over egged tbh...
Nice to see Martin Samuel flying in the face of prevailing opinion about Pochettino:....
Former club president Calderon on the Madrid situation:
On Conte:
"He's asked for three years and to come in with five people and have hands free for signings and transfers," Calderon told BBC Radio 5 live's Football Daily Euro Leagues Show.
"But that's something the president [Florentino Perez] isn't willing to accept."
"I don't think Antonio Conte will be the coach the Bernabeu is expecting. He's like Jose Mourinho - a defensive coach with normally three centre-backs playing counter-attacking football.
"That's not what Real Madrid expect to see. The president tried this before with Mourinho. They didn't win the Champions League and he left the club in a bad situation."
On other options:
"I'd like Roberto Martinez but he has an existing contract with Belgium. Pochettino also has one with Tottenham," Calderon said.
"The president has got in touch with many people like Martinez, Pochettino, Conte, Mourinho.
"Mourinho is the only coach that the president has respected or backed even though he did many wrong things in my opinion. He is a coach who is always blaming others for his failures.
"If Mourinho was free now, he'd be here - you can be completely sure. Conte has been the one to be in the crosshairs of the president but he knows what happens here. He's reluctant."
Calderon does not think Arsene Wenger, who stepped down this summer after 22 years as Arsenal boss, would be interested in taking over because of the way the president runs the club.
"He interferes in the line-up," said Calderon of Perez - a man he frequently criticises publicly.
"He decides the signings because of his whims. There's no football director.
"He's remodelling the stadium and spending 600m euros in doing that. Nobody was complaining about the stadium. That's why we cannot sign any players - no big players are going to come in for less than 200m euros these days.
"Wenger could be another contender but he works in long-term planning and that's not the case at Real Madrid now."
On why previous managers were successful:
"We've won the last six Champions Leagues with coaches like Del Bosque, Ancelotti and Zidane - coaches that were top players and knew what it was like to be in a dressing room full of stars because they were one of them," said Calderon.
"So what they did was not to be very complacent with players but motivate them. They would not be protagonists and would stay in the background. [The key is] to motivate them and put out the fire when the egos are appearing in the dressing room. Sometimes when you have very big, top players you need to work in a different way.
"That didn't happen with Mourinho or Benitez, it's not a matter of a firm hand. The players know what to do on the pitch."
So basically, as expected:
- Short termist nature
- Players bought on the presidents say, not managers
- No desire to build/commit longer term
- Players hold the power
- High expectation under baffling conditions
- Demands of an attacking football style
Honestly, as massive a club as Madrid is, I wonder why anyone would go there.