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The best Spurs team of all time - number 10, attacking midfielder, second striker

Who is the best #10, AM or second striker to play for Spurs?


  • Total voters
    50
  • Poll closed .

milo

Jack L. Jones
A quick recap of what we're doing

Right. The best Spurs team of all time.

We'll have a different thread for each position over the coming weeks. The thread will be open for a while for nominations and the most frequently mentioned players will be going into a poll on the same thread.

The team will line up 4-2-3-1. Modern style.

Anyone who comes into the thread, doesn't read what we're doing and posts their full best team of all time, gets laughed at.

The nineth position up for grabs - number ten or attacking midfield or second striker, take your pick.

Have a chat about who you think is best. A poll will be added when it looks like we have a few players to pick between.
 
4 names stand out for me as specialists in this position:

1) Alan Gilzean
2) Martin Peters
3) John White
4) Rafa van der Vaart

I think we have about 15 players I'd suggest for the #9 position which Greaves will win, but none of them I'd really class as a 'second striker' (including Sheringham)

Gilzean will get my vote anyway - the front pairing has to be the 'G-men'.
 
It's where Hoddle should be but he's already in.

John White would be an excellent (and will probably be ther most popular choice) but it has to be Gazza for me.
 
I would say Bale but surely Robbie Keane has to be up there??

Also I know Id go for Berbatov up front therefore it has to be Keane as no10 - they were just devastating together.....
 
It's where Hoddle should be but he's already in.

John White would be an excellent (and will probably be ther most popular choice) but it has to be Gazza for me.
I don't think Hoddle in the 10 role would be on the ball enough in the modern game.

I'd rather have him as the deep-lying playmaker where he'd be more able to find space to work in. A player of his calibre could easily know when to get forward too so we'd see enough of him further up.
 
Bale.....

We have had some world class players in this position but Gareth has it all.

2. Gazza
3. Gilzean
 
I don't think Hoddle in the 10 role would be on the ball enough in the modern game.

I'd rather have him as the deep-lying playmaker where he'd be more able to find space to work in. A player of his calibre could easily know when to get forward too so we'd see enough of him further up.

if he was playing it wouldn't be the modern game, it would step up to his level
 

Gascoigne only played this role in his last few months for us. For most of his time with us he was a CM in a 4-4-2 alongside Howells/Samways/Nayim, while Stewart or Walsh played in the hole behind Lineker.

It was only during 90/91 that we switched to 4-5-1, with Stewart converting to DM, and Gascoigne being given more licence to get up closest to Lineker.
 
I would say Bale but surely Robbie Keane has to be up there??

Also I know Id go for Berbatov up front therefore it has to be Keane as no10 - they were just devastating together.....

It was the most baffling media myth about Keane that he was a #10. He played in front of all his striker partners (Kanoute, Mido, Berbatov)
 
Gascoigne only played this role in his last few months for us. For most of his time with us he was a CM in a 4-4-2 alongside Howells/Samways/Nayim, while Stewart or Walsh played in the hole behind Lineker.

It was only during 90/91 that we switched to 4-5-1, with Stewart converting to DM, and Gascoigne being given more licence to get up closest to Lineker.

That's irrelevant. In a 4-2-3-1 which is being picked here I would play Hoddle as a deep playmaker (as someone above said) and Gazza further forwards in the no 10 role
 
It was the most baffling media myth about Keane that he was a #10. He played in front of all his striker partners (Kanoute, Mido, Berbatov)
Disagree, don't think its a myth at all. He dropped deep a lot, he played further forward when long balls are played to the big striker ie Berbs and then Keane feeds off of him. He was still a no.10....
 
Disagree, don't think its a myth at all. He dropped deep a lot, he played further forward when long balls are played to the big striker ie Berbs and then Keane feeds off of him. He was still a no.10....

I don't think he was a no 10 at all - he roamed around a lot (deep, wide, across the line) as well as occupying the position up top but from a creative perspective, he wasn't remotely close to that which you often expect from a no 10. If you look at other 'no 10s', whether people like Zola, Bergkamp and Sheringham from years gone by, or the likes of Eriksen etc today, Keane didn't have anything close to their creativity. In fact, his passing was pretty poor
 
I don't think he was a no 10 at all - he roamed around a lot (deep, wide, across the line) as well as occupying the position up top but from a creative perspective, he wasn't remotely close to that which you often expect from a no 10. If you look at other 'no 10s', whether people like Zola, Bergkamp and Sheringham from years gone by, or the likes of Eriksen etc today, Keane didn't have anything close to their creativity. In fact, his passing was pretty poor
Id certainly say he was creative - he created several of his goals himself for starters...not saying he was overly creative but to say he isn't is harsh. You don't have to box people into certain numbers but to me he was more a 10 than a 9....
 
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