chic

Saturday, August 1, 2009

Tottenham Hotspur News


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Harry still in for Huntelaar
Spurs boss retains interest in Real striker

Harry Redknapp is still keen to bring Klaas-Jan Huntelaar to Tottenham despite securing the services of Peter Crouch.

The Spurs boss now has a host of attacking options at his disposal with the £9million England international joining Jermain Defoe, Robbie Keane, Roman Pavlyuchenko and Darren Bent at White Hart Lane.

Redknapp admitted last week that he felt Real Madrid striker Huntelaar was out of their reach because of his wage demands and subsequently completed a move for Crouch.

But the White Hart Lane boss has now revealed that the deal is not dead and the Holland international could still be set for a switch to North London.

Bent's anticipated exit, with Sunderland his most likely destination, would hasten the arrival of the former Ajax ace.
Incredible

"It is definitely not a no-go," Redknapp said. "It is still a possibility. If you look at his goalscoring record, it is incredible.

"If he is available then again he is a player that interests me. I think if any top-class player becomes available then you have to be interested and if Darren Bent does go then maybe we will be interested.

"You cannot have too many good players. Competition for places is what it is all about. Look at Manchester United, you could pick two teams from their squad last year."

Should Bent depart and Redknapp successfully lure Huntelaar to White Hart Lane it would mean five top-class strikers vying for places in Spurs' forward line.

But the former Portsmouth boss, currently in China for the Asia Trophy, is unconcerned with upsetting players in his squad, insisting it is up to them to fight for their place.

Fight

"I don't care," he added. "It's not about keeping them happy, they have to keep me happy and the fans happy - that is what they are paid to do.

"It's up to them as they have got to fight to play, it's all about competition for places."

Meanwhile, Redknapp was stunned to hear that Spurs target Patrick Vieira has been linked with a return to Arsenal.

"That is surprising but I had heard nothing about it," he said. "I am sure he will be a good signing whoever he signs for.

"He belonged to Arsenal, he was fantastic there so if an opportunity to go back there came along then I'm sure he would take it.

"But I haven't spoken to anyone, it could only be a rumour so I don't know."

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Tottenham Hotspur News


AT LAST SOME MOVEMENT
Tottenham have signed Peter Crouch after reaching an agreement with Portsmouth.

Harry Redknapp worked with Crouch during his time in charge at Fratton Park and declared an interest in the England striker earlier this month.

Redknapp hinted that Crouch may be too expensive for Spurs but Pompey have now accepted an offer, believed to be in the region of £9million.

The 28-year-old has also completed a medical at White Hart Lane and agreed personal terms.

Crouch had appeared close to joining Sunderland last week but then pulled out of a move as he wanted to remain in the South of England.

All we need now is a new centre forward.

Thursday, June 18, 2009

Tottenham Hotspur News


Lamb opens door for Spurs

Middlesbrough chief executive Keith Lamb has invited Spurs to re-open negotiations for England international winger Stewart Downing.

Boro are likely to lose their long-serving 24-year-old wide-man this summer following their relegation to the Championship.

Spurs infuriated Boro in January with their latest move for Downing which the North East side claim unsettled the winger, who has played 23 times for England.

However, despite the poor relations between the clubs, Lamb would speak to Spurs should they wish to revive their interest in their injured star.

Downing is currently out of action after being stretchered off in Boro's penultimate game of last season against Aston Villa with a foot injury.

It could be between four and six months and Stewart believes he will be back sooner rather than later.

I think Spurs should forget about him and let him and Lamb stew.

Saturday, June 13, 2009

Tottenham Hotspur News


Glen Johnson linked to Spurs as well as others. Possible??

Portsmouth executive chairman Peter Storrie has told Sky Sports News that the club have received a bid for Glen Johnson and that a deal could be concluded imminently.

The England international has enjoyed the best season of his career to date in starring for Portsmouth and in the process has established himself as Fabio Capello's first choice at right-back.

Former club Chelsea, who Johnson left to join Portsmouth, have been credited with making a bid.

Harry seems very interested but Johnson seems to be looking towards champions league football.

Sunday, May 31, 2009

Spurs


Tottenham boss Harry Redknapp has admitted that he must sell before he can buy this summer.

The Spurs chief is keen to bring in fresh faces as he attempts to mount a top-four challenge in the Premier League next season.

However, money is tight at White Hart Lane and the club's board will not give Redknapp free range in the transfer market.

That means he must first trim his playing staff, helping to bring in extra funds and slash the wage bill, before he can turn his attention to new recruits.

"We have spent all our money already in keeping the club in the Premier League," said Redknapp.

"We saw against Liverpool (during a 3-1 defeat on Sunday) that we are a little short because we had some key players missing.

"We would like to add some players in the summer and I have some targets, but I will have to raise the money to go after them.

"We will have to wheel and deal because we used what money there was to bring in (Robbie) Keane and (Wilson) Palacios to keep us in this league."

Sunday, May 24, 2009

Tottenham Hotspur Football



With the Premier League title race done and dusted it seems somewhat bizarre the build-up to what could be the most dramatic final weekend of action in living memory has centred on Sir Alex Ferguson's team selection.

Sky Sports will be offering unrivalled coverage of all the action as it unfolds, with three live games available for you to choose from.

LIVE ON SKY SPORTS

Aston Villa v Newcastle 3.00pm Sun, Sky Sports 1 & HD1

Hull City v Manchester United 4.00pm Sun, Sky Sports 3 & HD3

Sunderland v Chelsea 4.00pm Sun, Sky Sports 3 (via the red button)

On Sunday two from four of Middlesbrough, Newcastle United, Sunderland and Hull City will join West Brom in contemplating life in the Championship next season; with the North East contingent of the quartet unlikely to be overly enamoured by Sir Alex Ferguson's starting XI at the KC Stadium.

United's UEFA Champions League final in Rome just three days later will be at the forefront of Ferguson's thinking, with the Scot unlikely to risk the likes of Cristiano Ronaldo and Wayne Rooney against Hull, merely to satisfy the demands of those that have called for the league's integrity to be upheld.

Although Survival Sunday could not be more delicately poised at the foot of the table, it is perhaps Middlesbrough that will start the day most resigned to their fate.

Gareth Southgate's side, who face West Ham at Upton Park, need the Tigers to lose if they are to have a chance of staying up, while Newcastle travel to Aston Villa having to better the result of Phil Brown's men if they are to survive.

Sunderland could go down if they lose at Chelsea and both Newcastle and Hull win, meaning all three of the North East clubs have a vested interest in the side Ferguson sends out.

Tigers boss Brown may never have a better chance of taking three points off his United counterpart, but he'll also be astute enough to realise that a side made from those on the periphery at Old Trafford is still more than a match for most top-flight clubs.

Over at St James' Park, the return of Alan Shearer has been greeted with much fanfare and talk of rejuvenated morale in the Magpies camp. In football though it is points rather than platitudes that ensure survival and while Shearer has earned plenty of the latter, he has secured all too few of the former.

Last week's home game with Fulham, never the best of travellers, was on paper the ideal opportunity to build on their massive Tyne-Tees victory over Middlesbrough. Instead, it was Diomansy Kamara that played the party pooper to perfection as his winning goal had the Toon faithful contemplating a trip to London Road.

Aston Villa have stuttered over the finishing line but a tired finale to their campaign cannot hide monumental strides made in the Midlands. And with Villa still playing for fifth place, trailing Everton as they do by just a solitary point, there will be few favours cast in the way of Shearer by his old pal Martin O'Neill.

In the East End the contrasting fortunes of two young managers will be made crystal clear to all those present at Upton Park. West Ham's Gianfranco Zola has defied the sceptics that surfaced in the early stages of his tenure to mould a bright and inventive side built in his own image; for Southgate the spectre of relegation looms large on Teesside.

Having missed out on a Europa League spot, which could prove to be the proverbial blessing in disguise, West Ham have precious little to play for other than to give their supporters a memorable send-off. For Southgate, only a win would give him hope of still being a Premier League manager next season.

Sunderland boss Ricky Sbragia has also endured a miserable week, with speculation over his own position rarely far from the tabloid gossip columns. Chelsea, not unlike Manchester United, have priorities elsewhere and arrive on Wearside with next week's FA Cup final likely to dictate Guus Hiddink's thinking in terms of the side he picks at the Stadium of Light.

Chelsea's Wembley opponents Everton conclude another excellent campaign with a trip to West London as Fulham, surely this season's most improved side, host the Toffees at fortress Craven Cottage.

West Brom finish the season in the position many predicted for them at the start of it; propping up the other 19 clubs.

A trip to Blackburn, who have only recently put to bed relegation fears of their own, marks the final chapter in what has been a disappointing rather than disastrous term. The Baggies have been pleasing on the eye throughout and an immediate return to the top flight should not be beyond Tony Mowbray's side next season.

Few, or more pertinently, no pundits predicted Stoke City would be in 11th place on the final day of the season. Tony Pulis has masterminded a magnificent first ever campaign in the Premier League and while he may still have to take the odd jibe about his side's style of play, it is he rather than opposite number Arsene Wenger that will be smiling on the final whistle at the Emirates.

Four trophyless years at Arsenal have seen Wenger experience the type of supporter ire normally reserved for lesser mortals, but having rejected talk of a purported move to Real Madrid, the majority in North London are likely to greet the Frenchman with the warmest of receptions.

Liverpool are another side that have fallen short of Manchester United this term but while Arsenal have been accused of going backwards, Rafa Benitez's Reds are undeniably on the up and will be desperate to finish off with a win at home to Tottenham.

The dark days of Juande Ramos, excluding last term's Carling Cup success, have long been consigned to history since Harry Redknapp swept into White Hart Lane, although it will be next season that a true gauge of the club's current standing will be made.

Manchester City host Bolton for a North West derby at Eastlands that lacks the spice of previous encounters given neither club has much to play for. Mark Hughes' side sit comfortably if unspectacularly in tenth place, which is satisfactory for this term but is unlikely to be good enough next year.

Sunday's fixture list is concluded at the JJB as Wigan host a Portsmouth outfit seemingly heading in the right direction under Paul Hart, following what has been the most unstable of campaigns on the South Coast.

Three different managers have occupied the dugout at Fratton Park this season and while Wigan have managed perfectly well with just one, it will nonetheless be another summer of rebuilding for Steve Bruce as he braces himself to lose more of his top stars.



Tottenham Hotspur boss Harry Redknapp insists he is not 'desperate' to offload any of his players, but may be prepared to sell to fund his own transfer plans.

David Bentley has been linked with a move away from White Hart Lane in the summer after struggling to make an impact since Redknapp took charge.

Redknapp hinted earlier in the week that the midfielder may be considering his future at Spurs, less than 12 months after arriving from Blackburn Rovers.

However, Redknapp has not discussed possible exits with any of his players and is happy with the options he currently has at his disposal.
Good group

"I don't go and persuade anyone that their futures are here, we just get on with it," said Redknapp on Sky Sports News.

"They're here, they've all got contracts and it's up to them to prove they're worth keeping, that's as simple as it is.

"I don't have to go round saying 'we want to keep you' and 'we want to keep you'. There's no-one I'm desperate to see the back of, none of them, they're a good group of lads.

"If good offers come in for one or two players, and it means me getting a couple of players in I feel will improve us, that's the way we'll look to go."

Spurs have been linked with a bid for Glen Johnson, who Redknapp signed during his time in charge at Portsmouth, but the Tottenham boss did not want to divulge the identities of his summer targets.

He added: "They belong to other clubs and I don't want to go down the road of discussing players at other clubs at this stage because it causes nothing but problems for yourself.

"We'll keep our targets to ourselves. The chairman will work in the summer to try and get one or two targets in that we've identified.

"In an ideal world you'd want to produce them without telling the whole world who you're signing."

Sunday, May 3, 2009

Tottenham Hotspur Football


A single goal from Jermaine Jenas was enough to take all three points as Tottenham beat West Brom 1-0 at White Hart Lane.

The result means West Brom are almost certainly going to be relegated from the Premier League in a game which they will be disappointed to have lost.

There were chances at either end before Jenas opened the scoring on 43 minutes, coolly stroking the ball home from just outside the box to give Spurs a half-time lead.

West Brom boss Tony Mowbray made several changes in the second half and his side may live to regret missed opportunities, most notably from Shelton Martis who squandered a free header while Marc-Antoine Fortune hit the post with a deflected effort.

The three points puts Tottenham back in the frame for a place in next season's Europa League as they move level on points with Fulham and Man City, albeit with an inferior goal difference.

Meanwhile the Baggies have to host Liverpool and Wigan before travelling to Blackburn and seven points could still be enough for them, but time appears to be running out.

The first half summed up their season, they had plenty of possession, created chances but found themselves going into the break behind.
They would have been ahead after 22 minutes but Spurs goalkeeper Heurelho Gomes kept the scores level with an acrobatic save, with Jonas Olsson almost turning around to celebrate before the Brazilian plucked his header away.

The Baggies had a penalty shout turned down when Benoit Assou-Ekotto got his body in front of Fortune, with Rob Styles giving the benefit of the doubt to the Spurs left-back.

Fortune also volleyed over after being found unmarked at the far post by Gianni Zuiverloon's cross. Had one of those chances resulted in a goal, there may have been a different outcome.

Spurs had been limited to half-chances, with Aaron Lennon stabbing wide after Scott Carson fumbled and Roman Pavlyuchenko thrashing over after Luka Modric slid him through down the left.

There would have been no complaints if the score was level at half-time but Jenas broke the deadlock two minutes before the break. He received the ball from Vedran Corluka, had time to take a touch as Youssouf Mulumbu backed off, before curling his effort into the bottom corner from 25 yard
It was harsh on West Brom as Carson looked to have had his view blocked by referee Styles but that mattered little to Jenas, who would have been aware Fabio Capello was watching in the stands.

Capello was keeping an eye on the likes of Lennon, as well as Croatia pair Vedran Corluka and Modric, who England will be up against later this year in a World Cup qualifier.

Spurs' England centre-backs, Ledley King and Jonathan Woodgate, were trying their best to keep Fortune quiet. West Brom's lone forward forced Gomes into a save with a low shot early in the second half before stricking the post with an effort that deflected off Corluka.

Mowbray then brought on Jay Simpson to offer Fortune support, while Jermain Defoe was introduced for Pavlyuchenko.

Martis had one header flash over and another cleared off the line by Defoe, while Borja Valero cleared his own crossbar when he made a last-ditch clearance at the other end.

Gomes was forced into a late save, at full stretch, to deny Robert Koren's deflected effort before Lennon struck a post in the final minute.

Sunday, April 12, 2009

Tottenham Hotspur News


MID-TABLE scraps are out of fashion these days. Teams are either fighting for a place in Europe or battling relegation, so it was quite a pleasure to watch a Premier League match not exactly devoid of meaning exactly but devoid of fear.

Despite losing once more to their north London rivals, West Ham still have pretensions of competing in the Uefa Cup — or the Europa League, as it will be known next season — which, as Spurs will tell you, is not necessarily a blessing. Harry Redknapp quietly guided his side to the exit of the Uefa Cup as fixture piled on fixture and Spurs’ plight in the league looked perilous. That was then.

Victory, sealed by Roman Pavlyuchenko’s fifth goal in the Premier League midway through the second half, has given Spurs another glimpse of European football at the end of another chaotic season. The pessimists among their supporters might also note that, by passing the magic 40-point mark, the spectre of relegation has also been banished.

“Staying in the league is first and foremost and we all but clinched that today,” said Redknapp. “But we’re three points behind West Ham, in eighth, that’s how crazy the league’s been. I didn’t think we’d be out of trouble so early.” Gianfranco Zola, the West Ham manager, will be wary of the extra European workload too, not least because yesterday a team without a number of regulars, notably Scott Parker, Carlton Cole and Jack Collison, looked lightweight in midfield and threadbare in attack against a Tottenham side still lacking conviction and, for long periods, critical balance.

Tottenham did, though, boast comfortably the best player on the field in Luka Modric, who drifted into central midfield when the mood took him and ran the game with a deft mixture of passes short and long. If Steven Gerrard ever watches the tape, he might note how the Croatian manages to combine both roles with aplomb, though he needed some encouragement from his manager at half-time. “I thought he could come off his line a bit more and get more of the ball,” said Redknapp. “That allows the full-back to get forward more and he did excellent. He’s improved out of all recognition.”

Inevitably, Modric was involved in the goal — as he was in most of Spurs’ best moments — picking up the ball on the right side and threading a pass to Pavlyuchenko, who had replaced the ineffective Darren Bent nine minutes earlier. The tall Russian still had a lot of work to do to turn James Collins and fire a low shot across Robert Green from a tight angle. It was a true striker’s goal and one that will bring Redknapp considerable hope for the future of his enigmatic striker. “I don’t want to criticise him because he’s done well at home,” said Redknapp. “I did feel he could change the game, but sometimes he has to work harder for the team.”

Zola’s priority for the future is in attack, where Diego Tristan is a shadow of his old self and David Di Michele insists on trying to do the hard thing when simplicity is the hallmark of the new West Ham. Once in the first half, he had time and space to put Mark Noble in on goal down the left, only take the shot himself. Noble vented his fury on the Italian, who squandered West Ham’s best chance when left one-on-one against Heurelho Gomes in the second half. “I thought, ‘This is the moment’,” said Zola. “We had a chance, but Tottenham are, on paper, one of the six best teams in the country and we stood up to them. We played without fear.”

In the circumstances, Zola has worked wonders in transforming an underachieving side into top-half respectability, relying on a steady supply of academy youngsters, another of whom, Junior Stanislas, fitted comfortably into the left side of midfield yesterday. “I know I can rely on them when I need to,” said Zola. “The only words I can have for my team are words of praise.” At Easter time that had a decent ring to it.

Saturday, April 11, 2009

Tottenham Hotspur News


Substitute Roman Pavlyuchenko gave Tottenham all three points against London rivals West Ham with a 65th-minute winner at White Hart Lane.

Pavlyuchenko took one touch to control Luka Modric's pass, a second to turn past James Collins and a clinical third to fire right-footed past the outstretched Robert Green.

Robbie Keane also saw a second-half shot cleared off the line by Collins after Green had spread himself well at the feet of Aaron Lennon, and David Di Michele squandered West Ham's best pair of chances as they pressed for an equaliser.

Di Michele's best chance came directly from a goal kick which Jonathan Woodgate failed to clear. Di Michele turned the centre-back well, but he rushed his shot and failed to get enough power behind it to trouble Heurelho Gomes.

Tottenham's win ends West Ham's five-game unbeaten streak and moves them up to eighth place, just three points behind Gianfranco Zola's men.

With Everton playing on Sunday, West Ham missed the chance to cut the gap on the sixth-place team to four points.

Tottenham however kept their hopes of European football alive thanks to Pavlyuchenko's winner, which came just nine minutes after coming off the bench.

His 14th goal of the season means the race for seventh place in the Premier League is hotting up.

Such is the tightness of this season, Spurs have been fighting against relegation since Harry Redknapp's arrival in October but now could qualify for the Europa League.

"The reality is we are not out of trouble yet," Redknapp wrote in his programme notes - but they are surely safe now.

Redknapp spent seven years at West Ham and nurtured the likes of Rio Ferdinand and Joe Cole but away fans still taunted their former manager, a bitterness that has also been fuelled by the Spurs manager remaining unbeaten against his old employers since leaving them.

It added spice to a London derby that already had plenty of controversial recent history.

Spurs had not been beaten by the Hammers since a mystery virus hit their squad three years ago and denied them a place in the Champions League.

Both clubs are now chasing a place in next season's revamped Uefa Cup, although there was little in the way of first-half action that would have graced even Europe's second-tier competition.

The main talking point of the first half was a trio of penalty shouts from the hosts being turned down.

They felt they should have had a spot-kick 20 minutes into the contest when Keane's shot flicked up and struck James Tomkins' arm.

Referee Martin Atkinson waved play on and did so again two minutes later when Keane went over in the penalty area under a challenge from Luis Boa Morte.

The third appeal was turned down when Di Michele challenged Vedran Corluka for the ball, with Atkinson deciding the tackle was shoulder-to-shoulder rather than a foul.

Hammers goalkeeper Green was called into action twice in a minute just after the half-hour mark.

Tom Huddlestone, making his first league start since Boxing Day as Wilson Palacios was suspended, drove towards the box and unleashed a drive from outside the penalty area that required a save.

When the ball broke for Keane, England keeper Green used his shoulder to save as the shot from the Spurs skipper was scuffed and moving unpredictably.

Darren Bent then headed wide with the next chance for the hosts, just before Di Michele had one effort saved by Gomes at the near post and another blocked by Woodgate's knee.

A foot problem for Jermaine Jenas flared up and he was replaced by Didier Zokora at half-time, who added bite in the midfield and picked up a yellow card for fouling Lucas Neill. Neill then got a booking himself for clipping Modric.

The Hammers enjoyed a spell of pressure and Redknapp's response was to introduce Russian striker Pavlyuchenko, who replaced Bent in attack.

Pavlyuchenko immediately got his head on Huddlestone's free-kick but Green positioned himself perfectly.

Green then launched the ball up field and found Di Michele, who raced through behind Woodgate and saw his finish saved by Gomes.

Di Michele was in the thick of the acion and got himself booked for a foul on Lennon when the winger, with England assistant Stuart Pearce in the crowd watching, ran at the visitors at full throttle.

Pearce will also report back to Fabio Capello on Green, who beat away Huddlestone's fearsome drive.

There was nothing Green could have done about the 65th-minute winner.

Modric received the ball with his back to goal but smuggled it through Neill and Matthew Upson to Pavlyuchenko.

The Spurs substitute had to hold off Collins before getting a shot away that went past Green and in at the far post.

Kieron Dyer came on for the visitors and went wide with their best late effort, while Green tipped over a curling effort from Lennon and Keane had an effort cleared off the line by Collins.

Saturday, April 4, 2009

Tottenham Hotspur news


Sam Allardyce's side have climbed out of the drop zone in recent weeks but they remain in a precarious position, just two points above third-bottom Newcastle.

Rovers have been unable to find much consistency despite showing signs of improvement, and they will be desperate to embark on a winning streak to ensure top-flight survival.

One problem for Blackburn has been a shortage of goals, with Roque Santa Cruz ruled out since 4th March with a knee problem.

The Paraguayan striker was not allowed to link up with his country for their recent World Cup qualifiers and he will miss the clash with Spurs after failing to recover as quickly as hoped.

David Dunn is also out with an Achilles injury, while Vince Grella (groin) is doubtful and Brett Emerton and Steven Reid are long-term casualty absentees.

Allardyce will have to check on the fitness of his other international players such as Andre Ooijer, Morten Gamst Pedersen and Keith Andrews before finalising his squad.
Looking up

Tottenham will hope to pick up where they left off a fortnight ago as they continue to push for a European place.

The table is still so congested that Harry Redknapp's men will not feel completely safe just yet, but recent results have allowed them to look up rather than down.

Impressive victories over Aston Villa and Chelsea have lifted Spurs to within three points of Wigan, who currently occupy the seventh spot that will almost certainly provide a route into the UEFA Europa League.

Ledley King is likely to play at Ewood Park despite being forced to withdraw from the England squad due to his troublesome knee.

Darren Bent is more doubtful after he limped out of England training earlier this week with a knee injury, so Roman Pavlyuchenko could start after playing twice for Russia over the past fortnight.

Luka Modric played no part in Croatia's win over Andorra in midweek but Redknapp will be keen for the in-form playmaker to take his place in a settled midfield quartet also featuring Aaron Lennon, Jermaine Jenas and Wilson Palacios.

Possible starting XIs

Blackburn: Robinson, Ooijer, Givet, Mokoena, Samba, Warnock, Nelsen, Pedersen, Diouf, McCarthy, Roberts.

Tottenham: Gomes, Corluka, King, Woodgate, Assou-Ekotto, Lennon, Jenas, Palacios, Modric, Keane, Pavlyuchenko.

Saturday, March 28, 2009

Tottenham Hotspur Football


Can you believe they are still trying to play King for England when the poor lad can hardly play all the games for Spurs. England must really be struggling for players of quality. You need at least 6 or 7 world class players in an international team to win a world cup. How many does England have?
England manager Fabio Capello is hopeful centre-back Ledley King will have an international future under his stewardship.

King was called up to the latest England squad after some commanding displays for his club Tottenham Hotspur.

However, the 28-year-old suffers with a long-standing knee problem that restricts him to just one match every seven days.

And on Tuesday it was confirmed that King would return to White Hart Lane, having been assessed by the England medical team.
Optimistic

It has been suggested that King's fitness issue means his England future is bleak, and Capello, who rates the defender highly, remains unsure if he could still have a role to play.

He said on Sky Sports News: "We hope (he has an international future), because he's a very interesting player - one of the best centre-backs. But I don't know the future.

"We've followed Ledley King a long time. The last four games he played all the games. For this reason we chose him.

"He came here. The national team's medical staff checked him. There was some problem with the knee. The day after we found the same problem with it, so we decided Ledley would return to Tottenham.

"He's a good player. I watched the game. He always plays well. When I choose I try to choose the best players.

"When the medical staff checked on the situation we decided that he could go back."

Redknapp

Spurs boss Harry Redknapp branded King's call-up as "mad" and "pointless", sparking reports of a club versus country row.

When asked of his relationship with Redknapp, Capello replied: "It's a normal relationship like with the other managers of the Premier League.

"I don't understand why he spoke about King and not about (Alan) Hutton - the Scottish manager included him in his squad after he didn't play for two months.

"It's the same thing. I don't know why he was happy about Scotland and not happy with us."

Sunday, March 22, 2009

Tottenham Hotspur winning form


Chelsea failed to take advantage of Manchester United's slip at Fulham as they lost 1-0 to Spurs.

The Blues, who kicked-off half an hour late at White Hart Lane due to a security scare, knew their title rivals were struggling at Craven Cottage but could not capitalise on the slip, going down to Luka Modric's 50th minute strike.

Guus Hiddink's men looked out of sorts for much of the afternoon and the home side took a deserved lead when the Croatian latched onto Aaron Lennon's centre.

But the Blues piled on the pressure as time ran down and Spurs were indebted to much-maligned keeper Heurelho Gomes for a string of fine saves.

The pick of the Brazilian's stops was a one-handed block to deny John Terry while he was also on hand to snuff out late efforts from florent Malouda and Nicolas Anelka.

Alex also hit the crossbar in stoppage time as Spurs held on.

Harry Redknapp's men were relegation candidates when he took over in October but they are unbeaten in six league games and could be in with a shout for Europe.

Hiddink's men were predictably limited to long shots and Michael Essien, back from a serious injury, forced Gomes into a save which he gathered at the second attempt early on.
Pos Team P Pts
1 Manchester United 29 65
2 Chelsea 30 61
3 Liverpool 29 61
4 Arsenal 30 55
5 Aston Villa 29 52
6 Everton 30 48
7 West Ham United 30 41
8 Fulham 30 40
9 Tottenham Hotspur 30 38
10 Wigan Athletic 29 38
11 Manchester City 29 35
12 Bolton Wanderers 30 34
13 Hull City 29 33
14 Sunderland 29 32
15 Portsmouth 29 32
16 Stoke City 30 32
17 Blackburn Rovers 30 31
18 Newcastle United 30 29
19 Middlesbrough 30 27
20 West Bromwich Albion 30 24

* All tables

Top Rated Players Player Rating Club
Luka Modric 8.7 Tottenham
Heurelho Gomes 8.6 Tottenham
Vedran Corluka 8.0 Tottenham
Ledley King 7.8 Tottenham
Aaron Lennon 7.7 Tottenham

* Rate the players here

Sunday, March 15, 2009

Spurs will survive


If you take into account the results of the teams around Spurs it looks good for Spurs staying up.Another close shave is not what they needed but it seems obvious that although Ramos is a good coach he cannot handle the English game. Look at what happened to Real. Even though Liverpool beat Manu this weekend that was a poor showing from Real against a rampant Liverpool. Congrats to Liverpool they have done well. Perhaps one day Spurs will play as good again. The team has gone from strengh to strengh under Harry but we still have a little way to go. Players like Palacios and Keane have made a difference but expect a bit more dealing in the summer.
LATEST NEWS
No complacency, no fear - Kev

Kevin Bond insists there will be no complacency as we try to edge further away from the Premier League's danger zone with a positive result at Villa on Sunday.

We travel to Villa Park on a run of four matches unbeaten and one defeat in the last seven in league action.

That run has lifted us away from the lower reaches of the table and we go into Sunday's fixture 13th in the standings but still only four points clear of the bottom three.

A point against Villa - now fifth on goal difference - will lift us over Hull and Bolton on goal difference and into 11th.

"We're confident we'll be fine but we haven't got enough points yet to be fine," said assistant boss Kevin. "We've still got a few matches left and we need to continue picking up points.

"The table can look so much different from one set of results to another and at this moment we can't look too far ahead of ourselves.

"As soon as we can start looking up rather than down the better it will be for everyone."

Villa are level on points with Arsenal as they fight for that fourth Champions League spot.

"They've had a terrific season," added Kevin. "They have kept a settled side throughout most of it although they've chopped and changed a bit recently because they've had so many matches.

"They've had a couple of indifferent results but they are a cracking side.

"They play high-tempo football, they'll be in our faces and it will be a difficult game but a game we're looking forward to.

"We've done well against the top teams this season and those games have brought the best out of us.

"So there is no need to fear it. We'll go there, keep our concentration, do nothing silly at the back and hopefully get something from the game."

Saturday, January 31, 2009

Spurs Lost again

What a start for our new goalkeeper balls are flying past him. When will this team get it sorted? Perhaps in the championship next season. If they don't think they will be their they had better start winning. Oh well there is always next week. Harry really has taken on a tough job with this lot.

Tuesday, January 6, 2009

Spurs are winning now

Jermaine is back lets get some more and don't sell Lennon.