chic

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.