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Manager Mauricio Pochettino

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Tottenham’s title challenge is a fairytale too – but don’t shout about it
Tottenham winning the Premier League would be almost as remarkable as a triumph for Leicester City, and the fans dare not mention the t-word as the side go about their business efficiently under the radar
Amy Lawrence

The last time Roma won the Serie A title, in 2001, in the weeks leading up to their coronation most supporters did not even dare talk about the possibility of winning it. They would not even say the word scudetto, the regular expression to denote Italian champions, as if by command from the highest overlords of superstition. They said “trukke trukke”, a catchphrase that loosely refers to a thing. It took on a life of its own. Everyone knew what they were talking about but nobody dared say it properly out loud.
The parable of trukke trukke perhaps strikes a chord at White Hart Lane.

Tottenham are quietly enjoying a season of extraordinary improvement and promise. But shhhh. They may be second in the table but this is not the time to make a racket about any big ideas.

The Leicester City whirlwind absolutely dominates the fairytale stakes, and rightly so. That suits Tottenham down to the ground. Winning six games in succession, playing with a strategy and confidence that has all the players bringing the best out of themselves and each other, of course there is a buzz around the place but it is more like background music compared with the crescendo of zany excitement that is building around the King Power.

Being slightly under the radar is a very useful place for Tottenham to be positioned. “We just want to stay as close as possible and our thing is to be humble,” said Christian Eriksen after Spurs clocked up another three points against Watford.

Among the crowd at White Hart Lane, the sentiment was echoed. Mike Collett, an esteemed football reporter who has been supporting Spurs since 1961, was in among the faithful and noticed that for all the fans’ positivity and happiness, it was conspicuous that nobody would dare to get carried away. “I have not heard anybody mention the word title,” he says. “Nobody among my friends talks about it. I am not allowing myself to think we can win the league. We have had so many false dawns. It never happens.”


Tottenham celebrate after winning the first division in 1961, with the manager, Bill Nicholson, seated and wearing a bowler hat. That was the club’s most recent title. Photograph: Popperfoto/Getty Images

The thing is, although nothing can match Leicester’s title bid for improbability, the scale of Tottenham’s achievement if their run continues to trukke trukke proportions would not be too far behind. They haven’t had a league title win since 1961. Any of their fans able to recall the experience of watching Bill Nicholson’s Double team, inspired by such players as Danny Blanchflower, Dave Mackay, Cliff Jones and Bobby Smith, will be at least in their sixties now. Incidentally, that team essentially won the title using a core of 12 players (five of the total of 17 played six times or fewer). But that’s another story for another day.

Even the chance to have a genuine shot at another title has not come along too often for Tottenham. There is a reason that “Spursy” is in the urban dictionary. Perhaps that is why it is better that there is not too much of a noise around N17. Collett can sense something special is happening, though. “I think this is the best team Tottenham have had since the mid-1980s team that won the FA Cup twice. There is an incredible confidence in the team that we haven’t felt for donkey’s years.”

Tottenham’s form, guided expertly by Mauricio Pochettino and a bunch of players who are following his instructions with aplomb, puts a new slant on traditional expectations. There is real (if deliberately understated) hope that the Argentinian manager, if he is not allowed to leave for a richer club at a time when Tottenham will be tightening their belts to pay for their stadium upgrade, can create a team capable of lasting success.

Next on the agenda is Manchester City, reeling from the pummelling delivered by Leicester on Saturday. Tottenham made a statement with a comprehensive victory over Manuel Pellegrini’s team in September and, arguably, they have upgraded their own style since then.

Of course, Leicester still have a five-point lead over Spurs and have no cup distractions, while Pochettino has Europa League fixtures against Fiorentina and an FA Cup fifth round match against Crystal Palace to juggle in the coming weeks, all of which adds to the sense that Tottenham are in the background of any title conversations.

It has been a while since English football has produced an unexpected champion. Leicester might be the people’s favourites but Tottenham don’t mind doing their stuff in the shadows.

Tottenham’s title challenge is a fairytale too – but don’t shout about it | Amy Lawrence
 
Tottenham’s title challenge is a fairytale too – but don’t shout about it
Tottenham winning the Premier League would be almost as remarkable as a triumph for Leicester City, and the fans dare not mention the t-word as the side go about their business efficiently under the radar
Amy Lawrence

The last time Roma won the Serie A title, in 2001, in the weeks leading up to their coronation most supporters did not even dare talk about the possibility of winning it. They would not even say the word scudetto, the regular expression to denote Italian champions, as if by command from the highest overlords of superstition. They said “trukke trukke”, a catchphrase that loosely refers to a thing. It took on a life of its own. Everyone knew what they were talking about but nobody dared say it properly out loud.
The parable of trukke trukke perhaps strikes a chord at White Hart Lane.

Tottenham are quietly enjoying a season of extraordinary improvement and promise. But shhhh. They may be second in the table but this is not the time to make a racket about any big ideas.

The Leicester City whirlwind absolutely dominates the fairytale stakes, and rightly so. That suits Tottenham down to the ground. Winning six games in succession, playing with a strategy and confidence that has all the players bringing the best out of themselves and each other, of course there is a buzz around the place but it is more like background music compared with the crescendo of zany excitement that is building around the King Power.

Being slightly under the radar is a very useful place for Tottenham to be positioned. “We just want to stay as close as possible and our thing is to be humble,” said Christian Eriksen after Spurs clocked up another three points against Watford.

Among the crowd at White Hart Lane, the sentiment was echoed. Mike Collett, an esteemed football reporter who has been supporting Spurs since 1961, was in among the faithful and noticed that for all the fans’ positivity and happiness, it was conspicuous that nobody would dare to get carried away. “I have not heard anybody mention the word title,” he says. “Nobody among my friends talks about it. I am not allowing myself to think we can win the league. We have had so many false dawns. It never happens.”


Tottenham celebrate after winning the first division in 1961, with the manager, Bill Nicholson, seated and wearing a bowler hat. That was the club’s most recent title. Photograph: Popperfoto/Getty Images

The thing is, although nothing can match Leicester’s title bid for improbability, the scale of Tottenham’s achievement if their run continues to trukke trukke proportions would not be too far behind. They haven’t had a league title win since 1961. Any of their fans able to recall the experience of watching Bill Nicholson’s Double team, inspired by such players as Danny Blanchflower, Dave Mackay, Cliff Jones and Bobby Smith, will be at least in their sixties now. Incidentally, that team essentially won the title using a core of 12 players (five of the total of 17 played six times or fewer). But that’s another story for another day.

Even the chance to have a genuine shot at another title has not come along too often for Tottenham. There is a reason that “Spursy” is in the urban dictionary. Perhaps that is why it is better that there is not too much of a noise around N17. Collett can sense something special is happening, though. “I think this is the best team Tottenham have had since the mid-1980s team that won the FA Cup twice. There is an incredible confidence in the team that we haven’t felt for donkey’s years.”

Tottenham’s form, guided expertly by Mauricio Pochettino and a bunch of players who are following his instructions with aplomb, puts a new slant on traditional expectations. There is real (if deliberately understated) hope that the Argentinian manager, if he is not allowed to leave for a richer club at a time when Tottenham will be tightening their belts to pay for their stadium upgrade, can create a team capable of lasting success.

Next on the agenda is Manchester City, reeling from the pummelling delivered by Leicester on Saturday. Tottenham made a statement with a comprehensive victory over Manuel Pellegrini’s team in September and, arguably, they have upgraded their own style since then.

Of course, Leicester still have a five-point lead over Spurs and have no cup distractions, while Pochettino has Europa League fixtures against Fiorentina and an FA Cup fifth round match against Crystal Palace to juggle in the coming weeks, all of which adds to the sense that Tottenham are in the background of any title conversations.

It has been a while since English football has produced an unexpected champion. Leicester might be the people’s favourites but Tottenham don’t mind doing their stuff in the shadows.

Tottenham’s title challenge is a fairytale too – but don’t shout about it | Amy Lawrence

If we do win the Premier League it won't seem like the incredible achievement it actually is because of Leicester. But if we win the League it could well be because Leicester took the pressure off.

I wouldn't give a damn though, would be unreal to win it!
 
Sanchez Flores on Pochettino & Spurs:
"For me, Tottenham is the best because we played twice against Manchester City, twice against Tottenham and twice against Chelsea, and I think this is the more complete team. I think this kind of team is very difficult to stop.
We know perfectly what we want to do when we recuperated the ball, we try to play, when we recuperate the ball, we try to put the ball far away – but it was impossible. It was impossible because they are like animals there, trying to beat and recuperate the ball as quick as possible.
They have a plan. They can attack, they know what they are doing when they lose the ball, what areas they want to recuperate the ball, how they want to recuperate the ball, what they want to do when they recuperate the ball. They have very good players in power and technical ways, so they can play interior play, they can play the sides and have very good players and skills also. They have everything a team needs to try to be champions.
I can feel that they don’t have such an important level of responsibility that they feel the pressure. They are young, in the top four and sometimes aren’t conscious of how important the Premier League is, and you can feel that they enjoy playing football. That is very important.”

He then goes on to talk about their time in La Liga and says of MP at Espanyol:
“I think he found the necessary players to develop the plan ( at Spurs)”
“At Espanyol he had young players, which is similar in this case, it is the style of Pochettino – but they didn’t have the possibility to manage the ball with this velocity and this category. The players, finally, are the most important thing in football and Tottenham found very good players.”
 
The story leads with Utd approaching Poch's representatives, you know, the ones that he doesn't have. Fucking embarrassing. It's Nigel Custis, who is desperate to get Maureen in. Think LVG called him out as fat the other week, so a spat is beginning to develop between the two.
Cutis is the cunt who had sherwood's ear, so no great surprise
 
The story leads with Utd approaching Poch's representatives, you know, the ones that he doesn't have. Fucking embarrassing. It's Nigel Custis, who is desperate to get Maureen in. Think LVG called him out as fat the other week, so a spat is beginning to develop between the two.

I thought exactly the same thing. Completely uninformed bullshit as it's widely known he doesn't even have an agent.
 
Potch's representatives could be anyone though, from his Lawyer to a brother or a cousin. Not necessarily the agent that he doesn't have.

Either eay, the story has come from somewhere. It could be some Exec at Man U wanting to spread the story to influence the negotiations with Mourinho. It could be that they actually want Potch as manager (and why wouldn't they). It might even be an attempt to unsettle Tottenham in order to better improve their chances of a top 4 finish. Either way, (to my mind at least) with so many media outlets reporting it means it has come from somewhere credible other then the mind of some random journey. The reasons why the story came out are limitless.
 
Potch's representatives could be anyone though, from his Lawyer to a brother or a cousin. Not necessarily the agent that he doesn't have.

Either eay, the story has come from somewhere. It could be some Exec at Man U wanting to spread the story to influence the negotiations with Mourinho. It could be that they actually want Potch as manager (and why wouldn't they). It might even be an attempt to unsettle Tottenham in order to better improve their chances of a top 4 finish. Either way, (to my mind at least) with so many media outlets reporting it means it has come from somewhere credible other then the mind of some random journey. The reasons why the story came out are limitless.


Could be all of that, or it could be that the journalist just made up a story that he thought people would want to read........his job after all is to sell newspapers and internet subscriptions, not to report the news.
 
Newspapers need newsworthy news everyday , newsworthy news does not happen every day
Therefore they resort to writing complete lies , not a bad job
 
I love the fact that the Press are reporting this story as if nothing has changed from the years that they could stroll into WHL and demand our best players.
I love the fact that since they did it, Real Madrid has become a parody of itself, being jerked around by the boy Emperor Ronald, who grows more detached every year.
I love the fact that when the Mancs want ours, they get the door slammed in their red nosed faces and have to crawl back to that grey, rainy, depressing, culture lacking mill town.
Think that covers it. COYFS!
 
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