Blame life, not Levy
Daniel Levy is at fault for quite a few things, but he isn’t responsible for Tottenham’s above average season.
Supporting Tottenham Hotspur is not something you simply choose to do; it’s a vocation, a directive from above, a randomly assigned genetic code over which you have no control. Once Tottenham has you, like a Darth Vader choke hold, it never lets go.
From the wizardry of Gazza, Bale and Waddle, to the misery of bad lasagna and Arjen Robben penalty misses, all of this is part of what makes Spurs such a unique and wonderful club to follow.
You will find me most days chained to a desk where I finance my Spurs addiction by working on B2B editorial or, thanks to my lowly Bronze Membership somewhere in Blocks 29 through to 32 at White Hart Lane.
Alternatively you can follow me on Twitter @BardiTFC
COYS
Daniel Levy is at fault for quite a few things, but he isn’t responsible for Tottenham’s above average season.
Spurs once again fell short when faced with the behemoth Man City, who even though they didn’t need any help, had a two gentlemen in black throwing aid at them.
There was a time when City were a lot of fun, now they are a fearsome goal scoring, money spending conglomerate on their way to White Hart Lane.
Christian Eriksen a midfielder more Burlesque than out-and-out striptease. He is finally becoming the player we all hoped he could be. At last that huge Croatian sized hole in our midfield can be plugged. “Erik- sen – sen -sen”
White Hart Lane is an amazing place. Home to the world famous Spurs, a place that has seen glory, gory and sheer desperation, however on Saturday it was an eye opener. This is what I learnt at the the Lane.
It’s official Jermain Defoe will be leaving Spurs. The striker departs Spurs very much a Marmite figure, some love him, some hate him, what isn’t up for debate though is the fact he was conceived solely to hit the back of the net
The last 24 months have been a painful ride for Spurs fans. Legends and managers have departed, smoke bombs thrown, Y-words banned and defeats to local rivals have left us a fractured bunch. We must unite, even if it’s under Tim Sherwood, Spurs are bigger than one man.
Many remain “unconvinced” with Tim Sherwood but for how much longer? Goals, speed and a victory at Old Trafford, does he need to win at the Emirates before we are all convinced?
Tottenham get back to winning ways as Adebayor puts aside his personal problems and starts scoring.