The Premiership's back! you readers are back! and I am back! So all is well.
It’s been a weird summer at
the Lane, players being sold by the bucket load without anyone asking for a
transfer and the one player we are desperate to shift (Adebayor) refusing to move
an inch. Common sense signings have been made and Daniel Levy will no doubt indulge
in his usual last minute brinksmanship to get Pochettino’s other targets. With the
football now underway, we can leave the transfer speculation behind.
I am always intrigued when Louis
Van Gaal and Pochettino go head to head. This is because, had David Moyes not
made a right horlicks of the Manchester united job, LVG will likely had been Spurs
manager and since Daniel Levy would never have sanctioned the kind of trolley
dash he been indulged at Old Trafford, how he would have got on at the Lane will remain one of life's unsolved mysteries. LVG appears more tactically adaptable and is clearly good for a touch of drama and a soundbite. However, he still has much to prove in the premiership given how much he has spent.
LVG was lucky to escape with a point the last time he visited White Hart Lane. However,
his team handed us a good stuffing at Old Trafford. It is now three games
without defeat against Pochettino’s Spurs.
This match was a bit of a slow
burner which Manchester united were very fortunate to win thanks to the
luckless Kyle Walker. United had once shot on target all afternoon and looked
like a team still trying to fire up, while Spurs looked at times like they all
needed a couple of cans of Red Bull to give them wings. Having said that, they
made the more purposeful start, played well in patches and had United hanging
on a bit at the end once they got over their awe of Bastian Schweinsteiger and
actually pressed him.
All in all, it was an encourage
start to Pochettino’s second season. United spent £83 million this summer to
improve their team and there was barely a £5 note between the two teams. Toby Alderwireld
settled into the defence well and it already obvious that the Spurs defence
which conceded the same number of goals as relegated Burnley will be much improved
this season. Kyle Walker, perhaps spurred on by the challenge of the energetic
Kieran Trippier played a very good match and was unlucky to score the decisive
own goal. Eric Dier, while probably not the long term solution to the central
defensive midfield position acquitted himself well. Nabil Bentaleb has received
a lot of plaudits for his play since breaking into the team at the end of the
2013 season. However, his occasionally has lapses in concentration and Saturday’s
lapse at a time when Spurs were on the attack with the full backs supporting
him was disastrous. Bentaleb had a poor game on Saturday but he is better than
that and he appears to have the drive that will ensure he bounces back from Saturday.
Everybody knows Spurs need some
reinforcement upfront. Dembele and Chadli covered and pressed well but did not stretch an untested United defence enough. With a bit more gusto in the attack, this match was winnable and that is the frustrating thing. It would have
been nice to have got all our players in before the season started but this is
the beast that the transfer window is and we’ll have to see what happens at the
end of August.
One thing that bordered me was
the way heads appeared to drop collectively after the goal as united enjoyed
their best period of the game. Spurs scored lots of goals last season, many in
the last minutes of games so heads should never drop. At one - nil, against a side
desperate not to lose, they are always still in the game.
Next up, those friendly bruisers
from Britannia, Stoke. They took six points off Tottenham last season. We’ll
like those six points this season please. Thanks.
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