Friday, February 25, 2011

Blackpool 3 Spurs 1

Coming into this game we were on the back of a three game winning streak in the league including a traditional glory night in Europe courtesy of a very mediocre AC Milan but take nothing from it, our victory was well deserved. Now back on more familiar...actually not so familiar because most Spurtans may recall that we hadn't played Blackpool away since our FA Cup meeting back in 1991 (we won 1-0).
The winning run was bought to an end at Bloomfield Road as two first half goals and a third 10 minutes from time saw the three points deposited in Blackpool's Premier League account.
After being caught out twice in the opening 45 minutes, the team went all-out attack in the second with the introduction of Jermaine Jenas and later Niko Kranjcar and how our 'goals for' from this encounter remained at just one is one to ponder. A combination of resolute defending, inspired goalkeeping and a few wasteful finishes goes some way towards explaining.
The goal by Pavlyuchenko although overshadowed by the loss was straight out of the top drawer and a possible contender for goal of the season. No matter, we have ten days before our next fixture at Wolves and knowing Spurs, we will win that one and maybe in the process get back a few of our injured personnel which includes Redknapps ego. Spurtans rule!

AC Milan 0 - 1 Spurs

Normal service resumed. Courtesy of All Action no Plot
Come now, really – did anyone in their wildest dreams expect that? Really? That was not just a victory away to AC Milan, it was an absolute ruddy masterclass in the much-vaunted but rarely achieved art of Navigating Fiendishly Difficult Away Legs in the Champions League. Novices? Fie upon the very suggestion. Our lot look like they were born to play in this competition.
First whistle to last our heroes stuck to the drill with a discipline that had me reaching for the whisky in disbelief. Like some super-computer sucking up knowledge at a rate of knots, ‘Arry demonstrated that the lessons of San Siro visits past have been learned, the days of “Just f*ckin’ run about” a distant memory as he adopted the most unlikely role, for one night at least, of tactical genius. Accordingly, our heroes carefully put to one side the gung-ho all-action approach they have spent the past couple of years perfecting, and instead donned monocles and mortar boards for a display of quite astounding maturity and bloody-mindedness. Witness Woodgate, not a cobweb in sight, clearing from a prone position on the floor in the final seconds; Modders orchestrating keep-ball in the dying stages; Corluka bearing a blood-stained ice-pack around his mangled foot; all of which left the Milanese stomping around with angrier and angrier scowls, like over-sized nursery kids, until one felt they might tear off their own limbs and beat each other with them, which admittedly very few nursery kids do these days.
Roll of Honour
Ah the good folk of Tottenham Hotspur FC. Heroes the ruddy lot of them. Sandro and Sergeant Wilson charged around to the strains of 90s one-hit techno wonder Kicks Like A Mule, stomping up to Milanese attacking types and positively screeching into their faces “Your name’s not down, you’re not coming in!” Not only did those two patrol the centre like Robocop and his less frivolous twin brother, but they also showed quite remarkable discipline in restraining themselves from diving in at any point, and avoiding the concession of too many unnecessary fouls.
For his next trick Gomes will presumably travel through time and reappear two days ago, but at the San Siro he settled simply for defying the laws of physics, those two second half saves worthy of Banks and tantamount to goals.
VDV’s every touch was a thing of beauty, the very antithesis of the Neanderthalic buffoon in the opposite ranks, for whom the ball was but a secondary detail. Too easy it is to forget VDV’s disguised chip that floated an inch wide while just about everyone in the stadium and the watching world was looking towards the far post area into which most mortals would have aimed a cross.
Lennon’s destruction of the left-back was almost inhumane (although not in a Matthieu Flamini sort of way), while out on the left the remarkably similar-looking BAE and Pienaar beavered back and forth indefatigably.
The back-four barely put a foot wrong, Daws looking every inch an international, and when all-out assault forced the reshuffle Woodgate slotted in with minimal fuss, and the drill was resumed. The other substitutes did precisely what every good wholesome substitute ought to do, Modric lovingly stroking the thing around for the final ten minutes and Kranjcar poking little triangles, as the enraged Italians looked for something, anything, to kick.
The Goal

Certain celluloid moments stick in the mind. The T-Rex scene in Jurassic Park; the moment inDie Hard 4 when Bruce Willis and the shaggy haired kid face a car flying through the air at them before two other cars crash into it to prevent it landing atop them; the shootout in Reservoir Dogs… To this pantheon of greats should be added the sight of Aaron Lennon leading a Tottenham counter-attack, legs a spinning blur, great big swathes of green ahead of him, a terrified defender back-pedalling with a look etched across his visage suggesting that at that very moment he would rather be anywhere else. Wonderful stuff, and while all sorts of wrong options were feasible, the little fella kept his head and played it to perfection – the pace, the shoulder-dip, the disguised pass.
And the finish. Good grief for one horrible moment it looked like Crouch’s legs had assumed minds of their own and were about to sabotage the blighter’s moment, but he avoided tripping over himself in an unholy tangle of limbs – just – and the day was ours.
(Epilogue)
And then it got better. Lest any further evidence be needed that his shaggy mane hides only a great big vacuum between his ears, Gattuso then ignored the likes of resident lightweights such as Pav, Modders and Gomes, and made a beeline for one J. Jordan Esquire. “Nobody wants to see that,” droned Stelling on Sky Sports, rather missing a trick, for Jordan vs Gattuso would be one of the fastest-selling pay-per-view events in television history, even if it would only be a matter of seconds before Jordan tore the little man apart with his bare hands and then chewed on him with what teeth he has left.
(Second Epilogue)
And then it got better still, when all-round good egg and renowned gentleman of the game, Graeme Souness, was swamped within his own bile during the post-match natter and spat out a description of Gattuso as “just a little dog”. Ooh, you could almost reach and touch the hatred.
One or two colleagues have pointed out that the tie is far from over and other such guff, only to be confronted by that most wonderful riposte, The Grin of Delight. Frankly, right now, I don’t care what happens tomorrow, next week or any time hence. After the turgid dross and embarrassment of the 90s and 00s, the last 18 months have provided enough lilywhite glory nights to last me a lifetime. AC Milan 0 – 1 Spurs. Ding dong.

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Dear Spurtans

Its been almost three months since my last post. I understand that there has been alot of controversy surrounding the content of my blog. Some say that my articles have been lifted from a certain All Action No Plot blog, others say,,,mostly the same. Well, today I address this issues. Plagiarism is wrong especially if it is done with the intent to take credit for someone elses work. I admit that some of my articles were lifted from AANP due to laziness but mostly because im a fan but in no way did I intend to take credit for the work...exactly. Spurtan is mostly a African blog in addition to being a Spurs blog and the content placed here was intended for an African audience. AANP is a fantastic blog written by fantastic writers and Spurs fanatics who I very much respect and not many people would hold a candle to the prowess of AANP. With this in mind, I have therefore dedicated Spurtan to the AANP cause giving readers a preview of the awesome content that is AANP.