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Spurs fans excited by Andre Villas-Boas

New manager backed by chairman

icon villasboasspurs9 July ~ Replacing Harry Redknapp with Andre Villas-Boas at Spurs is not as unexpected, risk-laden or unpopular as you might think. Tension between Redknapp and chairman Daniel Levy had been simmering for some time and it was the manager who provoked the confrontation that brought it to the boil. The club stuck by him during both his court case and the fuss over the England vacancy. He repaid them firstly by losing focus at the end of the season then hiring agent Paul Stretford, known for his uncompromising negotiating stance, to demand a new contract a few days after Levy's mother died. 

Levy, cautious and prudent as ever, weighed it up and saw limited value in offering a three-year deal to a man of pensionable age. In the end, he called Redknapp's bluff. It has been described as a sacking but in reality, the two men had had enough of each other.

Villas-Boas and Spurs fit like a Saville Row suit. The squad are likely to be comfortable and responsive to his 4-3-3 formation, which depends on compressing the play when not in possession, keeping the ball and making a swift transition into offensive mode when they have it. We possess pace, strength and stamina throughout the side, plus quick defenders necessary for his preferred high backline. This addresses the two deficiencies Redknapp failed to overcome: being far too open without the ball, thus leaving the back four continually exposed; and the inability to break down massed defensive deployments.

Villas-Boas behaves with the aloof arrogance of a true zealot. Perhaps that translates as not being chummy with journalists. But what counts is how he communicates with his players and he has a better chance to replicate the close relationship he had with his Porto squad than at Chelsea, where the attitudes of senior players were deeply entrenched. Above all, he shares with the team an ambition to better themselves as individuals and collectively.

Spurs' future depends on a long-term plan to buy younger players for whom Spurs represents a step up. This approach unearthed Luka Modric, Kyle Walker, Gareth Bale, Younès Kaboul and Sandro. Lessons have been learned: newcomers Gylfi Sigurdsson and Jan Vertonghen are experienced but yet to reach their peak. Unusually for Spurs, they have been signed pre-season.

There is the sense Levy and Villas-Boas have common ground here. Villas-Boas' player judgement will be tested fully, as we require reinforcements in goal and centre-midfield but especially up front, where we only have one striker. Less adaptable players like Jermain Defoe and Aaron Lennon may struggle.

Protected from a bad press by Redknapp's nauseatingly cosy relationship with the media, it is now open season at Spurs as the tabloids smell an intoxicating mixture of weakness and blood. This could fatally undermine Villas-Boas but unlike Roman Abramovich at Chelsea, Levy will support him if he puts the plan into action.

The mood among Spurs fans is unusually optimistic for the coming season. Like me, most are grateful for Redknapp's achievements but are philosophical about his departure because we never felt a close attachment. Villas-Boas deserves financial support from the boardroom and backing from the stands. Alan Fisher

Comment on 09-07-2012 18:30:59 by starchief #688671
A little bit of bias much? If Redknapp was so poor, look at where you were before and where he took you. Relegation candidates become championship candidates and Champions Leaguers but for an unexpected win by Chelsea.
"He repaid them firstly by losing focus at the end of the season" - and now that the court case and England are out of the picture, he could re-focus...unlike Villas-Boas, who was just poor with Chelsea.
"Perhaps that translates as not being chummy with journalists" or perhaps he was criticised for being so bloody awful.
"Like me, most are grateful for Redknapp's achievements" - you don't sound it and I suspect you'll be even more grateful when a team that was almost there doesn't achieve the same success, given AVB's record.
Talk about fickle.
Comment on 10-07-2012 04:43:19 by madmickyf #688867
"He repaid them firstly by losing focus at the end of the season then hiring agent Paul Stretford, known for his uncompromising negotiating stance, to demand a new contract a few days after Levy's mother died"

The bastard!! How dare he hire an agent and start contract negotiations when the chairman's mother had just died. He should be dragged through the streets of Tottenham for failing to observe the obligitary period of mourning!!
Comment on 11-07-2012 10:23:11 by Coral #689437
"The bastard!! How dare he hire an agent and start contract negotiations when the chairman's mother had just died."

My thoughts exactly, people should act with decorum and respect. Only thing is I am not being sarcastic.

"If Redknapp was so poor, look at where you were before and where he took you."

If we take out the brief and awful Ramos period he took them from being just missing out on a Champion's league place to taking them to just missing out on a Champion's league place.
Comment on 11-07-2012 19:04:37 by TMWNN #689672
The infantile and narrow view of the comments above prove just how well Redknapp and his pals in the press manged to manipulate consent among the outsiders into believing that Redknapp is some kind of hero.

Good riddance. It will be interesting to see where a manager of such greatness ends up.

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