After
the Cup Final, a break and now back to the start of a new league challenge… but
first, there was a matter of a friendly against Inter Milan.
Hanna
and I arrived at the ground at 10.30 am (it was only her second match at N17),
parked up and then I made my way to the shop. Stayed for about half an hour
(nothing caught my eye, apart from the programme) and then went to have a
gander around the stadium. Spotted John – who was the attendant at the school
(St Francis) when people parked there to watch Spurs play (before the new
stadium was built). I had been going there for about 40 odd years; now the
school has been taken over by the club (at least for match days), so I had to
find other parking facilities. But it was nice to see John (he has recently had
a heart attack). Many Spurs fans will remember him. I am sure we all wish him
well.
The
kick-off for the friendly was a few minutes late, but then all was full steam
ahead, at least the first 3 minutes, that was when Lucas Moura fired us ahead.
At this stage we looked incredibly sharp (ready to challenge for anything), but
the tempo we were playing at dropped, and it allowed our opponents to equalise.
Substitutions that were made interrupted the flow, and we went down a few
notches, and it stayed that way for the rest of the game.
Finally,
penalties came after full time. We were denied twice. Eventually losing 4-3.
Eriksen missed his second penalty in a matter of days (you could hear a few
boos around the stadium as he walked back to the centre spot).
But to
be fair, all this was academic. Nobody was going to kill themselves for a
friendly match. A crowd of over 58,000 turned up, impressive for a friendly.
Basically,
that was it.
But
the real meat on the bone was the beginning of the season, and before you could
say anything, Aston Villa was looming over us.
I
arrived at the stadium, as always, 5 hours earlier. A quick shifty in the shop,
purchased some clothes and into the stadium. Met up with the regular group of
friends (Terry, Ian, Jeff, Mel and Steve, no Beverley and a new edition to our
group, Ken). Had drinks, food and into the stadium.
The
fans were in a cheerful mood and raring to go. Finally, the whistle was blown
and we were off, sluggish, but off. For long periods we looked dire and it
looked like we were heading for defeat. The whistle went to put us out of our
misery. The talk was of defeat, my thoughts were that Pochettino had to give a
stiff talking to his players if they were going to turn this around. Then the
players came out (not before I made my way to the food area to get a couple of
bottles of diet coke and a tea and then back to my seat).
Whatever
Pochettino said it must have worked… well, it worked, I should say, when
Eriksen was brought on, and he injected some much-needed energy and vigour.
Even
though we didn’t sign forward Dybala, we had strengthened significantly in the
summer in an effort to improve on our last season's performance. We had started
in a similar fashion to our lacklustre form at the end of the 2018-19 season,
when we won just one of our last five domestic games.
On the
subject of Dybala; even though he is a striker, and some were saying that we
needed a cover for Kane, my thoughts were that we had Son, Moura and the young
Parratt. I thought we were covered ok. And remember that last season and the
season before, when Kane was injured, we did exceptionally well. So much so
that I thought that Kane should have been on the bench when we played Liverpool
in the final. Why the heck change a team that did so well from the previous
Ajax game (anyway, don’t get me started on that one). Don’t get me wrong, I
would have loved Dybala at this club, but it wasn’t to be and what we’ve got is
– hopefully – adequate.
Also,
to complicate things, for the Villa game, we were missing several talented
players because of injury and fitness (including suspension), Dele Alli, Son
Heung-min, Foyth, plus the new additions; Ryan Sessegnon and Giovani lo Celso.
Our
club record £53.8m signing Tanguy Ndombele cancelled out John McGinn's opener
after Villa failed to clear their lines following Tom Heaton's save to keep out
Davinson Sanchez. From there we transformed ourselves and showed confidence and
momentum and of course Kane, who had never scored in August, well, until last
season, that is, made sure of the points with a quick-fire double in the final
four minutes.
So,
that was the easy part, next week we will show our mettle by taking on those
that thrashed the Hammers 5-0, yes, Manchester City, and they are on their own
ground to-boot. Our new signings will get a baptism of fire.
We
walked away from the stadium with relief. Actually, I stayed an extra hour,
then got my car and drove home, eventually getting home after 11 pm. Overall, a
good day (a good few days). I had spent the last couple of days in London and
the previous day went to see the play Equus and also a trip to the Tower of
London (it was my birthday). Before that, I was visiting my mum in Lowestoft.
I am
sure all Spurs fans who were there or watched it on the box are happy that we
ended positively. We are serious challengers to the Premier League. After next
weeks match, we should have a clearer picture.
By
Glenn Renshaw
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