Thursday 12 January 2012

Nite Moves


In the pub after the cup win against Cheltenham, conversation turned to football superstition. As someone who justifies arguments with logic, reason, science and facts, there was a bit of surprise with the news that I have made an effort to drink out of my Spurs mug on matchdays since we have embarked on our fabulous run since winning at Wolves in September. I like to do my bit.

I do recognise fortune. The fortune of being born in the First World and the greatest City in the World; the fortune of good health; and the fortune of seeing a Spurs team in the eighties that played magnificent football. I was also fortunate that my first game was up in the Paxton Upper Tier, where as well as a good atmosphere (the banging of the wooden seats is still unforgettable now), it was also a great view of a great team, both then and now.

And last night, once again from the Paxton, I had a wonderful view of the artist Rafa Van Der Vaart.

I like art generally, having been to Picasso museums in Malaga and Barcelona, Van Gogh and Rijksmuseums in Amsterdam, as well as countless other exhibitions in places including Budapest, Dublin, Stockholm, Manchester and Madrid amongst others, often while my primary reason for travelling there in the first place was for football. Yet just as easy on the eye and stimulating to the mind is watching Van Der Vaart play.

In the second-half last night, as in the second-half against West Brom the previous week, his movement from a starting position in the centre of the pitch was wonderful. As was his touch, technique, intelligence and vision.  

Spurs started the second-half with a 4-3-3, used so effectively at Norwich in particular, recently. This time though Van Der Vaart was part of the three man midfield, alongside Jake Livermore and Luka Modric, rather than in the front three, where instead Aaron Lennon and Gareth Bale were fluid alongside Emmanuel Adebayor, at times Lennon hugging the touchline to stretch the width of the pitch while sometimes moving inside and letting the full-back overlap. A week earlier Van Der Vaart was playing behind a front two of Adebayor and Jermain Defoe in a diamond in the second half, and as like last night he ran the half.

His movement was similar to how Jari Litmanen used to play at Ajax in the mid-nineties in a shape which Terry Venables successfully adopted for England in Euro’96, with Teddy Sheringham at times picking up the ball alongside the centre back, while moments later in the same move being the furthest man forward in the opposition six-yard box. Van Der Vaart’s intelligence and personality, which I have written about before, makes him the perfect exponent of this.

He always plays the right ball, and had Xavi or Paul Scholes played as well as Van Der Vaart has in midfield in the second-half of Tottenham’s last two league games, it is likely his performances would have received more coverage. And as has been shown at times when playing from deep, most notably with two left-foot passes, one on the half-volley, out to Beniot Assou-Ekotto against Sunderland (when he also played in a diamond in the second half), he has the technique to execute difficult skills while spreading the play. I previously compared that half-volley to Hoddle, and with every game he plays he plays, Van Der Vaart looks to be the best player we have had since then.

His love of Tottenham is clear, as is the respect he has to all his previous clubs and their fans. And in style as well as attitude, he is what I would call, having grown up with the wonderful teams of the eighties, a typical Tottenham player.

He was central to the winner in the tight game against West Brom with his movement, a game when his great reading of the game was also vital when he was when he was defending 12 yards from his own by-line when we were momentarily down to nine men because of head injuries. And his attitude is key to our success.

His experience and leadership on the pitch last season contributed to a winning mentality that triumphed in the San Siro, got long overdue wins at the Emirates and Anfield, put Inter to the sword at White Hart Lane, and on four occasions won games in which we had missed penalty kicks. And as I wrote in a football column about the two Manchester clubs this week, mentality, pressure and confidence will be crucial in the title race.

It is no secret to anyone I have spoken to since the first week of October, or to anyone who has read things I have written about Spurs this season, that I think we can win the League. I have always thought the players and the manager have believed that as well. Other people seem to be coming round to the idea now as well. And as the manager inferred last night, we are beautiful to watch in the process.

MG
My e-book on Tottenham Hotspur's return to the European Cup for the first time in 49 seasons is available to buy from Amazon and Smashwords.