Spurs fans react to Kane drawing a blank on stadium’s opening

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Harry Kane failed to score as Tottenham Hotspur opened their new stadium against Crystal Palace on Wednesday, much to the chagrin of many fans.

The England captain started up front in the very first official Premier League game at the new stadium, but had to watch on as Son Heung-Min and Christian Eriksen scored the goals on a momentous evening for the club.

Roy Hodgson’s men were beaten 2-0 as Spurs regained the initiative in the race to qualify for the Champions League.

Kane, of course, scored in the final game at White Hart Lane as Manchester United were beaten 2-1, but he showed no signs of bitterness after his blank against the Eagles.

Writing on Twitter, he said: “What a feeling to play and win in our new home.”

And supporters are hopeful that he is merely saving his goals for next week when Spurs take on Manchester City in the first leg of their Champions League quarter-final.

Take a look at the best of the reaction below!

Aston Villa: Club must reignite interest in Isaac Hayden

Things are certainly looking up at Aston Villa! Still, the in-form side must now improve their midfield in the summer, and Isaac Hayden would complete a midfield trio of creativity.

Hayden, John McGinn, and Conor Hourihane would make one great midfield. One good enough to really push for promotion, or even make a real good go of staying in the Premier League, should they be promoted through the play-offs this season.

Hayden has been linked to Villa by the Daily Mail after he made it clear he wants to leave Newcastle at the end of the season because the distance between the city and his family home in London is too far. He put in a transfer request last June, but it was rejected.

Birmingham is certainly more accessible for the 24-year-old, who’s made 20 appearances for the Magpies this season. A move would also make him one of Villa’s main men, which he’s not had the luxury of being at Newcastle despite his impressive performances.

Despite Villa being in the Championship, the club’s size means it won’t seem like a step down. They could even be in the Premier League next term, but without that things are still looking up, and Hayden should relish the challenge of bringing the Villans back to the Premier League.

The 24-year-old would be a great signing for the long term too. With Villa looking to re-establish themselves as a top-flight team, they need to buy players capable of keeping the side there for years to come.

Villa fans, who do you think your club should sign this summer? Join the discussion by commenting below…

Michael Edwards has finally secured Liverpool a replacement for Xabi Alonso with Fabinho swoop

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On August 20th 2004, Liverpool completed the transfer of little-known Xabi Alonso from Real Sociedad in a deal worth £10.5 million. The deep-lying playmaker didn’t take long to settle in at Anfield and it rapidly became apparent that Rafa Benitez had signed a midfield metronome of ethereal quality.

It is rare to pluck a player of such immense raw talent from one of Europe’s top five leagues at a price as modest as £10.5 million, but Liverpool managed to pull off one of the signings of the season in 2004 at that very price.

Sitting at the base of Benitez’s midfield, Alonso conspired to regularly dissect his opponents with a level of vision which transcended beyond what the vast majority of top players are capable of.

The equalising goal against AC Milan in the 2005 Champions League final will remain a cinematic moment of euphoria to replay through the ages, but it was the finesse and simplicity of his every movement on the pitch which will remain etched into the minds of the Anfield faithful.

His classy style of play mirrored his outwardly slick yet unpretentious appearance. Benitez was the rotund Spanish waiter and Alonso was the chiselled Spanish prince.

Javier Mascherano is the only defensive midfielder to arrive at the club since Alonso who has showcased anything like the sheer level of class the Spaniard displayed in boundless quantities.

Jonjo Shelvey, Joe Allen, Alberto Aquilani, Raul Meireles, Emre Can and even Charlie Adam, who lacked the verve and charm Alonso possessed but offered a beer belly fit for a 20-pint bender on the Friday night preceding a Saturday fixture – so 1 nil to Adam I guess – have all been signed in the past ten years to settle into the midfield unit. All have them have been and gone, leaving little legacy behind.

Michael Edwards, though, operated with a nous and determination that suggested Liverpool were striving to buck this trend last summer. The deal for Naby Keita was already in place and hype surrounding his arrival was ubiquitous throughout the entirety of the 2017/18 season, but then something unexpected happened when the summer arrived: Edwards also negotiated the deal to bring in Fabinho from Monaco.

Out of the blue Fabinho was on his way to Merseyside in a £43.7 million deal. The Brazil international was hardly an unknown entity but the buzz over his signing was quashed somewhat by the overwhelming interest in Keita.

Fast forward nearly twelve months and the narrative has unfolded in a manner which only a minute contingent of Liverpool fans and neutrals would have predicted: Fabinho has been the outstanding summer acquisition and Keita has fallen on the moon with supporters expecting him to reach the stars.

Klopp has demanded patience from Fabinho with a steady introduction into the starting XI, but his stellar showing against Chelsea on Sunday afternoon proved that he is now a fundamental cog in Liverpool’s machine.

Domineering, creative, box-to-box, imperious and donning a clear nasty streak, as his questionable decision to clear his nose in the vicinity of an injured Eden Hazard attested to, Liverpool’s latest metronome was a joy to behold.

He completed six dribbles in the game, per Whoscored, a personal record which doubled his previous best this season, crunched into four tackles, made a single interception and completed 87 passes – more than any other player on the pitch – in a performance which had shades of an Alonso-esque masterclass.

It was the type of display which appeared to single-handedly vindicate Liverpool’s decision to swoop last summer, with every intelligent pass compelling the Anfield crowd to coo over this new majestic lynchpin.

Liverpool’s sporting director has established himself as an immensely popular figure since he was appointed to the position in November 2016. His ability to secure a deal for Fabinho, though, might just be his most outstanding achievement yet.

Those tasked with transfer policy have consistently failed to secure anything close to an adequate replacement for Alonso since he departed in 2009, however – even Mascherano lacked his orchestrative incisiveness in possession – Edwards seems to have finally achieved what none of his predecessors could manage.

Perhaps there is something slightly more functional and less awe-inspiring about Fabinho in comparison with Alonso. His role depends less on the majestic diagonal passes Alonso effortlessly used to spray and more on the destructive qualities he possesses in the defensive shape. But make no mistake about it, it would be insulting to undermine the Fluminense academy graduate’s exceptional ball-playing abilities.

Liverpool fans hadn’t seen anyone quite like Alonso in the past ten years until Fabinho rocked up last summer. After all these years, the Reds appear to have finally found the World Cup winner’s genuine successor.

Look at him now: Sam Allardyce and Everton

Sam Allardyce is good for one thing and one thing only. It is not pretty, nor is it much wanted by fans, but sometimes it is a necessary and painful procedure some must suffer if they want to survive in the Premier League. A bit like losing a leg to save one’s life.

Regardless of an extensive history that would suggest the Englishman could strike at any point, Everton fans probably thought themselves exempt from the Allardyce treatment. They had been one of the strongest teams in the competition, if not a little inconsistent at times, realistically what did they have to worry about. Ah, so very much.

Much in the same way that weeds thrive in certain conditions, Sam Allardyce comes to life in a struggling squad with very few ambitions other than fighting survival. Everton just so happened to be one of those teams in 2017.

A disastrous run of games under Ronald Koeman had left the Toffees into the lower half of the table and lost the former Southampton man his job, despite claiming European football the season before. There was only one thing for it: slap the panic button. Like Gotham City when they needed Batman the most, Sam Allardyce’s face was beamed onto the Liverpool skyline and the 63-year-old duly answered signing a short-term contract in November to run until June 2018 (as per The Guardian). Presumably when the Everton boardroom expected the mission to be complete – and not a day longer.

Allardyce may have hoisted Everton out of the relegation zone, but the mind-numbingly boring style that paved the way was too much for fans to handle. Take yourself off to a park on a Sunday morning and you will pretty much see the fundamentals of the former England manager’s style play out.

Allardyce was sacked just six months after taking the job.

Unsurprisingly ‘Big Sam’ has not yet been offered another job in management, and as the game moves on from his archaic style, we doubt he ever will. Instead, he bides his time and scrutinising others in the game as a pundit. People like Everton boss Marco Silva, who responded to his criticism in January (as per Daily Mail): “OK, maybe if it is David Moyes I would listen, because he did something really important at this club. But in this case it is not important at all.”

Time to take a break Allardyce.

Everton fans, what are some of your standout memories of Sam Allardyce? Let us know below… 

‘Brilliant’ – Spurs fans left in awe of out-of-position youngster

[ad_pod ]Tottenham Hotspur fans were delighted with Juan Foyth’s display as Mauricio Pochettino’s side lost 1-0 to Manchester City on Saturday.The Argentine played out of position as Spurs played City for the second time in a week.

After a glorious triumph in the Champions League, Pochettino’s men were beaten at the Etihad in the Premier League, with Phil Foden scoring the only goal of the game.

But the 21-year-old was a shining light throughout for Spurs, managing to effectively limit the threat of Raheem Sterling and, later, Leroy Sane on the left flank.

Indeed, Saturday’s display was the 21-year-old’s 13th in all competitions and his first at right-back.

A natural centre-back, Foyth’s playing time has been carefully managed by Pochettino in 2018-19, and a number of fans on Twitter were left delighted by his display in Manchester.

Indeed, many believe that he is set to blossom into a genuinely elite talent in north London.

Take a look at the best of the reaction below!

Pundit View: Robinson spots something many Leeds fans will love

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Plenty of Leeds fans have disagreed with Marcelo Bielsa’s decision to let Aston Villa score on Sunday, and those fans will absolutely love something Paul Robinson spotted during all the chaos.

Leeds and Aston Villa seem destined to meet in the play-off final at Wembley. The pair are currently set to face Derby County and West Brom respectively.

Leeds’ potential opponents, the Rams, have a knack of falling at the play-off hurdle, while the Baggies are shrouded in uncertainty after the sacking of Darren Moore.

And if Sunday’s 1-1 draw between the Whites and Villans is anything to go by, then their possible showdown at Wembley could be one for the ages.

Robinson, who works as a pundit for Sky Sports, picked up on something that has barely been mentioned amongst all the debate over whether the ball should have been kicked out or not in the build-up to the opening goal – Mateusz Klich was offside.

“When you see it in the replay, I don’t think it is a foul (on Kodjia). And then they (Leeds) are in a real predicament here. He (Roberts) looks as though he’s going to put it out and then he sees the balls on. I think the linesman gets it wrong because I actually think he’s offside (Klich),” he told Sky Sports Football (28/04/2019).

It does appear that Klich was marginally offside, and those Leeds fans who were against the decision to let Villa score will surely only love the fact that this is yet another aspect of the memorable incident that will annoy Villa fans.

Leeds fans take to Twitter in disbelief as Conor Hourihane gets away with Klich punch

Leeds fans knew full well that a lot of the incidents that happened in their clash with Aston Villa at Elland Road on Sunday would go to the FA for review. As expected, Anwar El Ghazi’s red card was rescinded whilst Patrick Bamford received a two-game ban for simulation. However, Conor Hourihane got off without punishment for his punch on Mateusz Klich, leaving Leeds fans seething.

The Whites cannot believe that once again they’ve seen an opponent get away with violent conduct. Against Brentford when Marcelo Bielsa’s side hosted the Bees, Sergi Canos, the Brentford winger, aimed a headbutt at Ezgjan Alioski and despite it being caught on camera, he received no retrospective ban. This time around, it was Conor Hourihane who got away with a blatant punch of Mateusz Klich.

The Polish midfielder wasn’t entirely blameless and he was the reason that tempers flared in the feisty clash as he bagged the controversial opener, leading to Hourihane letting his anger out by throwing a punch. The fact that Hourihane has gotten away without a ban means that Dean Smith will have him available for the playoffs, and he could be set to go up against Klich in a Wembley playoff final, and the Leeds fans are far from happy about it.

You can read the Whites’ verdict on the leniency for Hourihane here:

The Whites cannot believe that Hourihane got away with his punch on Klich and they’ll be desperate to beat Villa to promotion as revenge for the injustice.

Fixture In Focus Podcast – Title Showdown

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The Fixture In Focus Podcast returns this week in a slightly revised format, with two season-defining clashes in the Premier League title race at the heart of the agenda.

Manchester City’s destiny rests in their own hands as they travel to Brighton for what should be a routine victory. However, City fans will not be taking anything for granted after they almost conspired to throw the title away under similar circumstances in 2012.

Vincent Kompany’s thunderbolt on Monday evening put them into this glorious position and that earth-shattering moment is naturally on the agenda.

Liverpool, meanwhile, face a Wolves side who seem to have an insatiable thirst for upsetting the top-six clubs. Can Jurgen Klopp’s side hold their nerve and steal the title on the final day with a hard-fought victory?

Host James Jones is joined by #FIFpod regular and Man City fan Chris McMullan and George Dagless, who is still flying high from Liverpool’s stunning midweek comeback against Barcelona.

The agenda also includes discussion on how much difference 24 hours makes to the atmosphere at Anfield, why the smartest kid in class is always under huge pressure, and who will win the other epic battle of the weekend… the fight for 9th place at Vicarage Road.

If you love what we do and don’t want to miss another episode, don’t forget to subscribe on your preferred podcast platform by clicking here.

https://fixtureinfocus.podiant.co/e/3754927677f02e/

The Chalkboard: Antonio causes change to West Ham’s transfer strategy

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Michail Antonio has caused a change in West Ham’s thinking, sources have confirmed to Football FanCast.

On the chalkboard

The Irons were looking to recruit a first-choice striker this summer, a player capable of partnering Marko Arnautovic up front.

But sources have told FFC that Antonio’s recent form could lead to Manuel Pellegrini testing the Englishman out alongside the Austrian instead.

Indeed, he has scored two goals and laid on two assists in his last four games, having been given a regular run in the team by the former Manchester City boss.

Antonio has struggled to nail down a regular starting place this season and has been deployed in a number of different positions; he played as a right-back in the 3-1 win over Cardiff in December, was then left out against Crystal Palace and played as a centre-forward the following matchday versus Fulham.

Now, however, it appears he is being trusted further forward and it is about time.

Per WhoScored, he has made a total of 33 appearances this term and has completed 1.8 dribbles per game. This is a player who belongs in the final third, taking his man on and looking to unlock defences.

It is to his immense credit that his form is being looked on as it is; FFC understands that West Ham remain interested in buying a forward player, with Aleksandar Mitrovic of Fulham and Celta Vigo’s Maxi Gomez both targets, but there is now no need to rush their pursuit.

Give him a position

Pellegrini has the keys to unlocking Antonio’s potential.

He has long been a speed demon, capable of blistering pace, and he has allied to that a technical proficiency that has seen him create more chances and score more goals.

If he is to thrive at the Hammers, he needs to be played in a specific position for the duration of the campaign; up front makes sense.

He is the perfect counterpoint to Arnautovic, who is strong but lacks the pace required to burst beyond defences.

With the likes of Lucas Perez, Javier Hernandez and Andy Carroll all set to leave the club, there is a space opening up.

Antonio has the chance to grab it with both hands and ensure that, if a striker is signed this summer, they start their Hammers career on the bench.

Introducing: West Ham would strike gold with Bartlomiej Dragowski

Lukasz Fabianski has been outstanding, sublime, exceptional, world-class (you get the idea!) for West Ham United this season. The Poland international made a number of saves to help the Hammers to a tenth-placed finish and made sure their campaign was a lot better than it possibly could have been.

However, age is not quite on his or the Irons’ side as father time is starting to outrun him and it is likely he will only have a few more seasons in between the sticks before he decides to hang those gloves up for good.

But, it appears the Premier League side have already turned their attention to one man who could be a suitable replacement for him when the time comes and one that certainly has a bright future in the game if his recent performances are anything to go by.

According to a recent report by Italian publication Tuttomercatoweb, West Ham are thought to be taking an interest in Empoli’s shot-stopper, Bartlomiej Dragowski.

The 21-year-old is also a Poland international, having featured a number of times for the Under-21 side, and has been superb in the handful of games he has had on loan at the Serie A side, having joined them in January from Fiorentina.

Those Hammers fans that follow Italian football may already be well aware of the youngster and his talent after he made headlines in one of the top-flight matches last month and became a record-breaker in the process (Goal).

In a match against Atalanta, Dragowski had faced 47 shots in the 90 minutes, seeing 18 of those be on target, making 17 saves and still kept a clean sheet as the game ended 0-0. Those figures would surely make Fabianski envious of what he managed to accomplish this season!

Looking at the bigger picture, the 21-year-old has conceded 23 goals in his 15 appearances but that is hardly a surprise, nor that bad when considering how difficult of a year it has been for Empoli in Italy’s top-flight.

But, Dragowski has shown that he has the potential to be a top-class ‘keeper in the future and with the guidance that Fabianski could potentially offer him at the London Stadium, bringing him to the capital this summer could be considered a piece of astute business by Manuel Pellegrini and Mario Husillos.

West Ham fans, do you think Dragowski could be a potential Fabianski replacement in the future? Let us know below!

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