Commando. Truly, one of the great films of the ‘80s, quite the celluloid embodiment
of the all-action-no-plot mentality. From start to finish it is held together by the very wispiest
of fragile plots, whilst also punctuated by numerous illustrations of the linguistic difficulties
that Arnold Schwarzenegger never quite mastered ("All that matters to me now is Chenny").
Rejoice, all ye fellow lilywhites. Admittedly it is also with a degree of trepidation (Old
Trafford will do that to a Spurs fan) but goodness me it is wonderful finally to be able to look
forward to Spurs in Premiership action tonight. ‘Tis with delight therefore that I invite you to
gather round and peruse with me the permutations of team selection for the evening's
festivities.
Last-minute winners and multiple penalties are the least we have come to expect from a 90-minute
adventure at the Lane, but as the cheery dissection of events was conducted at AANP Towers one
question sprang to mind, yet to be satisfactorily answered: what the devil happened to that third
penalty we were awarded?
What ho, and how wonderful to reconvene in such happy circumstances, for glory be, the new
season will up and runneth soon enough. Huzzah! Surging left-wing runs, infuriatingly aimless
headers, goalkeeping howlers, near-suicidal-but-ultimately-ok left-backery, oodles of Sky Sports
stats, European adventures on Channel 5 and, of course, madcap, all-action seven-goal thrillers and
the like.
And so, finally, off we go, in the rather unorthodox settings of ITV4 and Edinburgh. It is a
truth universally acknowledged that any Scottish team whose name does not rhyme with either
"Beltic" or "Changers" is there for the taking, so first game of the season or not, this lot must
be destroyed. ‘Arry has understandably enough made noises about fielding kids and reserves in
the Europa League, but while none of us want injuries ahead of the United trip on Mon, it would
nevertheless make sense to field a full-strength side tonight.
Sitting down to type when one's lip is literally still quivering with rage must surely be
ill-advised, but how else to express sheer, undiluted incandescence? Here at AANP Towers we are
generally loath to criticise the officials, since their job is jolly difficult, their mistakes are
always honest and frankly I imagine that to a man the players make many more errors per game.
Around ten days ago I mused that I would have settled for eight points from our four
Christmas-New Year games. Three games in and we already have nine, which means that the riotously
good fun continues into 2011 – still not yet out of the title race, most definitely still in the
Top Four race and looking down upon the rotters from Stamford Bridge, languishing beneath us.
And now for something completely different. At third (and, later fourth) round stage the FA Cup
hardly constitutes fixture congestion, so the question of where it stands in our list of priorities
can probably be deferred to another day.
Bingo cards out then, as we look to cross off the names of various squad members last season
posing merrily in the club photocall back in August.
That was just about as straightforward as could have been hoped, just about every box ticked by
3.30pm. Key personnel rested; squad members got 90 minutes; home-grown youngster made Danny
Rose-esque impact on debut (fingers crossed the next few months are a bit brighter for him than for
the boy Rose); clean sheet; no injuries; no suspensions; opportunity for Defoe to return to
sharpness; etc.
Our heroes have made a pleasing habit of dispelling various hoodoos in recent months, and the
latest to present itself is a ten-year drought against the eleven men of Manchester United and
their various assistants in black. Over the last year or so we have torn apart some of the cream of
Europe, with United's the only scalp now missing, and while unbeaten our visitors have looked far
from invincible to date this season.
Apologies for the delay –since the final whistle sounded on Sunday afternoon the denizens of
AANP Towers have spent every waking minute traipsing the country searching for anyone –
anyone – willing to buy Peter Crouch from us. It does not have to be the chairman of a
football team. He could be bought by a British Basketball Association franchise, or shoved into a
museum for small children to gawp at.
In a curious quirk of circumstance it transpired that neither I nor my avidly Spurs-supporting
chum Ian could earlier this week recall, off the top of our heads, the identity of this weekend's
opponents. Such was the importance of last week's game against Man Utd that everything thereafter
paled into insignificance, at least temporarily.
Life without Gareth Bale? It began after 10 minutes last weekend, will continue today and, if
scurrilous rumours are to be believed may even take on a more permanent edge, with Inter
understandably keen to see "Year abroad" added to his already astonishing CV in the near future.
Mercifully, this is one of the transfer window's less likely rumours, but his absence nevertheless
seems likely this afternoon.
One down, seven to go - the dream of a run of eight consecutive League wins remains, at least
within this particularly deluded little mind. This afternoon's task will not be easy - Bolton
outdid us on their patch earlier in the season, and in Kevin Davies have precisely the sort of
striker whose presence makes me shudder from my Park Lane vantage point.
And so it continues. Five minutes ago Man City and Chelski were just expensively-assembled
specks in the distance; but three hard-earned wins later and we now pose them a problem they will
be unable to solve simply by reaching for the wallet and hurling foreign currency around. Take
that, you rotters.
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.
Spurs fans born yesterday – or at least since around 2009 – may disagree, but following up
victory at the San Siro with defeat at Blackpool would not be the most unlikely turn of events at
for the heroes of N17. Mercifully the current vintage seem just as capable of digging out tricky
away wins to lower-table scrappers as they are of churning out a never-to-be-forgotten glory night
in one of Europe's premier arenas – which ought to prove jolly handy tonight, as our walking
wounded leave a blood-stained trail from N17 to Blackpool pier.
Well if this doesn't get your juices flowing I suggest you go and boil your head. Tottenham
Hotspur vs AC Milan. It's the sort of fixture that makes me want to don nothing more than a
loin-cloth and go wrestle a bear, then save a small child - and svelte, scantily-clad brunette –
from a burning building, before reducing Colonel Gadaffi to tears with a devastating best-of-five
demolition in Scissors-Paper-Stone.
Old hat it may be for everyone else, but here at AANP Towers we bounce around the walls like
toddlers on a strict diet of fizzy drinks and E-numbers as we await the start of our Premiership
season. Still, rather than pacing the corridors, rubbing hands together in feverish anticipation
until tomorrow night, it occurred to me that the time is rather ripe for making public the various
musings that have echoed around the walls of AANP Towers all summer.
My, this is embarrassing. We wait three months – plus those tortuous extra 9 days – for our
season to begin, then promptly find ourselves nestled amongst the bottom one teams in the table
after being torn apart by a bunch of blasted kids. Thank heavens for the fixture-list and its
remaining 37 entries.
Like the Queen visiting the troops in Helmand in a symbolic gesture to bolster morale, we
lilywhites need something to raise spirits, for few amongst us found anything comforting in Monday
night's debacle and gloomy faces abound. Timely then that that Hearts are pootling along the High
Road to be given the run around tonight, for another gentle, if pointless, five-nil win would be
timely.
Optimism to follow, but it would be remiss to begin proceedings with anything other than the
nasty business of a post-mortem...
The Arnie Approach
In the absence of our recognised midfield enforcers, our glorious leader adopted the cunning
tactical ploy of leaving the back-four without any protection to handle a City front-line so shiny
and expensive they had Tevez on the bench, while the rest of our team was crammed with attacking
types .
(An early preview, as I'm off on a fresh gallivant this weekend). An air of equanimity
has pervaded AANP Towers these last few weeks, even as Wellbeck, Dzeko et al were rippling
our net from all angles, for those openers were two games from which few if any points could be
expected.
He may not exactly be renowned for his tactical acumen, but like a broken clock hitting the
jackpot ‘Arry has stumbled upon something of a platitude in his assessment of that Adebayor chap,
noting a few weeks back that if he scores goals he'll eventually worm his way into our affections
– and if he doesn't he won't.
‘Tis held in some quarters that as a whippersnapper the schoolboy ‘Arry would wile away his
hours yelping "Wolf!" with tedious regularity, but on Saturday even the cynics amongst us realised
that his "bare bones" mantra could be objectively verified. The adage has it that actions speak
louder than words, so when young Giovani was shoved out onto the pitch for a few minutes it became
evident that ‘Arry spoke sooth, and our lot really were struggling for personnel.
AANP's bosom swells with pride in announcing that the youngest nephew this week began school
this week, poor blighter, and similar feelings of satisfaction and reminiscence no doubt occurred
to ‘Arry as he sent forth the various assorted whelps and whippersnappers still too young to
watch Goodfellas, to do us proud on the corner of some foreign field last night.
Europa League or Carling Cup, which ought we to want less? It's a tricky one. The Europa League
trophy is a sizeable beast, and its lack of handles gives it a pleasingly Neanderthalic edge –
one cannot help but handle it in rough, uncouth manner when raising it aloft, which is rather apt
after 90 minutes of blood and thunder.
A show of hands then, for all you honest souls who just a couple of weeks ago had descended
into a panicked frenzy, charging around wailing prognostications of doom before leaping headfirst
through the nearest window, as our lot lost the opening two games with all the gloomy emphasis of
gravitationally-obsessed lead balloon.
I have looked it in the eye, monitored its pulse-rate and threatened all manner of violations
that contraven the terms of the Geneva convention – yet I can confirm ‘tis true: the league
table doesn't lie. Newcastle are currently in the Champions League spots.
Not that even the most fervent of their breed would harbour much hope of them still being them
come May 2012, but fourth they are, and reading between the black and white strips this points to a
team pootling along in marvellous early-season form.
1. Collect Underpants
2. ?
3. Profit
As the South Park Underpant Gnomes so crucially failed to diagnose, some things are a dashed sight
more difficult in practice than they appear on paper. Nota bene, ‘Arry and the assorted Hotspurs,
for bottom of the table Blackburn may be, but alas it is unlikely that they will simply roll over
and allow us to tickle their tummies before disappearing into the night with three points.
More dedicated followers of AANP will be well aware that when I do eventually conclude
fighting the good fight and prepare to meet my doom, ‘twill not be in a hail of bullets or blaze
of glory, but coronary failure sustained while watching our heroes. While cheering the news that
the various pokes and prods to ‘Arry ‘s cardiac area proved successful, I rather fear for him
if he observed on the telly-box the inept tomfoolery of Monsieur Bassong in contributing to our
downfall.
The adage has it that winning while playing poorly is a sign of a good time, but the sentiment
in this corner of the interweb is that we win these games because our forward line between them
just have more quality than most others in the division. Lennon's, Defoe's and even Bale's ability
in the way they took their goals were of the highest order; Fulham for all their pressure did not
have that class and clinical touch to apply the coup de grace as necessary.
Anyone else reached the slightly absurd conclusion that we should really win all but two of our
remaining 27 fixtures? The bubble will presumably burst at some point, but if the earth continues
its merry rotation around the sun in the time-honoured fashion of a few thousand years there is
little reason to expect anything other than the standard, slightly tortuous three-point haul.
"The measure of greatness is not how many you win, but how you react to defeat". Or something
along those lines. In fact, AANP may have invented that just now.
Anyway, the point is that the epithet has been fairly redundant for as far back as I can
remember, as we would generally fail to win in the first place, and then react to defeat with
another defeat, or a two-goal lead thrown away late on, or whatever.
Three more points, and all comfortable enough, but this being AANP Towers, and we being Spurs
fans, I react to third place in the festive season not by praising our heroes, but by flagging up
areas for improvement.
Specifically, I do beseech our heroes to make life a bit easier for all concerned by walloping
opponents out of sight once in a while.
Apologies for the tardiness – AANP Towers has been overrun by tiny people the last few
days...
And it had all begun so well. Our lot spent the opening minutes pinging the ball between
themselves with such dizzying rapidity that the only time a Chelski touched the thing in the
opening ten minutes was that lad on halfway, who was promptly crunched by Sandro, releasing Bale to
release Adebayor for our goal.
Recent games have dealt with the notion of ‘Arry as a tactical buffoon in no uncertain manner.
In days gone by the signing of VDV, the plan to loan Bale to Nottingham Forest and the instruction
to Pav to "go out there and f***ing run about" did little for our glorious leader's reputation as
tactical genius, and was grist to the mill of a whole army or interweb critics (mea culpa)
who lambasted him for doing little more than closing his eyes, pinning a tail on a donkey and
accepting the plaudits as his blind gamble paid off.