Tag Archives: She Wore

Could Tottenham’s relegation form see them relegated?

15 games, 15 points.

That is not the form of a title chasing team. It is not the form of a mid-table team. It is the form a team in the midst of a relegation battle.

LLDLLWWLWLLDWDL is Tottenham’s form over the last 15 games. Just Watford and Brighton are in worse form.

Even my basic maths tell me that 15 points from 15 games is a point a game. Over a 38 game season that would multiple up to 38 points. Last season Cardiff went down with 34 points.

It is actually surprising that Arsenal have the 3rd best form in the league, taking into account how they fell away in the closing stages of the season.

If Tottenham find themselves in the relegation after half a dozen games, surely they have to be considered relegation contenders rather than Champions League challengers?

Keenos

No one should cry for Bolton Wanderers

Yesterday saw the death of Bury Football Club, and the hint of a reprieve for their near-neighbours Bolton Wanderers. It is just a pity that they don’t deserve it.

The football news of recent weeks has been dominated by Bolton’s plight, as if one of the Football League’s founding members deserves a free ride and a get out of jail free card simply by virtue of their longevity.

But just what exactly has this ‘long and illustrious history’ consisted of? No major honours since 1958 and the dubious record of having played the most seasons in the top flight without ever having won it. And still they claim to be a big club? When your most successful manager of the last sixty years is Sam Allardyce then ‘big’ doesn’t even begin to describe it.

If you ever wanted to find a group of supporters even more deluded than Tottenham’s then look no further.

The reason that Bolton find themselves in their current situation is due to living grossly beyond their means both during their Premier League years and after relegation in 2012. Four consecutive finishes in the top eight of the league between 2003 and 2007, and reaching the last 16 of the UEFA Cup in 2008, came at a cost – namely the bulk of the £172.9 million owed mostly to the club’s owner Eddie Davies by December 2015, when the club faced their first winding-up petition from the HMRC.

Throughout the last two seasons, Wanderers would receive four more such petitions from the taxman as the club priortised promotion back to the Premier League’s gravy train over responsible business practice. They are now in very real danger of liquidation.

And what has been Bolton’s supporters response to all this? When other clubs have been in a similar position – Portsmouth and Brighton, to name two – their fans have rallied around the club and shown to the wider world that there is something worth saving. Yet the same can not be said here. Fair play to the five thousand-odd who watched them lose 5-0 to Ipswich at the weekend, but the silence from the 24,000 empty seats at the University of Bolton Stadium was deafening. Remember that, when they flood radio phone-ins and social media with claims of being heartborken when “their beloved club” goes the way of Bury.

If Bolton end up going out of business, then them serving as an example to any other club tempted to gamble their future in pursuit of short-term gain would be a fitting end. Because when Leeds borrowed too much money in pursuit of Champions League glory and ended up in administration, how much sympathy was there for them? If Roman Abramovich turned off Chelsea’s funds, leading them to get relegated before going bust, would we all be in tears?

There would be no sympathy for them at all if that were the case, and Bolton deserve no more now.

Ed

Rare Early North London Derby

29th August 1925.

It was the opening day of the 1925/26 season and the first day in the job for a certain Herbert Chapman.

The opponent that day was Tottenham Hotspur, who won 1-0 with a goal from Jimmy Dimmock.

That was 94 years ago and is the earliest Arsenal and Tottenham have ever played each other.

The last time Arsenal and Tottenham faced each other in August was back in 1997. It was a dull 0-0 draw. This weekends fixture is the earliest between the 2 sides since then.

In recent history, fixtures between Arsenal and Spurs have followed the same pattern.

They play in Middlesex in November before the return game in North London in March or April.

The fixture is also unusual due its 4:30pm kick off.

Usually, under police orders, games between the two sides happen around lunch time, previously as early as 11:30am. To have an early evening kick off on Sunday will be odd.

It will enable fans to get in a good few hours drinking prior to the match (unlike the hour or two we usually get) but will cut short the evening (unless you have the day booked off work on Monday).

Arsenal will be looking to return to winning ways following defeat to table topping Liverpool, whilst Spurs will be attempting to reverse their relegation form.

LLDLLWWLWLLDWDL is not the name of a Welsh town but Tottenham’s Premier League form over their last 15 games.

That form over 38 games would see them pick up just 38 points. Could Spurs really be in for a relegation battle this season?

Regardless of the result, North London is Red.

Keenos