Where is that value from thoughMore money than sense…
Where is that value from though
Spend isn’t valueObviously that’s merely a guesstimate according to their own parameters but the fact that we’ve spent nearly £1billion on transfer fees since Pochettino’s departure but have gone from Top 4 regulars to relegation battlers is a damning indictment of how badly we’ve mismanaged the “painful rebuild”
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Tottenham near £1bn in signings since Pochettino sacking after £35m Conor Gallagher deal
Only Chelsea and the two Manchester clubs have spent more than Spurs on players over the past six yearswww.telegraph.co.uk
This article would probably also suit the ‘what triggered our downfall’ thread. But thought this was excellent: https://www.reddit.com/r/coys/s/UOjmdjOwe3
Very clear that we have been blinded by data. Using data the wrong ways, to confirm existing biases. And I think Lange is the big culprit around this. Unfortunately no one above or around him has had the sense to temper this, and it’s led to a number of extraordinarily bad decisions being consistently made over the last year.
Reading the comments rather than the article but someone commented that it says we don't have a midfielder in the top 200 passers (by the passing metric established by the source material) in the league.
Our players passing and ability to move the ball forwards has been a consistent complaint this season from some of us - glad to see that validated here given the push back that opinion recieved
I don't think there's been much, if any, push back on that. And it ain't just this season, last season was just as unimaginative.Reading the comments rather than the article but someone commented that it says we don't have a midfielder in the top 200 passers (by the passing metric established by the source material) in the league.
Our players passing and ability to move the ball forwards has been a consistent complaint this season from some of us - glad to see that validated here given the push back that opinion recieved
Nail. Head.This passage from the ESPN article linked in the reddit post bears repetition:
Tottenham's major issue: They can't pass
Usually, soccer is a complex, dynamic game where individual qualities are impossible to extract from the interdependencies of roster construction, managerial instructions and on-field interactions. But sometimes you get a team like Tottenham, where the diagnosis is pretty simple: These guys can't pass.
At Gradient Sports, there is a team of people who watch every Premier League game and grade every pass a player makes on a minus-2 to plus-2 scale. Here's how they describe the process:
For example, consider a centre-back passing the ball on the halfway line. A routine, unpressured pass to an open teammate would receive a 0, as this meets the expectation of our expert Grading team. A precise, line-breaking pass under pressure would receive a positive grade. Conversely, an underhit pass to a teammate -- even if completed -- would receive a negative grade if it falls below the expected standard. This reflects our focus on evaluating performance rather than just outcomes.
The grading process is guided by detailed frameworks designed to minimise subjectivity and ensure consistency. Once raw grades are collected, they undergo multiple layers of quality control, including senior review of flagged actions, consistency checks, ongoing analysis, and dedicated quality assurance processes.
Based on this process of evaluating passing, here's where Tottenham's five best passers rank in the Premier League season:
1. Cristian Romero: 19th
2. Mickey van de Ven: 87th
3. Destiny Udogie: 152nd
4. Kevin Danso: 167th
5. Mohamed Kudus: 186th
Passing is the fundamental skill in this sport. The average Premier League team attempts 450 passes per game. Nothing else comes close: in a single game, the average team attempts eight shots, crosses the ball 18 times, tries to dribble past defenders 18 times, attempts 16 tackles, and makes eight interceptions. If you can't pass the ball, then nothing else matters. It's the force at the heart of the game that gives everything else meaning.
So, how the heck does one of the richest teams in the world -- one that purports to be the modern example of what a soccer club is -- build a team with only two of the 150 best passers in its own league?
This passage from the ESPN article linked in the reddit post bears repetition:
Tottenham's major issue: They can't pass
Usually, soccer is a complex, dynamic game where individual qualities are impossible to extract from the interdependencies of roster construction, managerial instructions and on-field interactions. But sometimes you get a team like Tottenham, where the diagnosis is pretty simple: These guys can't pass.
At Gradient Sports, there is a team of people who watch every Premier League game and grade every pass a player makes on a minus-2 to plus-2 scale. Here's how they describe the process:
For example, consider a centre-back passing the ball on the halfway line. A routine, unpressured pass to an open teammate would receive a 0, as this meets the expectation of our expert Grading team. A precise, line-breaking pass under pressure would receive a positive grade. Conversely, an underhit pass to a teammate -- even if completed -- would receive a negative grade if it falls below the expected standard. This reflects our focus on evaluating performance rather than just outcomes.
The grading process is guided by detailed frameworks designed to minimise subjectivity and ensure consistency. Once raw grades are collected, they undergo multiple layers of quality control, including senior review of flagged actions, consistency checks, ongoing analysis, and dedicated quality assurance processes.
Based on this process of evaluating passing, here's where Tottenham's five best passers rank in the Premier League season:
1. Cristian Romero: 19th
2. Mickey van de Ven: 87th
3. Destiny Udogie: 152nd
4. Kevin Danso: 167th
5. Mohamed Kudus: 186th
Passing is the fundamental skill in this sport. The average Premier League team attempts 450 passes per game. Nothing else comes close: in a single game, the average team attempts eight shots, crosses the ball 18 times, tries to dribble past defenders 18 times, attempts 16 tackles, and makes eight interceptions. If you can't pass the ball, then nothing else matters. It's the force at the heart of the game that gives everything else meaning.
So, how the heck does one of the richest teams in the world -- one that purports to be the modern example of what a soccer club is -- build a team with only two of the 150 best passers in its own league?
If he seriously thoughf that nobody else could improve this team while knowing the injuries we had and didn't want recall loans or get loans in. Then I just don't know why he is here.Lange should have anticipated more injuries than returns based on the horrific sick bay list we had before he let Brennan go. He has failed us biggly. Needs to Fkd off el pronto
Him being in the job for as long as he has been is also criminalSaid it before
He and the club made a call that less changes were needed because they were limited in what they could do to the CL sqiad
Very little has been said about that but personally I think that’s scandalously arrogant
That's funny considering we penny pinch and when we do spend it's on rubbish. And then we pay off managers every other year......it's beyond hilariousMore money than sense…
And he would have got injuredWe’d probably have played him in goals.
Not fudging surprised AT ALL!Reading the comments rather than the article but someone commented that it says we don't have a midfielder in the top 200 passers (by the passing metric established by the source material) in the league.
Our players passing and ability to move the ball forwards has been a consistent complaint this season from some of us - glad to see that validated here given the push back that opinion recieved
What are the metrics? It's plain to see there is an issue with progressive passing in midfield. Under Frank he was risk adverse and there was no forward passing allowed through the centre of midfield. Will be interesting to see how De Zerbi deals with it.Reading the comments rather than the article but someone commented that it says we don't have a midfielder in the top 200 passers (by the passing metric established by the source material) in the league.
Our players passing and ability to move the ball forwards has been a consistent complaint this season from some of us - glad to see that validated here given the push back that opinion recieved
Not fudging surprised AT ALL!
This is the reason we are getting relegated more than any other.
I said it all season, Romero being a decent passer is a nice bonus but a CB should never be the primary passer on a team. If that is what you have, then this season is what you get.
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