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Paulinho -José Paulo Bezerra Maciel Júnior

The midfield 3 will be similar, not so sure about defense and the front 3 (or keeper in fact) but will be interesting to see where we go in the market from here
 
I realy liked the mid

-------------Sandro-----------
-------Dembele----Paulinho
Lennon-------------------Bale
--------------Villa
 
would be absolute beastly defensively. Sandro/Paulinho/Dembele is so solid and of course Lennon is very good defensively when it comes to tracking back and helping out the full back. We'd need Paulinho to get double digit goals though to compensate for Lennons lack of.
 
would be absolute beastly defensively. Sandro/Paulinho/Dembele is so solid and of course Lennon is very good defensively when it comes to tracking back and helping out the full back. We'd need Paulinho to get double digit goals though to compensate for Lennons lack of.

Not sure if we can trust Paulinho to do that in his first season, and why I think we'll see a front 3 that doesn't include Lennon as first choice if we move to a 4-3-3 more permanently.
 
Not sure if we can trust Paulinho to do that in his first season, and why I think we'll see a front 3 that doesn't include Lennon as first choice if we move to a 4-3-3 more permanently.

I completely agree. No way should we rely on Paulinho like that either. the potential three of paulinho/dembele/sandro means we are almost certain to sign someone who can score goals out wide.
 
A fantastic read from SkySports' Jon Holmes. Interesting how he talks about Vieira and Petit, was thinking about that when my mouth started watering at the prospect of The Beast and Paulinho along side Dembele.

http://www1.skysports.com/football/news/12040/8803381/Paulinho-power

Paulinho power

After an initial season of transition to move away from Harry Redknapp's tactics, Andre Villas-Boas is set to power up the Tottenham engine room another notch with the signing of Paulinho. Jon Holmes considers the potential impact of Spurs' imminent arrival

By Jon Holmes - @jonboy79. Last Updated: July 3, 2013 11:39am

Paulinho: If his Confederations Cup performances are anything to go by Spurs have done a smart bit of business

Rate the central core of any Premier League team and it's not long before you're remembering the benchmark standard set by Patrick Vieira and Emmanuel Petit in the late 1990s. In the first of Petit's three seasons at Arsenal, the creative-destructive duo claimed a double before heading back to their homeland to put the World Cup to rights as well.

Even though the Gunners failed to retain their crown in 1998-99, the pair were arguably even better in that campaign and both were picked for the PFA Team of the Year. Manchester United's Roy Keane and Paul Scholes are the main rivals to the Frenchmen when considering the greatest midfield partnership of the last 20-odd years, but it's arguably the Petit-Vieira axis that's referenced the most.

However, consistent two-man combos are much rarer these days. Squad rotation is the norm, and with three attackers favoured in the forward line, there has to be more flexibility in formations. Can any current top-flight team dominate the centre to the extent that Petit and Vieira did? In a swing across the north of the capital, Tottenham are emerging as the most likely candidates - and it could be a trio that we're admiring.

Until he sustained a serious knee injury at QPR early in 2013, Sandro wasn't far off Gareth Bale and Jan Vertonghen in making the most telling contribution to the Tottenham cause last season. "The beast is hurt", he tweeted at the time, and every Spurs fan felt the blow. In addition, the muscle injuries suffered by Mousa Dembele - who had looked on his way to becoming the "complete midfielder" - further impacted on dreams of a Champions League return. For when Sandro and Dembele had played alongside each other, such as in the memorable 3-2 win at Manchester United in late September, they had looked in near-perfect harmony. Fitness permitting, they give outstanding balance to Andre Villas-Boas' side - Sandro's strength and intuition to intercept, coupled with Dembele's dribbling ability and tackling prowess.

Enter Paulinho into the equation, and the prospects for an uncrackable midfield code look even greater. Having played a starring role in Brazil's Confederations Cup victory, the 24-year-old expects to head to White Hart Lane for a fee in the region of £17million. With Corinthians, Paulinho has won the domestic title, the Copa Libertadores and the FIFA Club World Cup. And with him on board, Villas-Boas will be minded to complete Spurs' switch to 4-3-3, which he preferred to play at Porto.

He'll certainly bring more pressing into the Spurs midfield, and athleticism too. He's a physical threat at set pieces, liable to out-jump defenders and place accurate headers on goal, as he demonstrated late in the semi-final against Uruguay. But Paulinho's displays at the Confederations Cup also showed us his quick-thinking. After muscling out Sergio Busquets in midfield early on in the final, he dug out a sensational 30-yard chip which very nearly caught out Iker Casillas. The control and finish for his goal against Japan showed an acute sense of marksmanship (he averages a goal every four or five games for Corinthians). And his exquisite floated ball into the box for Neymar, which led to Fred's opener against Uruguay, underlined the extent of his passing range.

Improvisation, finishing, long-distance deliveries - you could argue that Spurs already boast midfield options with those qualities, such as Gylfi Sigurdsson, Clint Dempsey and Tom Huddlestone. What makes Paulinho so attractive is that they're all combined together in one package. Working in tandem with Sandro and Dembele, the suggestion is for each player to shift seamlessly between attack and defence - Spurs' beating heart.

With Bale and Benoit Assou-Ekotto (or whoever's tasked to be left-back, should he be sold) doing the leg work on one flank, and Kyle Walker and Aaron Lennon rampaging down the other, AVB needs only stick a sharp striker like Roberto Soldado up front and the forward momentum is rather frightening. Spurs have to find another gear next season to make the top four, and putting Paulinho in the tank could provide it.
 
He told ESPN Brasil: “They [Tottenham] made an offer to my agent and to Corinthians, I sat down, analysed the proposal and chose Tottenham. We think it was the best path, the best option.

“I am moving from one big club to Tottenham, another club in a big league. I am sure I will perform my job to the best of my ability. I don’t regret and I won’t regret [this decision].”

Paulinho had spells in Lithuania and Poland in his younger days and he claims he previosly turned down a big money move to Russia.

“I received an offer from Russia that was way higher than what I earned at Corinthians,” he said. “But that wasn’t my focus. My focus was to stay at Corinthians, I refused a huge offer because of the Confederations Cup and the World Cup.

“The moment is not to think about the financial aspect, I have to think about my career. You can earn money anywhere, a guy that earns one million does the same as someone who earns 500 thousand, you need to have a good head.

“I received a huge offer, to earn 10 times more. I played in Lithuania and Poland for two and a half years, and I thought that I would be hidden in Russia, stay far away from the national team, with no visibility.

I focused on my career first and on the financial aspect later.”

refreshing attitude
 
From Sandro's official Tweet...

A4087_zps61f0f946.jpg
 
Lets hope he isn't Kleberson mk II

I mean Kleberson was Scolaris MVP at the 2002 World Cup and was outstanding that tournament.
 
Corinthians, Paulinho and now Sandro have all pretty much announced this transfer. What are Spurs gaining by delaying the announcement!?
 
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