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Dele Alli - Player watch

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Ron Burgundy

SC Supporter
Jun 19, 2008
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Would be nice if there was a vid of his performance vs. Leicester - he just seems to be maturing really well

It feels like we're starting to warm up really doesn't it?
 

HW61

Well-Known Member
Aug 31, 2012
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Maturing- he’s always had football intelligence, now he’s using it more thoughtfully
Spot on. That was the thing you could see in Dele from the off. Intelligence. That gift can’t be trained into a footballer. However, I’d be intrigued to know just how much Poch and his coaching team have carefully identified and influenced his changing role. They’ve got a heck of a track record already . Poch coaching and Dele’s talent is a scary combo.
 

Vincent30

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Aug 31, 2012
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Spot on. That was the thing you could see in Dele from the off. Intelligence. That gift can’t be trained into a footballer. However, I’d be intrigued to know just how much Poch and his coaching team have carefully identified and influenced his changing role. They’ve got a heck of a track record already . Poch coaching and Dele’s talent is a scary combo.

And you have to love his face when others get it wrong around him. Eriksen, Kane to a degree, Son etc they are all nice guys. We need Dele up there sticking it to them if it's not going right. The kid is a winner, that is something you can't train and that one part of his attitude is absolutely pivotal to our team.
 

spids

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Jul 19, 2015
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Scholes yeah but I don't remember Lampard playing as a AM?

Scholes played much of his early career as a CM alongside Kane in a 4-4-2.
Lampard (at Chelsea) was very much part of a 4-3-3 and he was the CM with license to get forward.
Gerrard's early career also saw him play in a 4-4-2, but he moved to a withdrawn CF role alongside Torres when he probably had his most productive seasons in front of goal.
 

smallsnc

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Mar 30, 2017
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For perspective, by the time Kane turned 23 (Dele still has 5 months to go before then), Kane had a total of 59 goals (51) and assists (8) in the EPL. Regardless of what position he plays DA is productive in the final 3rd.
 

allatsea

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Aug 31, 2012
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For perspective, by the time Kane turned 23 (Dele still has 5 months to go before then), Kane had a total of 59 goals (51) and assists (8) in the EPL. Regardless of what position he plays DA is productive in the final 3rd.

Simply put they are both truly outstanding players and we are lucky to have them.
 

BringBack_leGin

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Jul 28, 2004
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Even if he has been playing as a forward, it’s been as a massively subservient forward to our main striker who scored enough for two by himself, and he’s still posted better per game than out and out strikers for us like Defoe and Robbie Keane, neither of whom assisted at the same rate.

And he’s no more a forward than Lampard was off Drogba.

His output is exceptional, however you spin it.
 
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matthew.absurdum

Well-Known Member
Aug 31, 2012
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Exceptional talent with the balls & confidence to go with it.

Interestingly, I don't think he suits any mega clubs like Real and Barcelona. I can imagine their fans would call him like disappearing or lazy. He is not that kind of players like Messi or Ronaldo. Excellent team player in a relatively silent way. Good for us.
 

kmk

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Oct 5, 2014
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https://www.theguardian.com/footbal...i-tottenham-carabao-cup-quarter-final-arsenal

Dele Alli’s best moments are when he sees it and plays it, circuits whirring

There has been a prolonged attempt to find the Spurs No 20’s best position and here was the answer – a floating No 10 behind two strikers

It is easy to forget that Dele Alli is still only 22, such have been the vicissitudes of a career that has seen him ease through the incredulous highs and lows of two England tournaments and during which his own levels have veered between a performance of rare destructive beautyagainst Real Madrid and those afternoons when he simply drifts through a game, a sublime attacking talent in search of a hook on which to hang.

At the Emirates, Alli provided two moments of brilliance in the heat of an evenly matched knockout derby. He was central to the action again a little later when a spectator on the far side threw a plastic water bottle at his head with Tottenham 2‑0 up, something Alli then reminded that section of the crowd of thanks to some helpful hand gestures.

It is to be hoped the supporter responsible is identified and banned from the stadium.

For now it is Alli’s second-half goal that will dominate the montage from this game, a finish so delicate it seemed to stop time for a moment, one of those touches that take you out of the fury of elite-level football and back into a place where people play for fun, where the game is a carefree thing full of joy.

Alli’s first decisive moment had come earlier, as Tottenham scored an opening goal made by a tumble, a neat finish and two long balls. The second of these was the most gorgeous instant pass from their No 20.

Paulo Gazzaniga punted the ball forward from the back. Sokratis Papastathopoulos fell over in a tangle with Lucas Moura. As the ball ran loose the players seemed to stop for half a beat. In that moment Alli saw the picture, the space and the lines of movement around him a bit quicker.

A twitch of his right foot sent the loose ball curving into the path of Son Heung-min, already off on the run and calling for it on the far side. The weight and the curve were perfect to take Son spurting in on goal. He pinged the ball powerfully into the far corner past Petr Cech.

The worth of an assist has always been a little nebulous in football but this was a genuine goal-conjuring pass, seized out of the air and executed with cold, clear certainty. It was his third of the season in all competitions, but then it has been an in-and-out campaign until now.

Alli is a player whose merits are most clear when you see him in the flesh. At times his easy physicality, his use of space, his wonderful touch, can almost feel like a force of intimidation, the kind of footballer opponents seem to stand back and admire in the clinches. It is also fair to say his best moments come when he does not wait for the rest of the game, when he just sees it and plays it, circuits whirring that little bit faster than the average human.

For this Carabao Cup quarter-final Alli was stationed at the creative heart of the Spurs team, playing as a floating No 10 behind two strikers. There has been a prolonged attempt to find his ideal position. Here Mauricio Pochettino built a structure that gave him huge freedom but also huge responsibility, the job of making this team work, and justifying Christian Eriksen being shunted to the left.

As for Arsenal, well, their own No 10, Mesut Özil, was nowhere to be seen on a big night for his team at the Emirates (insert joke here).
On this occasion Özil was left out for “tactical reasons”. Presumably these tactics were to actually try to win the game, something Özil has experienced just once in his last eight weeks at Arsenal, during which time the club have paid him £2.8m under his new contract.

Get that atlas out, Mesut. Dust down that suitcase off the top of the old French armoire. Arsenal are nothing if not a commercial machine and this is surely one of the worst pieces of business in the club’s history. January can’t come quickly enough.

Other than that, Arsenal will feel unlucky. They might have equalised in the first half. Instead it was left to Alli to kill the game after 59 minutes. What a lovely goal it was, made by Harry Kane taking the ball on his chest and playing a simple pass over the top of Arsenal’s defence, who stood and watched and thought about it while Alli drifted in on goal.

Cech came skittering out. Alli raised his right foot and stroked, cosseted, dusted, fondled – and all other manner of delicately sensual verbs – the ball over the goalkeeper’s head, where it seemed to hang in the night air before falling gently into the back of the net.

“We’ve got Alli,” the Spurs fans pointed out from behind the goal. Given the chance to provide that edge from the cockpit of the team, he was more than enough.
 

Always Offside

Ardent Aussie
Oct 31, 2013
781
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We really have assembled a fabulous squad. Some of the players outside the XI could be upgraded but we've got the most talented bunch of guys I've seen for many years. Hope we can win something in the near future to keep these guys at the club.
 
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