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Levy is a business man first and a chairman second.

DeeJay_Yid

Active Member
Dec 10, 2006
134
25
Levy is a businessman first and a football chairman second.

There is nothing new this window with the way he does his deals, albeit the signings are a lot more credible. Nothing to do with him, it's all Ramos. That's why they come and we are faced with no more Atoubas, but Arshavins.

His dealings may be good for business, but we always get our arse kicked the first 10 games of the season, until the squad is settled come Dec. Then we kick into gear. Except for last year where Jol had no chance....

What say you? Jol or Ramos, maybe it's our shrewd chairman that needs to learn the football basics.....Brilliant as he is.
 

DeeJay_Yid

Active Member
Dec 10, 2006
134
25
Forgot to add, i am fed up with last minute signings. ITK only came into light on Spurs Forums when Levy came. Cause we all wondered what he would do next, or which version of Rasiak we will sign come end of transfer window.

I hereby proclaim that the last weekend of the transfer window should be known as the Rasiak Window among Spurs fans, to celebrate the CC league genius who almost made it.

So...squeaky bum time this Rasiak weekend?
 

Mullers

Unknown member
Jan 4, 2006
25,914
16,413
I am also fed up to the back teeth of last minute transfers. Levy can be a business man first and a chairman second if he wants to but stop talking about champions league football if you're not going to back the manager.
 

Michey

New Member
May 4, 2004
7,888
1
I am also fed up to the back teeth of last minute transfers. Levy can be a business man first and a chairman second if he wants to but stop talking about champions league football if you're not going to back the manager.
:clap:

I wish they would think differently sometime. Spend a couple of mill extra and get the player in early so the manager can have HIS team and prepare them for the season. Doing this could really mean that we could earn the BIG bucks. If not thru Champions League then thru higher place in the Premiership or thru UEFA-cup.

But nooooo - drag the transfers until the last minute and get a shitty start in the league and a team that already are low on selfesteem. :bang:
 

charlatan.uk

Banned
Aug 11, 2008
166
0
a good start is worth its wait in gold.

a couple of million saved is a fools economy in this situation.

especially if you hard headed chasing of the best deal results in no deal at all.
 

jamesc0le

SISS:LOKO:plays/thinks/eats chicken like sissoko!
Jun 17, 2008
4,974
944
next thing you know he will be revealing '' the credit crunch has hit spurs'' in yet another failed attempt at getting players on the cheap..

ahh, still, we all know Mr Levy, you aint all bad.. run along and sign Michael Owen now.. (and arshavin of course but don't go higher than 18 million pounds! + bonuses)
(extra 2 million for 40 appearances this season?):shrug:



edit: (and brasilian Ronaldo, he's free!)
 

Krafty

Well-Known Member
May 26, 2004
4,791
2,133
I dont get all this Levy bashing, I think its a load of crap.

It seems people are basically telling him to accept whatever bid Utd make for Berbatov, doesnt matter if its 5 or 8 mill under our valuation.

Then they want him to spend 20 mill (all of the keane money) on a player that has only had a couple of good seasons even though he is 27, who nobody was after even in January, who hasnt played outside of Russia, nevermind in England.

Yeah, come on DL, accept whatever terms anyone else sets, doesnt matter if it will cost us an extra ten mill every window, and soon we'll have no money to spend. If Arshavin turns out to be a waste of money, its not like we will all get on your back, is it?

Levy is a fantastic chairman. We have had Europe for two seasons and a stadium which is too small and in a crap area of London. Yet we are amongst the top spenders in the transfer market, make a profit each year AND have the money to make a much needed upgrade in our training facilities, as well as store money for a new stadium.

Comolli, Jenas, Dawson, Berbatov, Bent, Lennon, now we are onto Levy as the villain.

Come on lads, lets be supporters and actually support our club!
 

Flatters

Racist Troll
May 4, 2005
27,001
50
We know nothing about what goes on. Quite literally nothing. Absolutely pointless thread.
 

piedpiper

Well-Known Member
Aug 14, 2008
3,780
6,795
God NO NO NO, i remember the days when our season buying budget was 15 million under Mr Sugar. Levy has taken this club to a different level, he appears to lack patience that all.
 

alpha

Well-Known Member
Jun 27, 2005
1,143
873
Ramos gets taste of Spurs love of a deal

·The Tottenham chairman's recruitment strategy can be damaging, but Juande Ramos has to accept it

spurslaugh276.jpg
Chairman Daniel Levy has taken a hands-on approach alongside Juande Ramos. Photograph: Akira Suemori/AP


When Juande Ramos says: 'You get the feeling the sooner the whole thing is finished the better,' you know he is getting a proper taste of being a Tottenham Hotspur manager; a flavour of the numbers-led myopia that descends on the north London club whenever the transfer window opens.
This year's Dimitar Berbatov transfer saga is reminiscent of situations gone by

Summer 2006: Michael Carrick's move to Manchester United drags into the final weeks of pre-season as Tottenham squeeze the fee up to £18.6m. Martin Jol, the then Spurs manager, is left scrambling to compensate for the loss of his most important midfielder.

Summer 2007: Jol requests the purchases of three players: the left-winger Martin Petrov, a holding midfielder and an experienced centre-back. Daniel Levy, the Spurs chairman, balks at Petrov's wages, then buys attacking midfielder Kevin-Prince Boateng and defender Younes Kaboul. Both prove so ineffective, they are transfer-listed inside a year.

Summer 2008: Berbatov wants out for the second season running. Ramos argues for the forward to be sold quickly and replaced by one who wants to play for Tottenham, while also requesting an injury-free central defender. Levy has a war of words with Liverpool and Manchester United over their approaches for Robbie Keane, who is sold, and Berbatov, who is left unsettled, leaving Spurs with only one usable striker, while buying three playmakers and zero defenders.

It is the reiteration of the error that exposes its cause. Levy is first and foremost a businessman for whom the finance and fine detail of a deal is the most important thing. For him its better to force an extra £4m - and a negotiating victory - out of United than remove an unsettled and unsettling Berbatov from the camp and swap him for a player who will work for the team; cleverer accounting strategy to recruit youngsters with a potential resale value than a finished product in his late 20s.

If Levy has spent heavily this window, with over £45m committed on Luka Modric, David Bentley, Heurelho Gomes and Giovani Dos Santos, he has also recouped the best part of that sum in selling Keane, Kaboul, Paul Robinson, Steed Malbranque, Pascal Chimbonda, Teemu Tainio and Anthony Gardner. More importantly, the squad has been shunted into imbalance.

From the 2007 soap opera in which Jol and Ramos struggled to deal with the desires of four senior strikers, Darren Bent has become the only properly employable forward. The midfield is overrun with individuals whose best position would be as a free-floating No10, yet Tottenham generally do not line up with one. There is neither a single natural holding midfielder nor an unarguable choice on the left wing. Bought two years ago to be the elusive defensive screen, Didier Zokora continues to be shoe-horned into various defensive roles he can not quite master, while there is only one reliable selection in the centre of defence and none at left-back.

While some of this imbalance is being addressed by the acquisitions of Russia forward Roman Pavlyuchenko and Manchester City defender Vedran Corluka, the damage done by Tottenham's transfer window procrastination may already be too great to remedy. Six eminently winnable points have been lost to Middlesbrough and Sunderland in the club's two Premier League fixtures to date, and such is the present state of disrepair that few expect anything from Stamford Bridge this afternoon.

In last season's Premier League, six points proved the difference between relegation and 13th place, between mid-table and the Uefa Cup and between the title and third place. A nine-point handicap hardly sits well with a club attempting to achieve a first-ever Champions League qualification. With each Premier League place worth £725,000 and access to the Champions League as much as 40 times more, Levy's parsimony may prove profligate.

Left to hold the fort, Ramos is hardly happy about it. Quiz the Spaniard about the flaws in Tottenham's recruitment strategy and he will offer a knowing smile, delicately suggesting that it is an area beyond his own control. 'Without a doubt, it has had an awful lot to do with the start to the season,' he says. 'With the comings and goings, players are obviously trying their best to concentrate 100 per cent, but I think it has affected things slightly with their work on the training ground and even going into games. Our start has been affected by this.
'It would have been great to have been a lot calmer. But you have to grin and bear it and get on with things. Certainly the ideal situation is that you get your squad settled early and you work with all the players in the pre-season period. Unfortunately on this occasion we have not been able to work with every player.'

In contrast to his predecessor, Ramos refuses to criticise the club's inexperienced sporting director, Damien Comolli. After making obvious mistakes in recommending the likes of Boateng, Kaboul and Zokora, the Frenchman's own position is under review and it is not he who holds the final say on spending and selling.

'The contact [with Comolli] is daily; we have an excellent relationship,' Ramos says. 'We chat about everything and it is a very good working relationship. Every club works in it's own particular fashion. Here at Tottenham we have a system where the sporting director is in charge of transfers and we gain a consensus in conversation with him. Then it is the club itself that carries out the transfers at the end of the day. The person who has the capacity and the wherewithal to control the club is the chairman. That's what he's there for and that's what he does.'

At Chelsea there is sparse sympathy for a manager who denied London's richest club last season's Carling Cup. So little that Luiz Felipe Scolari is prepared to paint Stamford Bridge as a place of relative of penury.

'Look, I've brought in only one player at Chelsea - only Deco,' the Chelsea manager says. 'I think in this season Juande has brought in three, four or five, including Modric, Pavlyuchenko and Gomes, who started as a goalkeeper with me in Brazil. I put him in the [Cruzeiro] first team at 18 and now he's at Tottenham. At that time I had good vision.

'I think this season Tottenham spent more money than us and bought four or five players. Chelsea have bought only Deco. I buy one player and sell seven.'

If Scolari is playing mind games - ignoring the multi-million pay rises handed to Frank Lampard, Petr Cech and Michael Essien, while pressing for still more money to be poured into Robinho's ill-handled purchase - he does not seek to conceal the value his first Chelsea buy. Deco was considered essential, his transfer agreed as soon as Scolari signed on the dotted line. The player was in place for a whole pre-season so that Chelsea could be rebuilt around him.

'It's not just that he [Deco] is a good player; other teams maybe need one player or two players to mark him and that opens the space for other players in our team,' Scolari says. 'He's a unique player, one of the best in the world. If you remember [Zinedine] Zidane; when he played you expected a different way. Deco isn't Zidane, but it's near. You expect something and something changes.'
 

spursfan1991

Well-Known Member
Jul 3, 2008
1,747
4,058
The title of this thread is very true, he has replaced Berbatov with a crap Championship player. We need a better chairmen than this if we are to improve.
 

DoublePivot

Relegated to Lurker
Jul 1, 2005
8,987
67
Levy is doing a damn fine job. I'm surprised that is even up for discussion.


Buys a lot, sells a lot, has financially screwed the faithful with ridiculously high prices for mid-table football. has only two claims: produced one gem (1 CC) and lots of profit.

He's baled by his coaches constantly.

I would say that his used car salesman approach to this club should be up for debate. Or is it that the Levy blind followers are afraid of losing, so this is why they want to scuttle discussion.
 

Mullers

Unknown member
Jan 4, 2006
25,914
16,413
We moved slowly for Pav so he is cup tied, we replaced Keane with a untried kid on a season long loan, I wonder what Ramos thinks.What happened to our mile long Comolli list of replacement strikers and DMs? Maybe he accidently put it in the washing machine.
 

DoublePivot

Relegated to Lurker
Jul 1, 2005
8,987
67
We moved slowly for Pav so he is cup tied, we replaced Keane with a untried kid on a season long loan, I wonder what Ramos thinks.What happened to our mile long Comolli list of replacement strikers and DMs? Maybe he accidently put it in the washing machine.

If I were Juande, I would do everything in my power to get fired and get the payout from this pathetic organziation......3 in the last 15 is a good start :wink:
 
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