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Spurs Scouting Thread

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not_tenth-again

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Jun 19, 2009
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I've heard Bayern are keen on Lewandowski too - surely that would spell the end of Gomez if they signed him?

Was just talking to my German brother in-law about this only 2 minutes ago. He reckons he's at a crossroads. He hasn't really improved as a player since going to bayern, no doubt he's a better finisher but his all round game has probably gone backwards to a greater degree. At Stuttgart he had to work harder for his chances at bayern he lounges about until the chances are provided to him.

I was a massive fan of his at Stuttgart but I reckon the move to bayern was a year or two too soon for him..... Please take note Gareth.... He's still young enough to get it back and improve but I reckon his dimensions are not immense enough to splash out in a big way. I'd love to wrangle Shaqiri off them though.
 

TheAmerican

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Aug 30, 2012
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Jano Ananidze (20, Spartak Moscow)
cost: 3,000.000 €
position: CAM/LM/RM
style: plays very similarly to Modric, deep passer


Gio Chanturia (19, Alania Vladikavkaz)
cost: 2.500.000 €
position: ST/LW/RW
style: a skilled dribbler, quick and makes strong runs with the ball


Ryad Boudebouz (23, FC Sochaux-Montbéliard)
cost: 5.500.000 €
position: RW/CM
style: a very creative winger and midfielder, strong on the ball and has pace


Tomas Necid (23, CSKA Moscow)
cost: 4.500.000 €
position: striker
style: solid finisher, good positioning
 

beats1

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Feb 22, 2010
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Also, I still think we may go back at look at RW cover over the summer to move to a 4-3-3. I could see us going for Narsingh and Feghouli, they have played well recently, and are still likely both under 10m.
I really hope we dont go for Feghouli, he is supposed to be a big douche in the dressing room
 

beats1

Well-Known Member
Feb 22, 2010
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Wouldn't mind Ben Davies & De Guzman at Swansea to come in!
I always been a big fan of De Guzman, if he didnt have his injury problems he would be a great player, I had him down as my signing of the season in the prediction thread:)mad:stupid fecking Michu). Good shout considering he is still owned by cash strapped Villarreal who are currently in the play offs
 

Dharmabum

Well-Known Member
Aug 16, 2003
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England's Lisbon Lion: Eric Dier is unknown over here but he's following in footsteps of Ronaldo... and has even been compared to Beckenbauer

By Mike Dickson
PUBLISHED: 22:30 GMT, 18 March 2013 | UPDATED: 11:39 GMT, 19 March 2013
article-2295399-18C0E5B1000005DC-484_306x423.jpg

Top dog: Eric Dier and his pet Labrador Sisco
He is an English player just turned 19 and his manager has described him as a potential Franz Beckenbauer, but only the football cognoscenti may have heard of Eric Dier.
The reason is that Dier plies his trade not in the land of his birth but in Portugal, where he broke into the Sporting Lisbon first team at 18.
His progress was such that his veteran boss, Jesualdo Ferreira, has mentioned him in the same breath as the German master.
This week, the Sporting midfielder-cum-centre back makes a rare trip back to the UK, in the squad for the England Under 19s against Turkey at Buck's Head in Telford, a slightly less glamorous venue than he is used to.
Home for him is the pictureseque fishing town of Alcochete, across the water from the Portuguese capital, where his local restaurant is adorned with pictures of Cristiano Ronaldo.
Ronaldo used to be a regular at the Maritimo cafe and is still an occasional visitor to the dining spot favoured by those who train at Sporting's famed academy.
Dier has an interesting sporting pedigree. His maternal grandfather was Ted Croker, former chief of the FA, who played for Charlton, as did his great uncle.
His father, Jeremy, was once a tennis player who appeared at Wimbledon in the 1980s and relocated to the Portuguese capital 10 years ago.
Little did the family know that, a decade on, one of the six children who went with him would become that extremely rare specimen - an Englishman at the beginning of his career playing in a foreign league, following the likes of Ronaldo, Luis Figo and Nani from the academy.
A strapping 6ft 2in, Dier made his debut in November and has made 14 appearances, including 90 minutes in the derby match against Benfica.
The key to his sudden elevation was an 18-month spell at Goodison Park that ended last summer. 'It sounds a bit of cliche but it may be a case of me going there as a boy and coming back as a man,' says Dier, sitting in the Maritimo accompanied by his black laborador Sisco, with whom he lives close by.
His journey towards the top of the professional game began soon after the family arrived in Lisbon, his mother working at the 2004 European Championship finals.
'My PE teacher used to scout for Sporting and, when I was nine, he recommended me for a trial. From there, I just went up through the age groups and was always kept on while others were dropping out.
'I suppose it was only when they offered me a contract at 14 and I enrolled in the academy school that I realised it might be quite serious.'
He quickly mixed in with a diverse group often different to his own middle-class background, including large numbers brought in from former colony Guinea-Bissau.

Having continually played at a level a year above himself, his progress stalled around 17. It was agreed time back in England would be beneficial, with Everton the destination through a contact.
A six-month stay turned into 18 as a regular in the youth team and reserves.
'I had become a bit spoiled or complacent at Sporting and I needed a kick up the backside, which is what Everton gave me. It was quite tough going to an unfamiliar place where I didn't know anyone at first,' says the impressively articulate Dier, who speaks Portuguese as naturally as he does English.
'Coaches like Alan Stubbs were quite hard on me but that helped a lot. It was the best thing that could have happened. It really hardened me up physically and mentally. The football was much faster, physical and more direct than here.'
He believes the education of a footballer in England must be different to what he has known - and not just in the way Sporting place greater emphasis on their young players pursuing academia.
'I know I did not play an 11-a-side match until I was 12; even beyond that, we tended to play smaller-sized matches on smaller pitches.
'I don't remember much chasing of the ball going on when I was a kid. We played a lot of five-a-side and seven-a-side - you played in all different positions and everyone learned to attack. Results didn't matter until much older and there weren't parents going mad if we lost or any inquests by coaches.
'To be honest, we didn't lose very often. The club are very proud of the academy and what it has done. We can't compete financially with some of the big European clubs so there is the knowledge that players have to be developed. When you're in the academy, names like Ronaldo and Figo are always on your mind.'
Dier did not expect things to happen so quickly after returning from Merseyside but was picked for the Sporting B team in Portugal's second tier and made his senior debut in November, laying on his team's goal with a pinpoint cross. His third game was the Benfica derby.
'I was determined to take my chance when it came along. The Benfica match was an amazing experience - flares were going off everywhere and you can tell the fans don't like each other.
'It went by in a blur. One thing I've found in the first team is the intensity of concentration required is much greater and that was very tiring at first, but I'm getting used to it.'
Dier has also tasted playing for a club in a slump and lying just below mid-table, with the manager changing as a result. His form and versatility - moving into midfield from centre back sparked Ferreira's Beckenbauer comparison - has been a rare shaft of light in a gloomy season for the Portuguese giants.
'There are maybe some parallels with Liverpool in where we are right now,' says Dier, with more rave reviews in Saturday's 2-1 win over Setubal.
'We're a big club. There's a bit of transitional phase going on before getting back to where we should be. I am looking at it as a valuable experience this early in my career.'
His path will, he hopes, one day lead him to the Premier League and full caps to add to those he has with the Under 19s, the FA having belatedly taken note of their one-time secretary's grandson.
'I've got three more seasons on my contract here and I'm happy,' says Dier.
'I'll always be English because of my parents, but I feel Portuguese as well. I've been told from a young age that your career's a marathon, not a sprint. I'm old enough to understand that now.'

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/football/article-2295399/Eric-Dier-English-player-shining-Sporting-Lisbon--INTERVIEW.html#ixzz2NzTGzaHt
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook

 

Syn_13

Fly On, Little Wing
Jul 17, 2008
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I was having a look at top scoring strikers lately and came across Porto's Jackson Martinez, who I had not heard anything about before. Christ the guy is on fire at the moment! His goal tally is brilliant atm. I know we've already been at loggerheads with Porto over Moutinho but he looks a decent player.

Anyone watch much of the Portuguese league and could offer any insight into what type of striker he is and if he'd suit our system?
 

TEESSIDE1

Married, new job and Spurs on the up!
Jul 3, 2006
15,181
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Not sure if it's been mentioned but if we're after a proven striker who wouldn't cost the earth ... then surely Hernandez at Manure has to be on the radar. 24 years old, 4th choice at Manure and is either on the bench or left out all together. With Utd being linked with Ronaldo, player's are bound to leave.
 

tobi

Clear Eyes, Full Hearts, Can't Lose
Jun 10, 2003
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I can see him moving to Atletico if Falcao leaves in the summer.
 

TheAmerican

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Aug 30, 2012
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I was having a look at top scoring strikers lately and came across Porto's Jackson Martinez, who I had not heard anything about before. Christ the guy is on fire at the moment! His goal tally is brilliant atm. I know we've already been at loggerheads with Porto over Moutinho but he looks a decent player.

Anyone watch much of the Portuguese league and could offer any insight into what type of striker he is and if he'd suit our system?

He is being linked with big clubs, and is probably out of our price-range. There have been reports of Chelsea, United, Madrid and others scouting him.

Edit: I just searched and he also has a contract until 2016 and a termination clause of 40 million euros.
 

mill

Well-Known Member
May 21, 2007
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He is being linked with big clubs, and is probably out of our price-range. There have been reports of Chelsea, United, Madrid and others scouting him.

Edit: I just searched and he also has a contract until 2016 and a termination clause of 40 million euros.
We should forget about signing porto players, their chairman and our chairman fucking nightmare. Saying that moutinho, Rodriguez and Martinez and the title challenge is on
 

Syn_13

Fly On, Little Wing
Jul 17, 2008
14,852
20,661
He is being linked with big clubs, and is probably out of our price-range. There have been reports of Chelsea, United, Madrid and others scouting him.

Edit: I just searched and he also has a contract until 2016 and a termination clause of 40 million euros.

Hah! Well that's us out of that one then!
 

TEESSIDE1

Married, new job and Spurs on the up!
Jul 3, 2006
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As always Levy will be looking for a bargain and will be eyeing up the best of the relegation fodder.

Not that I rate all of these but potential targets may be:

Remy - striker - QPR (apparent release clause when they go down).
M'bia - combative central midfielder - QPR
Kone - striker - Wigan
McManaman (21) - striker - Wigan
Benteke (22) - striker - A Villa

If Chelsea bring in another striker then we should go all out for Lukaku. 19 years old, built like a brick sh*t house, 13 goals in 14 starts in the league.

For a 3rd choice striker, why not give someone like Charlie Austin a chance? 23 years old, 23 league goals in 33 games.
 

TheAmerican

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Aug 30, 2012
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As always Levy will be looking for a bargain and will be eyeing up the best of the relegation fodder.

Not that I rate all of these but potential targets may be:

Remy - striker - QPR (apparent release clause when they go down).
M'bia - combative central midfielder - QPR
Kone - striker - Wigan
McManaman (21) - striker - Wigan
Benteke (22) - striker - A Villa

If Chelsea bring in another striker then we should go all out for Lukaku. 19 years old, built like a brick sh*t house, 13 goals in 14 starts in the league.

For a 3rd choice striker, why not give someone like Charlie Austin a chance? 23 years old, 23 league goals in 33 games.
I'd take Taarabt off qpr's hands before any of their other players. He is quality and can slot lw/lm and cm/cam.
 

fatpiranha

dismember
Jun 9, 2003
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I was really impressed by 19 year old Crystal Palace midfielder Jonathan Williams who made his full international debut last night when he came on to replace Gareth Bale at half time. Only 5'6" but fast and strong he was creative and never gave the ball away. Reminded me very strongly of a young Modric although he has been described as the Welsh David Silva. Liverpool, Arsenal and Man City have all been sniffing around him. One to keep an eye on I think.
 
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