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Player Watch: Erik Lamela

Real_madyidd

The best username, unless you are a fucking idiot.
Oct 25, 2004
18,796
12,449
Thank you for the heads up! This is so embarrassing, it reminded me a few years ago when I had this massive crush over this girl living at the other side of the world, and I would freak out a bit if she went a few days without texting me or making a social media post or something (and I'm one of those who don't really spend much time over social media and who kinda hate it actually). :D


That post is embarrassing.
 

yankspurs

Enic Out
Aug 22, 2013
41,970
71,396
Thank you for the heads up! This is so embarrassing, it reminded me a few years ago when I had this massive crush over this girl living at the other side of the world, and I would freak out a bit if she went a few days without texting me or making a social media post or something (and I'm one of those who don't really spend much time over social media and who kinda hate it actually). :D
Is this a cry for help? Are you okay?
 

E17yid

Well-Known Member
Jan 21, 2013
17,090
30,892
The whistle went before Lamela went down. His going down had nothing to do with the referee's decision to send Martial off.

You might be right and I didn’t mean to suggest this was always the case, however, having watched this back, it does appear you’re right that the whistle went before he went down, however, he didn’t start reaching into his pocket until after Lamela had gone to ground from what I could see but the video I was watching wasn’t the best.
 

E17yid

Well-Known Member
Jan 21, 2013
17,090
30,892
Seen it again on a slightly better video now and there’s actually quite a bit of time between when he initially blows his whistle and issuing the red card. Lamela goes to ground clearly in between those 2 incidents. Obviously we’ll never know but he might’ve been blowing his whistle to give them a standard talking to as you see a lot of refs do when there’s some argy bargy pre corner, then when he saw Lamela go to ground thought I’m going to red him. Obviously you could be right and just thought straight away I’m going to send him off as soon as he blew his whistle but he took a while to get his card out (but he might’ve wanted to wait until he walked over to Martial to issue the card) like I said we’ll never know.
 

BringBack_leGin

Well-Known Member
Jul 28, 2004
27,719
54,929
In this day and age where every single movement of a players bollocks is VARd, does anyone seriously think that the whole incident wasn’t looked at and decided “hmm, by the rules we can’t really punish Lamela for his part but by the rules Martial has to go”?

Not a huge fan of what Lamela did but if it forced the ref to make the right decision by the rules, which would have been double checked by var as every red is, then I can live with it.
 

mil1lion

This is the place to be
May 7, 2004
42,523
78,131
Even the great Barca side under Guardiola played up at times especially against Real Madrid, and they for me were the greatest team of all time. I don't think what Lamela did was really dirty. He just played the game and in all honesty it's no different to when a player wins a penalty. The rule is simple and Martial deserved the red card. Lamela just made sure it was noticed in the same way that if a player gets clipped inside the box he goes to ground even if the force of the clip isn't enough to knock them down. All teams do this sort of thing and we haven't always done it enough.
 

bbunc

Well-Known Member
May 11, 2019
1,562
6,610
Are people still complaining about this?

how many times each weekend do we see players shoved in the chest and go down to the floor grabbing their face like they took a punch from IronMike?
It’s a crappy part of the game but it’s part of the game and what Lamela did wasn’t even all that exaggerated compared to most of the stuff that happens.

at the end of the day, VAR checked and Martial slapped him in the face. You can’t do that.
 

nferno

Waiting for England to finally win the Euros-2024?
Jan 7, 2007
7,072
10,160
Missed him today, the guy only knows how to play in one gear and it rubs off onto the rest of the team. Should be the sub for Ndombele from now on.
 

SlotBadger

({})?
Jul 24, 2013
13,972
43,741
Few soundbites from Lamela (source):
Speaking to a group of journalists during a video interaction on Amazon’s documentary series on the club, titled ‘All or Nothing: Tottenham Hotspur’, Spurs’ Argentine star Erik Lamela said the 24-hour period within which the managerial change was made had left the players surprised.

“When he left the club after five years, it was a surprise for us because we didn’t expect that. It was difficult for the players. We were talking between us and we couldn’t believe it. There are a lot of great memories working together with him, which is shared by everyone in the team,” Lamela, 28, said of his compatriot.

“We knew each other well, so it was difficult as I said. But the day after, we didn’t have time to think about it. The day after, everyone was ready to start a new era and change the mentality as a team and try to win the next game. Football is always like that. We didn’t have much time to think about it; we needed to win the next game.”


The Argentine winger said high expectations may have affected Spurs during the poor start to last season. “It’s very difficult to reach the Champions League final. When you do, the expectations are high after that. And that is what happened with us; the season after, everyone expected us to be on top form again. But that season was difficult for us from the beginning – a lot of injuries, a lot of players missing and we didn’t have luck in many games too, with VAR or other things,” he said.

Being part of the documentary was an unusual experience for the players at the club and Lamela said it felt unusual with the cameras around. “At the beginning it was strange because we were not used to cameras recording us all the time. But after a while, in the middle of the season, it felt normal. We forgot about the cameras,” he explained.


Lamela also described Mourinho’s arrival at the club the day after Pochettino’s arrival as ‘strange’ but added that the Portuguese manager has come across as ‘a very nice person, always very honest with the players’. “He is a big manager. Everyone knows him. That moment (when he joined) was very strange for us because we didn’t know much about the situation at the club. As professionals, we were all pushing in the same way. At that moment, the team wasn’t doing great and everyone was just trying to change that,” Lamela said.

Asked about his thoughts on Mourinho’s speech in the documentary where he calls upon his players to be ‘bastards’ on the pitch for 90 minutes, Lamela replied: “Whenever a manager says something, then I think it’s because it’s a point of view that the players maybe do not have. I think for the team, sometimes there are times where we need to finish off games but we don’t do. We need to be clever in different aspects – keeping the ball, winning a foul and many different situations. And that was what he was talking about.”


Spurs haven’t won a trophy since their League Cup victory in 2008 but Lamela said the club now has a squad strong enough to compete for major honours. Tottenham signed midfielder Pierre-Emile Hojbjerg, full-back Sergio Reguilon and back-up goalkeeper Joe Hart this summer while Gareth Bale returned on a season-long loan from Real Madrid.

“We have a very good team now. The squad is big, a lot of players in every position. The competition for places is higher, and that’s good because there are a lot of games coming in all the competitions. And this is what we want – to try to really win something this season, but we need to go game by game, month by month. There will be many games every week, every month for us, so we have to be calm and just try to win the next game,” he said.
 

worcestersauce

"I'm no optimist I'm just a prisoner of hope
Jan 23, 2006
26,966
45,255
We could have done with him in the last five minutes yesterday, he'd have taken time out of the game and got in their face, made them so angry they'd have been kicking out so bad they'd have been kicking themselves. As it was we were too nice.
 

bomberH

Well-Known Member
Jun 4, 2005
28,466
168,302
Lad.
Aggressive.
Man crush.
Evil, yet
Lovely.
Arts, dark.

??

Bumping cos in regards to the term ‘squad player’ I don’t think there’s a better squad player in the history of football
 

SlotBadger

({})?
Jul 24, 2013
13,972
43,741
Lad.
Aggressive.
Man crush.
Evil, yet
Lovely.
Arts, dark.

??

Bumping cos in regards to the term ‘squad player’ I don’t think there’s a better squad player in the history of football
He’s got the shot of a squirrel and occasionally keeps the ball like the world will end if he passes, but I’ll be damned if there‘s another player that shows the desire of a warrior in every single fucking match he’s involved.
The fact he’s not first choice and still leaves everything on the pitch is even more heroic.

Yes, I wish he’d score or assist like he did at Roma, but to still see so many Spurs fans failing to grasp what he brings to the team absolutely baffles me.
 

Shadydan

Well-Known Member
Jul 7, 2012
38,247
104,143
I'm convinced that Jose sends Lamela out to totally shithouse opponents, Lamela is the kind of player Jose loves because he's so good at practicing the dark arts and getting away with it.
 
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