Home Blog Page 980

Under the Lens: Pochettino’s Past and Future

7

The great Alexia Furmanski has joined the Mundo Albiceleste team and her first article is about a certain Mauricio Pochettino and his rumored move to Newcastle United! A big thank you to Alexia and a thank you! Make sure to give her a follow on Twitter!

Newcastle United has been making headlines. Not only are they on the verge of being acquired by a Saudi Arabian investment group, it has also been rumored that the Magpies want to make Mauricio Pochettino their coach. Reportedly, they would pay him enough to make him the third-highest paid football manager in the world. Sources say that Pochettino is interested in returning to the Premier League (and a lucrative payday) and is considering a move to Newcastle, but in a recent interview, he insisted that he wants to manage Spurs again and lift the trophy that has eluded him and the club for so long.

Spurs fans should stay calm. Mauricio Pochettino wants to return and probably will, whether in the immediate future or a few years down the road. Tottenham has not necessarily been exciting under the supervision of Jose Mourinho, Poch’s replacement. This must make some Spurs fans wonder why the Argentine left in the first place. Let’s recap.

Problems in North London started in the summer of 2018, when Spurs became the first team in 15 years to not sign a player during the summer transfer window. Tottenham went 18 months without adding a single player, which in today’s footballing world is unheard of. Tottenham was in the midst of building a beautiful stadium and training ground, which likely made president Daniel Levy tighten up the transfer budget. As a result, during that transfer window, Tottenham failed to add depth and quality to a team that many argued was one to two moves away from winning trophies.

Although the majority of the blame has fallen on the board and Daniel Levy, it is rumored that Pochettino denied players offered to him by management. Pochettino was not shy about making his voice heard. He publicized his discontent with ownership during interviews and post-match conferences and asked that they allow him to make the moves he felt were necessary. This obviously led to tension among the manager and his bosses, and relationships started to suffer both inside the locker room and at the managerial level.

Despite all of this, in 2019, thanks to Lucas Moura’s second-leg hat-trick in Amsterdam, Tottenham reached the Champions League finals, a monumental achievement for the North London squad. For the final, Pochettino gambled on Harry Kane, who was coming off an April injury, but unfortunately Kane was a shadow of himself, and clearly unfit for the occasion. The game didn’t play out in their favor, and Spurs were denied a historic victory in Madrid by Premier League rival Liverpool. Pochettino’s heartbreak following the loss was felt throughout London, and he even admitted that he did not leave his house for ten days after the loss, stating that “it was so tough because we nearly touched glory.”

Wins are like makeup. They cover up imperfections and hide what is underneath. Tottenham’s extraordinary Champions League campaign covered up much of the locker room drama that I described above. After the loss, the club came crashing back to reality, the makeup washed away, and the imperfections were exposed. Cracks began to appear between Pochettino and the team, and the chemistry they once had begun to fade. This often occurs to teams after a historic campaign during which everyone commits their all to achieving history. Falling short of that goal is often detrimental to the team’s future, and without a solid foundation, it is inevitable that the pieces will start to fall apart. Add to that the tension that had already been brewing inside the club, and you have a recipe for disaster.

Following the Champions League campaign, Christian Eriksen, a central figure to Spurs’ European run, began exploring options outside of London, and eventually ended up at Inter Milan. Injuries followed. First to Giovani Lo Celso and then captain Hugo Lloris.

The results did not help. In the beginning of the season, Tottenham failed to secure any points against Newcastle in a home game. In September, Tottenham threw away, for the second match in three games, a two-goal lead against Olympiacos. The following game was against Leicester, where Tottenham were defeated after again being in the lead. Things got worst for Tottenham, when they were knocked out of the English League Cup by 4th tier Colchester United in a penalty shootout. The nail in the coffin was probably the 7-2 embarrassment handed to Spurs by Bayern Munich in the Champions League. The game was played in North London! And, for good measure, Brighton beat Tottenham 3-0 a few days later. Having won none of his last 5 games and sitting 14th in the Premier League table, even those without a sense of smell could sniff out what was coming.

On November 19th , Pochettino got sacked. After 293 matches with the club, his record stood at 159 wins, 62 draws, 72 defeats (a winning percentage of 54%).

In today’s football, if you want to chase the big prizes, you need to spend money. Although Poch miraculously led Spurs to the Champions League final, the lack of big name signings towards the end of his coaching tenure led to his ultimate demise.

However, the bond and winning culture Pochettino created at Spurs will never be forgotten, but in the meantime, Newcastle is calling. If I were him, I’d answer. The highly-regarded Pochettino knows the Premier League, and everyone has seen how far he can develop players with time, as he did with Kyle Walker, Harry Kane, Dele Alli, and more.

Saying that Newcastle has talent to develop is an understatement. Joelinton, Allan Saint-Maxim and Paraguayan Miguel Almiron are all young, promising players that would excel under Poch’s supervision. He can overachieve at Newcastle. To take the next step, acquisitions will be key, but it should not be a problem for Newcastle, especially if the Saudis consummate the purchase. According to the Spanish outlet Mundo Deportivo, Pochettino has his eyes set on Coutinho, a player who can create something out of nothing, but is currently not at his best at Bayern Munich. Pochettino has been wanting to sign Coutinho since his time at Tottenham, but was rebuffed by Daniel Levy.

Some may question whether Pochettino is already too big of a name for a team like Newcastle, who is used to sitting at the middle of the table or fighting to stave off relegation. However, Poch is highly ambitious and enjoys a challenge, and as mentioned, Newcastle is a very interesting project. A significant transfer budget and Pochettino’s coaching prowess may be the combination that takes Newcastle into the Premier League’s elite. Pick up the phone, Poch, Newcastle is calling.

Alexia Furmanski is an Argentinean born, Miami raised, soccer enthusiast. Her passion for the sport began as a young child, as family time consisted of watching her grandfather (a die-hard fan) cheer on River Plate. The years pass but the passion continues – but now as both a River Plate and Tottenham fanatic.

Argentina U23 coach Fernando Batista talks Adolfo Gaich to Barcelona

2

Argentina U23 coach Fernando Batista gave an interview where he spoke about Barcelona’s reported interest in Adolfo Gaich.

As we reported a few weeks ago, Barcelona are apparently interested in signing the Argentina international. Gaich, who made his debut for the senior Argentina team late last year, has been linked with a move to Europe for several months. The latest being European giants Barcelona.

Speaking in an interview with Mundo Deportivo, here’s what Argentina youth coach Fernando Batista had to say:

“It doesn’t surprise me that Barcelona look towards Adolfo as someone for a future project. It’s worth betting on Gaich. I have no doubts. He has potential, aerial play, he’s strong. One on one, he has speed. Despite being 1.90 cm, he knows how to get an opponent off him. I imagine him perfectly on European pitches, with the grass being wet. It’s ideal for him.

“At Barcelona, they would make him better because of how they work and for the level of his team mates which would demand more of him.”

Fernando Batista also spoke about Gaich’s failed transfer over to Club Brugge in Belgium:

“If that transfer would have been done, the adaptation process there would have been to play. Now, if Barcelona get him, they wouldn’t have him playing because I imagine they’d incorporate him as a support, something like what Borussia Dortmund do with (Leonardo) Balerdi.”

Batista compared the San Lorenzo striker to Martin Palermo and Robert Lewandowski. Regarding his comparison to Palermo, he compares him for:

“His optimism towards looking for the goal” while also saying “he has a few things of (Robert) Lewandowski in terms of “his physicality, how he uses his body, how he shields the ball.”

“The characteristics would perhaps fit him better in the Premier League, the Bundesliga or in Italian football. But he could also play perfectly in Spain and with Barcelona.”

Manchester City, Real Madrid, Ajax interested in Lucas Martinez Quarta

25

Several clubs are interested in signing Lucas Martinez Quarta of River Plate.

Lucas Martinez Quarta has grabbed the attention of several of the top European clubs. Per a report by TyC Sports, Manchester City are the latest club to be linked to the 23 year old.

With club captain Vincent Kompany already out of Manchester, Pep Guardiola could be looking to give himself other options in central defense. However, per the report, AC Milan, Real Madrid, Ajax and Borussia Dortmund are also keeping tabs on the Argentine.

Martinez has already played two matches for the senior Argentina national team. Both of them coming in September of last year.

Roberto Ayala: “Maradona was pure art, Messi is Speedy Gonzalez”

23

Roberto Ayala spoke with Fox Sports and gave his opinion on both Diego Maradona and Lionel Messi.

Ayala played with both legendary players in the Argentina national team. Here’s what he had to say:

“They are different. Diego for me was art in its purest form in his movements. He (Messi) is a Speedy Gonzalez who never loses the ball. He has the ball at 2 cm from his foot. How do you do that?

“I played with both. With Diego, I was just starting off. They are two beasts. When he (Messi) retires, he will also be remembered. I don’t know if it’ll be like Diego, it doesn’t matter. But yeah, I do enjoy that I had them in the same shirt.

The former Valencia man is also on the current Argentina national team staff with Lionel Scaloni. Ayala commented on Messi’s importance to the current squad:

“For this generation, he (Messi) is very important. He doesn’t have to take care but to transmit what he lived through his Argentina national team career. Today, there’s no Masche who was helping him and they were a very good duo. There is Otamendi but the character is different. There’s a good group, there are good footballers, now you have to build a team.”

Roberto Abbondanzieri speaks about Lionel Messi, 2006 World Cup, 2004 Copa America, more

2

Roberto Abbondanzieri spoke about Lionel Messi at the 2006 World Cup, his injury against Germany, Marcelo Bielsa and the 2004 Copa America.

The former Boca Juniors and Getafe man was the starting goalkeeper for Argentina at the 2004 Copa America and the 2006 World Cup. Speaking to TyC Sports, Abbodanzieri spoke about it all. Regarding Lionel Messi, here’s what he had to say:

“How could I forget. Yes, he’s the one that took the most shots in the training sessions. We would stay to work a bit more and Leo was always there. I have a good relationship with him even if it’s been a bit of time since we spoke. He’d invite me to all his events. I lost, yes. He shot them very well. He looked more Brazilian than Argentine. The Messi I saw in the training sessions in 2006 was like the one now but without the experience.”

Regarding his injury vs. Germany in the quarter finals of the 2006 World Cup and how there were rumors that he could have continued:

“It was some moment. I went out far. I could have played dumb and stayed close to goal. It was a kick from the right and there was an opening. It was a moment where I was perfect but that took me out of the World Cup. For that, it took me four months to recover.

“It bothers me but it’s there. What stayed with me the most were the faces in the locker room. Honestly, I don’t want there to be any doubts. I spoke with Grondona. I couldn’t anymore. The next day, I left with my family. I went to Getafe to play for fives months. The doubts appeared when they did some tests on me in the stadium and nothing came out of it, like any test that is done instantly.

“There are a thousand versions. I was at Arsenal with Julio and he asked me the same thing.”

About the 2004 Copa America, Abbondanzieri spoke about Brazil’s first goal which came off a free kick where they drew level:

“For the free kick, I put four in the wall because I was afraid that they would shoot to the right of the goal. And there was the goal but I didn’t say anything. It was a very significant goal because it’s not the same going into half time winning than it is drawing.

“After the 2006 World Cup, I was training with Getafe and I got a letter that Bielsa had left me. Very serious, he went as far as writing us letters. He congratulated me for going to Europe, for the World Cup and he told me:

“The truth is that there’s something I have been meaning to tell you for some time: I never understood why you put so many players in the wall.”

“Obviously, there were missing players to head it away. In the letter, he explained everything and I didn’t contest it.

Abbondanzieri has stated that he has watched the goal more as a coach than a goalkeeper:

“Everyone was being man marked, no one was left. A lot was said about the goal at the time but for me and obviously for Bielsa, the first goal was more important. And people perhaps don’t realize that.”

Become a Mundo Albiceleste Member

Support the site, win prizes, and be part of the Albiceleste family!

$2.99 / month or save 16% with $29.99 / year

  • Participate to win a different retro Argentina shirt every month!
  • Play weekly trivia to win a 2022 World Cup ball signed by Julián Álvarez, among other prizes!
  • Write opinion pieces for the site
Subscribe Now