WHUFC.com
Junior Stanislas is hoping for bigger and better things after making a
goalscoring impact this week
22.10.2008
Junior Stanislas is working hard in training with a spring in his step after
his match-winning performance against Arsenal reserves in midweek.
The young winger, who has been in terrific form of late, scored the only
goal of the game with a well-taken volley in the 24th minute at Bishop's
Stortford. It was his first strike of the campaign after going close several
times in recent matches. "It felt very good as I haven't scored this
season," Stanislas told WHUTV.
"In pre-season, I scored a few for the reserves and the Under-18s so it felt
good to get off the mark. I knew it was going in as soon as I hit it as I
caught it quite sweet and it was travelling. As soon as I connected it was
in the net."
The 18-year-old is building a bit of a reputation as a set-piece specialist
after scoring plenty last term. So it was a different feeling he enjoyed
after netting from open play against the Gunners. "When you work hard you
score the free-kicks and when someone wins the penalties you score them, but
this time me and Walter Lopez linked up well so it was good to score from
that."
Lopez played a major part in Stanislas' strike after delivering an
inch-perfect ball in from the left-hand touchline and the Uruguayan seems to
have made a big impact on Stanislas. He said: "It's good to play with him
[Lopez]. I played with him against West Bromwich Albion as well and it's a
good partnership in training and we kind of understand each other.
"When you play with the older players, everyone is comfortable on the ball
and if you mess up everyone is there to encourage you so that doesn't really
matter."
The England Under-19 international had his first taste of the first-team
when he was named on the bench for the Carling Cup match against Watford
earlier in the season. He is obviously keen for more so was particularly
pleased to get a goal under the watchful gaze of Gianfranco Zola and Steve
Clarke.
"It's nice putting on a good performance with the manager watching as I've
had few niggling injuries and he hasn't really seen what I can do so
hopefully I have shown him a bit more. If I keep consistently putting in
performances I might get my chance."
If Stanislas's set-pieces were not clinical enough already, the West Ham
United No46 will not have to look too far for some expert tuition. "I always
see the manager working with some of the senior boys and putting mannequins
up and hitting free-kicks and when they're done I get involved. Hopefully
soon I'll start working with him as well and hopefully he can teach me a
bit.
"He [Zola] has said little things to me every now and then. One of them is
consistency, because sometimes I'll do good things in training but then
maybe give the ball away but he just told me to keep consistent, don't stay
wide, come inside and get involved with whoever is playing up front."
Despite taking the plaudits against Arsenal, Stanislas says he has a simple
aim for season ahead. "All you can do is keep working hard and hopefully you
will catch the manager's eye and he will throw you in."
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Bajner makes good progress
WHUFC.com
Another international run-out for Balint Bajner on Wednesday saw him help
Hungary U19s to success
22.10.2008
Balint Bajner got another 90 minutes for Hungary at youth level on Wednesday
as they won through to the Elite round of the European Under-19
Championship.
The West Ham United striker, still only 17, had scored three goals in
Monday's 6-0 win against San Marino but had to settle for a supporting role
this time around. The victory, and Scotland's 8-0 defeat of San Marino,
means the mini-tournament hosts made sure of a top-two place and progress to
the next stage before their final group game against the Scots on Saturday.
The Elite round, which will also feature Jordan Spence's England, takes
place in the spring with the finals in Ukraine next summer.
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Under the Hammer : Cottee aware of Foreign Policy
xpress4me.com
By Rohan Alvares, Sports Reporter
Former West Ham star Tony Cottee has called for his old side to find
stability under new manager Gianfranco Zola in the wake of all their recent
problems off the pitch. The Hammers were dealt a blow early into the new
season when Alan Curbishley resigned last month after falling out with the
board. That led to the appointment of Zola, who made history in becoming the
club's first non-British manager. And Cottee is hoping the gamble pays off
in the long run. "It's big risk for the club and a big change of direction.
If you've never had a foreign manager you don't quite know what you will
get," Cottee told XPRESS on the sidelines of his punditry stint with
Showtime. "He was a fantastic player. I really hope he's the right manager
to take the club forward. Because the club needs to become a little bit more
stable, there's a lot of stuff going on off the pitch at the moment," he
added. The Upton Park side are also hoping to be exonerated in their
controversial signing of Argentine striker Carlos Tevez in August 2006 with
the matter set to be resolved in court. "It's absolutely crazy. It should
have been sorted out a year ago. I don't like to see any football matters
[end] in court. It's very disappointing. So off the field there's
potentially some big sort of problems ahead for West Ham so I'm very
concerned," said Cottee. With regard to his other former team, Everton who
are also in the doldrums, Cottee is delighted at manager David Moyes signing
a new five-year deal. "I think Everton are going to be taken over in the
next couple of months. I know it's a foreign investor but I don't know where
he is from, it might be Dubai, I don't know, it could be anywhere. "I'd like
to think David knows what's going on with the takeover. Perhaps he's met the
new guys and had some reassurances. I'm really pleased because he's been a
really good manager for Everton. If the club's going to progress, I think
they are going to need him there for the next five years," he said.
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Wenger has problems in defence and hopes Gallas and Sagna will be fit to
face West Ham
Daily Mail
By Sportsmail Reporter
Last updated at 1:28 AM on 23rd October 2008
Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger hopes William Gallas and Bacary Sagna will be
fit to play at West Ham on Sunday as a mini defensive injury crisis
threatens to damage the club's quest for trophies. A flamboyant attacking
display against Fenerbahce glossed over problems at the back, where Mikael
Silvestre looked every inch a player who has started just four games in 12
months. Arsenal boss Arsene Wenger hopes William Gallas and Bacary Sagna
will be fit to play at West Ham on Sunday
Emmanuel Eboue is rarely trusted now at right back and Alex Song was exposed
alongside Silvestre. Johan Djourou, the only other serious alternative in
the absence of Gallas, Sagna and Kolo Toure, was just back after suffering
concussion.
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F A Is Such An Apt Name
Submitted by Neville Nixon on 22 October, 2008 - 18:07.
What good does the FA do? Well, F A actually! Sensing a chance to flex their
muscles, those bureaucratic myopics have decided to show that 'johnny
foreigner' organisation based in Lausanne, the CAS,that they mean business
by suggesting that the be all and end all of all resolutions will be decided
by them. The FA are seeking to hijack West Ham United's attempts at
appealing against the ludicrous 'verdict' found by the kangaroo court in
favour of Sheffield United over the Carlos Tevez affair, having managed to
corrupt one committee Kevin McBabe and his gang of thieves have enlisted the
support of their FA cronies in order to prevent the 'verdict' being over
turned. The sheer hypocrisy of their actions beggars belief and one would
think that their would be better employed trying to keep their own house in
order rather than trying to stick their noses in to Premiership affairs. Put
plainly they are completely out of their depth, headed up by Bert Trautman
lookalike Lord Triesman and his pet monkey Alistair Maclean, the FA are in
danger of losing the little credibility they have among the football
fraternity. Maclean's namesake wrote adventure novels..this one is pretty
good at fiction too! - Ed
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How Iceland's Financial Meltdown Wound Up in British Soccer, Midfield
By JEANNE WHALEN
Wall Street Journal
Perhaps the most formidable and devastating soccer opponent has taken the
field in the United Kingdom. It's the global financial crisis, and it has
quite a kick.
England's Premier League, which includes the country's most storied teams,
is getting hit by a number of global problems. Teams have piled on debt in
recent years. The league includes teams that are owned by tycoons from
Iceland, the U.S. and Russia, and some of them are grappling with troubled
currencies, banks and
companies. Sponsors that poured money into the sport -- American
International Group Inc., Northern Rock and XL Leisure, a failed travel
agency -- have either collapsed or been propped up by governments.
View Full Image
Associated Press
Soccer great Cristiano Ronaldo of Manchester United, which is sponsored by
ailing AIG.
"Clubs are beginning to see the edge of the hurricane," Lord David Triesman,
chairman of the sport's governing body, the Football Association, said
earlier this month. "The art is to make sure you stay at the edge, or get
out of its path."
Lord Triesman chastised teams for the £3 billion ($5 billion) in debt they
have amassed. By comparison, the Premier League clubs had revenue of £1.53
billion in 2007, earned mostly from television broadcast fees, ticket sales
and sponsorship deals, according to a Deloitte & Touche LLP report on soccer
finance. Many sports teams, especially in the U.S., have long operated at a
loss. Still, the debt burden isn't sitting well with some in Britain.
In recent years, English teams competed for the best players in the world,
luring them with higher and higher salaries. Owners and sponsors, too, came
from all over the world, with some owners buying teams through leveraged
buyouts that saddled teams with debt. Crying foul, some fans have become
couchbound financial coaches, fretting that clubs will have a hard time
paying their debt or affording new players.
Only eight of the top 20 U.K. teams made an operating profit in 2007,
compared with 16 in 2006, in part due to rising costs to sign players,
according to Deloitte. Competition to sign players has sent annual salaries
soaring to as much as £7.8 million.
Fans of West Ham United, a London team, are among the most worried. The
Icelandic billionaire who owns the team was a big shareholder in Landsbanki
Islands hf, which collapsed amid Iceland's financial crisis. A club sponsor,
travel agency XL Leisure, went bankrupt last month, prompting players to
cover the company's logo on their jerseys with patches.
Blogs trafficked by West Ham United fans have been overflowing with
financial commentary on the Icelandic meltdown. "To put it plainly: West Ham
will be sold to facilitate the reconstruction of the Icelandic banking
system!" one fan wrote.
Asgeir Fridgeirsson, vice chairman of West Ham United, says team owner
Bjorgolfur Gudmundsson is "reviewing all options," but isn't currently in
talks to sell the team. The club will have the money it needs to improve its
squad, he says.
The fiscal duress has, unsurprisingly, become fair game for the rival teams'
fans, who taunted West Ham recently by singing, "Where's Your Sponsor Gone?"
to the tune of the 1970s Scottish pop refrain "Where's Your Mamma Gone?"
In Liverpool, thousands of soccer fans marched last month to protest the
team's large debt and delays in building a new stadium. The group directed
its anger at the club's American owners, Dallas billionaire Thomas Hicks and
his partner George Gillett, who bought the team in a leveraged buyout last
year, saddling it with debt.
Bank loans of about £260 million are due in July 2009, according to the
accounts of the holding company that owns the club. The owners postponed
plans to build a new stadium, citing the credit crunch. "Yanks out!" fans
chanted at the protest march. Liverpool officials didn't respond to requests
for comment.
Manchester United, sponsored by the troubled AIG, was also left with large
debts -- about £660 million -- after Tampa Bay Buccaneers owner Malcolm
Glazer bought the club through a leveraged buyout in 2005. A Manchester
United spokesman said the club is "not at all" worried about paying its
debt, saying that the team generates more than enough cash to cover it.
Manchester United had an operating profit of £66 million in the year ended
June 2007, according to Deloitte.
The former owner of Manchester's other soccer team, Manchester City, also
has run into trouble. Thailand's former prime minister, Thaksin Shinawatra,
has just been sentenced to two years in prison after being found guilty of
corruption by the Thai Supreme Court.
In some cases, the financial profligacy invites the ultimate penalty in
soccer: fan abandonment. Mark Doherty, a 36-year-old in the northern city of
Newcastle, says he has given up his season tickets to Newcastle United out
of disgust over player salaries. "I saw a lot of the players getting 150,000
[pounds] a week and I said, 'I'm not paying that anymore,'" he said.
Newcastle's big-spending days may be over, however. One of the team's main
sponsors -- the bank Northern Rock -- was nationalized by the U.K.
government earlier this year. And shares of the retailing empire that
Newcastle's owner, Mike Ashley, controls have lost 87% of their value since
early 2007. Last month, Mr. Ashley announced plans to sell Newcastle United.
Newcastle officials didn't respond to requests for comment.
Write to Jeanne Whalen at jeanne.whalen@wsj.com
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Cole still upset by Nigeria snub
Sport.co.uk
Author: Deniz Vehbi
Posted on: 22 October 2008 - 4:11 PM
West Ham striker Carlton Cole admits he is still coming to terms with the
disappointment of missing out on international football with Nigeria after
representing England at Under-21 level.Cole, who was recently called up to
the Nigeria squad by coach Shaibu Amodu, is ineligible to play after making
19 appearances for England's youngsters."I was really daft", the 24-year-old
told the Nigerian Tribune. "My dad is from Nigeria and I would have loved to
play but it was not to be because I was not eligible. I've played for
England U-21 in a competitive competition and captained the team. Honestly,
it was hard for me when I got to know. "I was disappointed I couldn't play
for my dad's country, but these things happen in football. Right now, I'm
focusing on my career at West Ham and I'll see where that gets me."
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West Ham kid Stanislaus reveals Zola talks
23.10.08 | tribalfootball.com
West Ham United youngster Junior Stanislaus has revealed manager Gianfranco
Zola has been in contact. The winger told whufc.com: "He [Zola] has said
little things to me every now and then. One of them is consistency, because
sometimes I'll do good things in training but then maybe give the ball away
but he just told me to keep consistent, don't stay wide, come inside and get
involved with whoever is playing up front. "All you can do is keep working
hard and hopefully you will catch the manager's eye and he will throw you
in."
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Hammers fans don't seem happy with ticket prices
3:27pm Wednesday 22nd October 2008
Echo
WEST Ham United supporters are threatening to vote with their wallets over
the price of Premier League match tickets. With just three days to go until
the Hammers host Arsenal in what is one of the club's biggest home games of
the season, nearly 1,000 tickets remain unsold. The remaining tickets -
priced between £45 and £63 for adults and £25.50 and £34.50 for under-16s -
are on general sale, but many fans have decided to watch the fixture live on
SKY Sports television or the internet instead. And supporters' disquiet is
evident on on-line fans' forum WestHamOnline.net One, using the avatar Full
Claret Jacket, summed up a number of posts by writing: "I was priced out a
couple of seasons back. "I used to go every home and pretty much every away.
I only attended four games last year and streamed the rest. "I love going to
the games but it costs me a ton (£100) every time when you put in travel,
beer and food - even more if my kids want to go (which they often do). "This
year I cannot justify the cost of club membership or the ticket prices when
there are so many other more pressing things to spend money on."
Another, Marshboy, said he was being forced to give up his season ticket due
to the spiralling cost. "I won't be renewing next season. 15 years I've had
my season ticket and now I just can't afford football anymore." West Ham
have struggled to fill Upton Park this season, with less than 33,000 fans
turning out for the Premier League fixtures against Wigan Athletic and
Blackburn Rovers, while just 10,055 showed up for the Carling Cup second
round win over League Two Macclesfield Town.
And with many supporters choosing to tighten their purse-strings in the
current uncertain financial environment, the Boleyn Ground is set to be
under its 35,647 capacity again.
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Hammers whizkid stepping up his claim for a place in Zola's team
10:02am Wednesday 22nd October 2008
Echo
PROMISING West Ham youngster Junior Stanislas staked his claim for a place
in Gianfranco Zola's first team after scoring with a stunning volley to sink
Arsenal Reserves on Tuesday night. The England Under-19 international did
his chances of breaking into the Italian's new-look front three no harm with
an impressive performance in the 1-0 win over Arsene Wenger's youngsters,
which was capped with a spectacular first-time strike on the edge of the
box. The goal - in front of a watching Zola and assistant Steve Clarke - was
the 18-year-old's first of the season, although he has put together a string
of strong displays in an attempt to grab the manager's attention. Those
efforts have so far proved fruitless, but it surely won't be long before he
is afforded a chance to shine in Zola's three-pronged attack.
"It was nice to put on a show in front of the manager and Clarkey as well,"
said Stanislas. "I've had a little niggly knee injury as well, so it was
good to be able to show them what I can do and now I just want to keep
banging them in. "Hopefully I can get a first-team opportunity soon."
Stanislas' potential has never been in doubt, but the teeanger himself
admits he has had to develop the area of his game that needed most work.
"Maybe before I wasn't consistent. I would play a few good games, an alright
game and a bad game, but now I've played a few good games in a row so I want
to keep that going," he said. "Maybe it's because I'm getting older that
I've worked out how to do that. "The system that we're playing with three
up-front also works for me as well. I like it. Other than that, I've just
had it drilled into me a hundred times that I need to do that."
And the south London-born ace revealed he is also looking to get extra tips
off of Zola in order to take his game to the next level. He added: "A couple
of the senior boys have been working with Zola after training and I've been
hoping to get involved, but I haven't had the opportunity just yet. I'm
hoping to do that, though."
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Behrami happy to stay with Hammers
Newham Recorder
22 October 2008
AN INEVITABLE consequence of financial uncertainty at a club is that the
footballing jackals will gather in order to pick off your prize players.
Despite their current precarious plight, Tottenham were this week linked
with a January move for Scott Parker and Matty Upson, while the biggest
noises have been about Swiss international Valon Behrami. The former Lazio
man, who signed during the summer in a £5million deal, was linked with Roma
after his agent spoke to the Italian press about their interest in the
player. West Ham's sporting director Gianluca Nani angrily dismissed the
report, slamming Roma as they had made no official approach for the player,
and insisting that the midfield man was not for sale. However, the next
twist in the story has seen the 23-year-old, who has 19 international caps
to his name, welcome the prospect of a move back to the Italian capital. He
told sports paper Leggo: "I would not have a problem wearing the Giallorossa
shirt, in fact playing for Roma would make me happy," said Behrami,
seemingly unaware of how unhappy that would make Lazio fans. He added the
proviso: "But I am happy at West Ham. I spoke to the leadership in recent
days and they have assured me there are no problems."
It seems that Behrami's agent Alessandro Beltrami is also back-tracking on
his original statement. This week he insisted: "The rumour saying the player
is unsettled at West Ham is wrong; it comes from Italy, where several clubs
have always been interested in him. "People say West Ham have money
problems and want to re-sell Behrami quickly in order to earn money, but I
don't believe this. "I am due to meet with Gianluca Nani before the game
with Arsenal, but he told me there's no issue with the player at all. "As
far as the player is concerned, he loves London life and being a West Ham
player," he concluded.
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Noble: It may take two years to get it right
22 October 2008
Newham Recorder
AT TIMES it looks like an unstoppable attacking tide; at other times it
looks like a rudderless shambles, and West Ham midfielder Mark Noble admits
that it may take some time for the Hammers to master their new 4-3-3
formation, writes DAVE EVANS. Sunday's defeat at Hull City illustrated the
point perfectly. On the counter attack, West Ham's three-pronged attack
scythed through a stubborn, well-organised Tigers defence as if it were
standing still. But when the chips were down and the Hammers had to push for
an equaliser, there was no balance, no flow and inevitably, no goal to show
for their efforts. Noble, though, is confident that things will improve.
"The formation is a good one, and I think it is working," said the
21-year-old Canning Town-born midfield star. "Obviously it's going to be a
slow process though. It's not going to work over months, it's going to be a
couple of years before he finally gets it going."
That may be a worrying thought for West Ham fans, though with two wins
already under Zola this season, there are times when the system obviously
works a treat.
The England under-21 man was quick to suggest that Sunday's game at the KC
Stadium should have been one of them. "We felt we should have won the game,"
insisted Noble, who played five games for the Tigers back in 2006. "In the
first half especially the way we played and kept the ball, the way we passed
it. We just couldn't score."
West Ham certainly had plenty of possession, both at the back and in
midfield, but one thing that is worrying many Hammers' fans is the lack of
urgency when they have the ball, and also the way that sometimes Noble and
in particular fellow midfielder Scott Parker, err on the negative side.
Noble, though, is pleased with the way things are going, but with
reservations: "I'm really enjoying the role I have been given," he said.
"But then again, it is only enjoyable if you're winning. "We haven't in the
last two games, so you can't laugh and smile."
Noble certainly had something to smile about last week as he helped England
under-21s to the finals of the European Championships thanks to a two-legged
victory over Wales. The West Ham fan will now travel to Sweden for the
finals next summer and he is confident that the team can do well. "I got to
the semi-final last time and the only achievement now would be to go that
one step further - to get to the final and win it," said Noble. "That's our
aim, that's our goal and hopefully we can do that."
Back at West Ham though, the former Academy boy feels that the team have not
performed as well as they might have done in the opening eight games of the
Premier League season. "It's not enough points," he admitted. "We thought we
should have won last week as well, although it was a bit of bad luck with
'Greeny' dropping the first one - it's unlike him. "Again today, we felt we
should have taken the three points, but it hasn't happened and now we've got
Arsenal and Manchester Un-ited in the next two games, so we've got a big job
to try and do our best to get some points out of them."
Noble has been part of the furniture at Upton Park since stepping into the
limelight for the last 10 games of the 'Great Escape' two seasons ago. He
now has 83 appearances under his belt, but with just seven goals to show for
his efforts, it is part of his game that he has to work on. That may be
where the new formation lets him down slightly. With three central
midfielders, there should plenty of scope for Noble to get forward, but too
often he seems to sit back alongside Parker, instead of hitting the
opposition where it hurts. Fans will hope it doesn't take two years to get
it right, but they will certainly be hoping that local boy Noble remains
part of the Zola revolution.
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Hammers must improve on the crazy eight!
22 October 2008
Newham Recorder
THE PREMIER League season is only eight games old and yet already to many
West Ham fans it has seemed like a marathon, or a long run in the UEFA Cup,
writes DAVE EVANS. Former boss Alan Curbishley used to gauge his team's
performances over eight-game periods, and when he saw the opening eight
fixtures for his side this season, his eyes must have lit up at the
prospect. None of the top four were included in those opening matches, while
games against newly-promoted sides Hull City and West Brom were in the mix
as the Hammers looked for a good start to the campaign. Things rarely go to
plan though - just ask Tottenham - and in those eight games we have seen
West Ham lose their manager, lose against both of the new teams in the
Premier League, and their chairman lose something in the region of
£400million if you can believe the rumours. West Ham can't draw games
anymore either. The cracking 2-2 deadlock with Aston Villa on the final day
of last season was the last time that the Hammers have shared the spoils,
and their tally of 12 points out of 24 should really have been added to by
at least a couple. The problems that West Ham now face are two-fold. They
have a new boss in Gianfranco Zola who is slowly trying to embed his
football philosophy and new formation on a team during the season. And now
that those comparatively soft first eight games have gone and the Hammers
have not gleaned enough points from them, they face a much more difficult
prospect in the next eight. Midfielder Mark Noble stressed that it could
take as long as two years to work out the best way to play in the 4-3-3
formation, but if that is the case, then it will be a season of struggle for
the Hammers. They certainly need to iron out some glitches in the system. At
times it has looked good and certainly solid, but too often it has appeared
negative and not a million miles away from the 4-5-1 system that was so
castigated by fans under Curbishley's management.
Julien Faubert seems out of sorts at right wing back, but that may be solved
by moving Valon Behrami into that position and perhaps freeing up one of the
central midfield places to allow for a man with more flair. Lee Bowyer, when
he is fit, seems to be the obvious choice, while Noble must endeavour to get
further forward, more often, instead of fading out of games on too many
occasions. Up front, Carlton Cole and now Craig Bellamy seem perfectly
suited to the formation. Cole can hold the ball up with the best in the
Premier League, while the 4-3-3 gives Bellamy the freedom to drop deeper,
run wider and cause all sorts of problems for defences, as he did at the KC
Stadium. Matty Etherington's role is not so assured though, and a place for
David Di Michele, Freddie Sears or even Diego Tristan may be a better bet if
the winger does not find his feet and his confidence soon. With big boys
Arsenal and Manchester United next on the agenda, the next eight games could
not have started more testing for West Ham, and if they get little or
nothing from those, it puts added pressure on the other matches. Trips to
Middlesbrough, Sunder-land and Liverpool are never easy, while Everton and
Portsmouth both seem to have the upper hand at Upton Park in recent matches.
If things go disastrously wrong, and they might, by the time Spurs come
knocking on December 8, both teams could easily be in the lower reaches of
the Premier League.
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