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The Hoddle of Coffee: Tottenham Hotspur news and links for Wednesday, August 28

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good morning!

Do we have the goal of the season already?

This is just one question you’ll ask in today’s hoddle (The other is: Are we going to have to EFL Championship posts this week? The answer to that is YES).

Today’s comes from Mark Harris of Oxford United, who scored a potential goal-of-the-season contender already against Blackburn Rovers. Let’s take a look:

There’s a lot to like about this goal:

The hockey assist from the goalkeeper. Who doesn’t love to chuck it long?

The control from the Oxford United striker (?), who deftly controlled the ball with his chest.

And most importantly, that incredible volley from Harris.

And good on him too for seeing that the Blackburn keeper was well off his line. Even if he were, I am not sure he would have gotten it. What a sensational strike.

Oxford United would prefer you remember that goal instead of them losing that game 1-2.

Fitzie’s track of the day: Floating Parade, by Michael Kiwanuka

And now for your links:

Alasdair Gold on Tottenham’s ‘transfer day dilemma’

Spurs Women to host Arsenal, United, Chelsea at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium

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Good news for Spurs Women fans who like to watch their team play in large, awesome stadiums! Today, Tottenham Hotspur Women announced that three of their home matches this coming season will be played at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, and not at their usual home, Leyton Orient’s Brisbane Road.

Naturally, they’re the three biggest home matches of the season: vs. Arsenal, vs. Manchester United, and vs. Chelsea.

The home Women’s North London Derby will be held (at least for now) on November 17, the Manchester United fixture will take place on February 2, 2025, and the Chelsea fixture on May 5, 2025. The club is offering a three-match adult “hat trick bundle” for all of the fixtures for £30, and honestly that’s a pretty friggin’ incredible deal to watch a Tottenham Hotspur match at the new stadium.

The club’s clearly hoping to further capitalize on the increased stature of women’s football in England, as well as Spurs Women’s trip to the FA Cup final this past spring. Low-cost tickets to matches at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium should do the trick, and hopefully they’ll get huge crowds for all three.

Now, if only they’d sign some new players...

DONE DEAL: Manor Solomon heading to Leeds United on season-long loan

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This one’s been coming for a while, but it’s nice to have it finally settled — Manor Solomon completed a season-long loan to Championship side Leeds United today, after turning down approaches from clubs on the continent.

Solomon wasn’t going to feature much for Spurs this season, especially now that Tottenham have signed Wilson Odobert, a player who is just as quick, arguably a better dribbler, and significantly younger. If you’re being charitable (and heck, why not be charitable?) Manor Solomon is coming off of what was basically a season-long injury last year that he picked up in matchweek 3, so going to a place where he can get significant minutes and rebuild his career (or his transfer market?) makes a lot of sense.

Y’all already know what I think about him and the circumstances of his original signing, so I won’t go into that again, but this is probably the best possible circumstance for all parties. Solomon also continues what has been a pretty spectacular summer of player departures as Johan Lange has now shipped out almost all of the fringe players and deadwood in last year’s side. (We’re still waiting for Giovani Lo Celso and Sergio Reguilon news, Johan.)

Good luck to Manor this season.

OFFICIAL: Spurs release third kit

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Well, the worst-kept secret from the Tottenham Hotspur marketing department (after the 24/25 home and away kits of course) has now been officially confirmed. Spurs this morning announced via their website and social media the release of the long-awaited third kit - well, long-awaited by some, I’m sure:

There’s the usual marketing spiel about “embracing club heritage”, with the green and some elements of the badge being a reference to trees from which the “Seven Sisters” draws its name.

But is it cool?

I dunno guys, you’re asking the wrong millennial. The strip, which was leaked months back, is a teal color that brings to mind THAT Ajax kit, and honestly? I personally kind of like it. The color scheme is great, I actually like the detailing around the badge, and the upwards Nike tick actually sort of does it for me.

Where things get a bit weird though is the patterning on the shirt, which is meant to be reflective of Spurs’ N17 roots, which I guess means... fungus? Come on. You know the first thing that comes to mind is a petri dish.

Still. I don’t hate it. Sound off in the comments!

The Hoddle of Coffee: Tottenham Hotspur news and links for Tuesday, August 27

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good morning!

You know what we haven’t had recently? A Ben Davies appreciation hoddle.

It may have gotten lost somewhere in Spurs’ 4-0 win over Everton on Saturday, but Tottenham recognised Davies’ decade-long tenure with the club before kickoff.

Davies celebrated with his own post from a few weeks ago:

And here’s Tottenham’s video of Davies receiving his gift from Ledley King, and receiving a well-earned round of applause from the fans.

Just a tad underwhelming though.

Regardless, I’m thrilled that Davies was recognised. He’s been everything a manager could possibly want in a player. He showed enough versatility to survive the Poch-Nuno-Mou-Conte years, magically transformed himself into a speedy leftback to compete with Sergio Reguilon when that was a thing, and deputised brilliantly as a centreback.

I still love seeing him start games too. Hopefully we get to see that soon with cup competitions.

So let’s celebrate a decades worth of Ben Davies!

Fitzie’s track of the day: Love Will Find a Way, by Pharoah Sanders

And now for your links:

David Ornstein ($$): Manor Solomon to complete move to Leeds on Tuesday

Dan KP: Tottenham recruiting plan brings positive results

Tottenham’s Son, Yang get Korea calls for upcoming international break

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Hey, did you know we have an international break coming up after this weekends’ third round of Premier League fixtures? I know, I know. I hate it too. But depending on your perspective, there’s already one positive emerging out of the upcoming week of meaningless Nations League matches and international friendlies: Tottenham Hotspur’s 18-year old signing Yang Min-hyeok has been called up to South Korea for the first time, alongside his captain, Son Heung-Min.

Sonny being called up to play for Korea is like death and taxes — he’s Korea’s captain so you know he’s going to not only get the call, but also play significant minutes in both of Korea’s upcoming World Cup qualifying matches against Palestine and Oman. But Yang’s the real exciting thing here — it’s his first ever call to play for Korea at the senior level after debuting at the U17 level. Hopefully he actually plays, because at this stage in his career the more minutes he gets potentially the better he’ll be. Yang should prove to everyone that sometimes, yes sometimes, there are exceptions to my tried and true position that it’s better when Tottenham’s players are not called up to play for their national teams during off-cycle years.

Yang currently has 3G+2A in five matches for Gangwon FC; he doesn’t formally join Spurs until January, at the conclusion of the K-League season. Korea plays World Cup qualifiers against Palestine on Thurs. September 5, and at Oman on Tues. September 10.

Tottenham 4-0 Everton: Player ratings to the theme of Star Trek movies

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Last night, while lying on the couch watching Pluto TV because the chemotherapy symptoms were kicking my ass and I couldn’t find the energy to move much, I caught the last 45 minutes of Star Trek: Generations, the cross-over movie intended to hand the torch over from the Kirk era to the Picard era. I remember liking this movie a lot when it came out as an 18 year old, but watching it back boy howdy was this a bang-average 1990s Star Trek film. But it did get me thinking, how the hell have I not ranked Tottenham players to Star Trek movies yet? So here I am to rectify this mistake.

Y’all, I’m a huge nerd. You know this, and it’s not the first (or even fourth) time I’ve used Trek as a theme. Maybe it’s a weird time to do it since there hasn’t been a Trek movie since 2016, there are no forthcoming movies in the pipeline, and the franchise is in a bit of a state of flux at the moment, but dammit it’s my blog and sometimes it’s just good to write what you know. So that’s what we’re doing.

Here are your Tottenham player ratings to the theme of Star Trek movies. As always, there are too many movies for the available categories so you’re getting a representative sample.

I mean, it was always going to be this, right? Of course it was. WoK is just a damn good action movie pitting two evenly-matched rivals against each other in space. It addressed the glaring weakness of the original Star Trek film (grandiose but boring and overly intellectual) by bringing back a back a classic and fantastically charismatic villain, had some incredibly tense starship battle sequences, plus resulted in some some incredibly meaningful consequences in the literal death of Spock. It’s not just the best Trek movie, it’s a damn good movie in general terms.

Micky van de Ven (Community — 4.5): Used his speed well on numerous occasions to cut out dangerous Everton counters, and defended well. Haven’t seen a box-to-box run with the ball that good since Sonny vs. Burnley. Wonderful stuff.

Son Heung-Min (Community — 4.5): Fine, I’ll take my medicine for asking if Son was cooked last week (though at age 32 it’s still a valid question). I’ve got thick skin and can take it. Two goals from three shots and 1.1 xG on his own is a pretty fantastic haul against a Dycheball side, and picking Pickford’s pocket for his second ruled.

A surprise? It shoudn’t be. The Next Generation’s film offerings were all over the place, but it was never better than in First Contact, a film both about the Borg and the founding of the Federation. Time travel is an overused trope in Trek, but it’s done very effectively here. The acting is also as good as you’ll get in Trek, with standout performances from Alfre Woodard, James Cromwell, and a (seriously buff) Patrick Stewart who for the first time is forced to really deal with the trauma he experienced by being temporarily assimilated by the Borg in “Best of Both Worlds.” This is a Picard-centric movie, but there’s a good balance between Stewart and the supporting cast, all of which get a chance to shine. Just a fun, well-executed sci-fi film.

Cuti Romero (Community — 4.5): Cuti had a weird and somewhat rocky first half with a couple of direct giveaways and somewhat relaxed play out of the back, but was imperious in the second half, set up Maddison a couple of times with deep passing, and added a thumping headed goal off the bar. Not a perfect performance but a very very good one.

Ange Postecoglou (Community — 4.5): Much, much better. Shifted the starting lineup with Solanke out — a brave, if necessary decision — and used his subs early and effectively. Does he read this blog? (He doesn’t read this blog)

The last ride for the original series cast, I’ve always felt this movie was a little underrated. It brings back the Klingons as villains in a big way (Christopher Plummer!), forces Kirk and the rest of the cast to acknowledge and deal with their advancing age (and the death of Kirk’s son), and even brings back Sulu and the Excelsior, something I wish we had a lot more of in that era of Trek. A fitting, high-energy way to round out the TOS era of Trek.

Yves Bissouma (Community — 4.0): Welcome back, buddy. Fired a thunderbastard of a shot off the underside of the bar to put Spurs up and put in a very disciplined defensive performance in his first match of the season. Also notably more progressive with his passing, with several good and long balls forward.

Pedro Porro (Community — 4.0): One of Spurs’ strongest performers against Leicester and had another very good match on Saturday. Superb defending on the day and while not as effective from the wing did have a shot saved.

James Maddison (Community — 4.0): Another strong creative performance from a free-8 position with a second assist in two matches. He’s looking solid, and it’s lovely to see. Could’ve done better with his goal attempt in space, but hard to criticize him too much for this match.

If you’re going to create an entirely separate universe and reimagine TOS with a fresher, younger cast, you damn well better make it fun. And shockingly, J.J. Abrams did just that, lens flares and all. I thought the Kelvin Universe idea was brilliant, even if they did hedge by including Leonard Nemoy as elderly time-traveling Spock. The freedom to take things in a new direction while adhering to the general strokes of existing Trek canon resulted in an exciting and entertaining Trek film, even if it pissed off some of the fans of the original series. Shame he never made a Trek movie better than this one.

Destiny Udogie (Community — 3.5): Worked well in combination with Odobert on the left side. Still not as dynamic as I remember him but he looks like he’s starting to round back into form.

Guglielmo Vicario (Community — 4.0): Not a ton to do in this one as Everton were pretty hapless but did have a couple of good saves. Still looks a little hesitant on corners but at least he didn’t have to scream at any youngsters this match.

Dejan Kulusevski (Community — 4.0): A solid performance, worked well in tight spaces and opened up the midfield with his movement. But it does feel like no matter where he’s supposed to play he always ends up playing as a right midfielder.

Wilson Odobert (Community — 4.0): My word, is Wilson saucy! Dynamic and dribbly, he looked like the real deal. Was let down by his end product in and around the box, but you can certainly see why Tottenham were so keen to bring him in and he worked well with Udogie. I’d like to see what he does on the right with a healthy Solanke.

Djed Spence (Community — 3.0): Not an extensive highlight reel but used his speed effectively and had a couple of very nice defensive moments late.

I know Trek fans who absolutely love this movie and for good reasons. I’ve never found it to be THAT compelling. Another time-travel romp back to California in the 1980s where the cast has to Save the Whales (!!) so they can communicate with a visiting space probe that threatens to destroy the planet in the future is the epitome of the Environmental Theme Movies™ that popped up over and over again in that decade. Sorry, but it’s corny. That said, the cast clearly had a hell of a lot of fun in this one and there are some genuinely great moments of comedy, while Shatner chews scenery like a maniac. It’s fun. I get while people like it. I maintain that in the context of the entire series, it’s merely FINE.

Richarlison (Community — 3.0): I was hoping to see more from him but at this point just getting meaningful match minutes is important, and he had some good moments in and around Everton’s box.

Pape Sarr (Community — 3.0): Was mostly just a decent midfield presence at a time when Spurs had already taken their foot off the gas.

Archie Gray (Community — 3.0): I’m still a little nervous relying on Archie too much right now as a six, but unlike in preseason he didn’t look out of place and was tidy enough with the ball.

Lucas Bergvall (Community — 3.0): Didn’t do a ton, didn’t HAVE to do a ton. Snapped nicely into a few tackles, continues to learn on the job.

I referenced it in the opening paragraphs, but Generations — the passing of the torch from TOS to TNG in the film franchise — just doesn’t hold up that well 30 years later. It’s not a surprise, I suppose and there are some super fun set pieces (including the crash-landing and destruction of the Enterprise-D), but the entire premise felt more like a way to let angry Trek fans say goodbye to Shatner’s Kirk in a way that ended up being kinda hackneyed. At least Malcolm MacDowell got to chew scenery and upstage Shatner. Supposedly the original cut of the film had MacDowell killing Kirk by shooting him in the back, and I maintain that’d have been a much more appropriate way for Kirk to exit this mortal coil than what ended up in the final film.

Brennan Johnson (Community — 3.0): OK yes, he had some good defensive contributions, but that’s not why he’s in this Spurs team! A couple of small moments going forward but otherwise quiet and passive. Had one moment where he was in a good position to finish off a (bad) Odobert cross. I don’t hate BJ, and think he’s a good option as a late game sub, but he’s now had two lackluster matches in a row as a starter and I’d like to see Odobert start in his place.

I don’t think I’ve ever been as sadly disappointed with a Star Trek film as I was with this one after leaving the theater. There are movies I hate more (see below!) but this one just made me sad. The movie was basically an expanded Next Generation episode, which in theory isn’t a bad thing, but the central concept was that of a *middling* TNG episode, not one of the tense, compelling ones that you remember so well. In fact, I honestly have a hard time remembering what it’s about, except something about the Prime Directive, a Starfleet admiral wanting to exploit natural resources, flying the Enterprise via joystick, and Data having a floating butt. I would’ve had a much better time watching an expanded movie version of something like “Cause & Effect,” “Yesterday’s Enterprise,” or even “Schisms” than... whatever this was.

You thought I was going to go with Star Trek V, the one where they meet “God,” didn’t you? Nope! That movie sucked, but this one was even worse. J.J. Abrams had an incredible opportunity to take the Kelvin Universe Trek into uncharted waters and just do whatever the hell he wanted that was fun and cool — that’s the whole point of alternate universes! Instead he concocted and made the dumbest, most asinine attempt at remaking Wrath of Khan possible. There were a lot of ill-advised attempts to hide the fact that Benedict Cumberbatch was actually Khan (when it was obvious from the beginning) plus equally ridiculous attempts to make Spock into an action hero. The reverse-death scene where (spoiler) Kirk dies saving the world instead of Spock was just awful and dumb. I’m convinced this movie set the franchise back years.

No Tottenham players were as bad as Star Trek: Into Darkness

The Hoddle of Coffee: Tottenham Hotspur news and links for Monday, August 26

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good morning!

Today’s a great day, beccause today marks the first day of the US Open proper. Some of you tennis fans may have watched the qualifying rounds with fitzie (not phsyically, but spiritually) last week. But we didnt’ know the draws.

Now we do. So let’s do some predicting.

Men’s singles bracket:

Favourites: Carlos Alcaraz, Novak Djokovic, Jannik Sinner, Alex Zverev

I’m putting these four as the ones to beat. It’s the top four seeds, unsurprisingly. But there are some question marks.

First is Sinner’s hip. He seems to have had some issue with it the last month. He appeared okay enough to beat Tiafoe in the Cincinnati Masters a few weeks ago, but it’s just something to keep an eye on. Plus this surface is playing a little bit slow. Not sure that suits him.

Novak Djokovic has just about an easy path the the finals as you can get. His knee brace is gone and so is the thousand-pound gorilla after winning the Olympics. Zverev I think is also getting much closer to lifting his first major trophy.

But my money is on Alcaraz. He’s #3 in the world, but I still think he’s the best. The surface suits him the best and he’s a former champ here. He had a tough loss against Gael Monfils a few weeks ago, but I think it’s a one-off.

Dark horses: Tommy Paul, Taylor Fritz, Alex de Minaur, Lorenzo Musetti

Fritz has the best chance of these four to reach the semis. I think he matches up well against Casper Ruud (potential 4th round), but a quarterfinals vs Zverev is tough. He and Tommy Paul are both progessing really well this year, able to string out consecutive best-of-five matches.

Other than that, I’m looking at de Minaue and Musetti. I don’t think the Aussie can beat Alcaraz, but he can get to the quarters. Musetti could also potentially play Zverev in the R16. Zverev’s forehand is better though.

Fitzie’s predictions: Alcaraz def Zverev

Women’s singles bracket:

Favourites: Iga Swiatek and Aryna Sabalenka

We need this final. Women’s tennis deserves it. By far the two best players on the planet today. The 2022 champion and the 2023 runner-up have been the most dominant players this year. Swiatek on every surface other than grass. And no one hits the ball harder than Sabalenka. Her shoulder seems better after skipping Wimbledon. She also beat Swiatek en route to the Cincy title a few weeks ago.

Dark Horses: Jelena Ostapenko, Danielle Collins, Madison Keys, Mirra Andreeva, Victoria Azarenka

I’m really going with players who can just hit the crap out of the ball. I think all five can make a deep run here. But they all can be mercurial too.

Azarenka has the easiest draw of the bunch. Andreeva would play Swiatek in the R16, while Keys would play Sabalenka. I wouldn’t be surprised if they pull off the upsets. But it’s a tall, tall task.

Biggest question marks: Elena Rybakina, Coco Gauff

We haven’t seen much of Ryabkina since she made it to the SFs of Wimbledon. And I don’t know if she’s even practiced on the USO grounds. It appears she’s ill, and she recently split up with her coach. Something seems off.

Meanwhile, Gauff has had a horrible few months. A R16 outing at the USO, an early defeat at the Paris Olympics, which she backed up with early round exits in Canada and Cincy. Her serve and forehand look awful. Not good for the defending champ.

Fitzie’s predictions: Sabalenka def. Swiatek

Fitzie’s track of the day: Like Someone In Love, by Bill Evans

And now for your links:

Dan KP: Micky Van de Ven says Tottenham are ‘more dangerous’ this season

Jay Harris ($$): Bissouma repays Postecoglou after being included in squad

Turns out Tottenham hired a set piece coach after all

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One of the more pleasant things to come out of Tottenham’s first two Premier League matches of the season has been the fact that they have looked simultaneously more dangerous on offensive set pieces, and less vulnerable on defensive set pieces. What was a major concern last season has improved dramatically this season — though admittedly a small sample size, Spurs have yet to concede from a set piece and have looked significantly better on both sides of those situations. This is despite Ange Postecoglou’s almost dismissive attitudes about coaching that part of the game in the second half of last season and his refusal to directly hire a set piece coach to address it.

Or didn’t he? Tottenham did have a coaching shuffle this summer after Chris Davies left the club to become manager of Birmingham City, bringing in Nick Montgomery and Sergio Raimundo from Hibernian FC and promoting Matt Wells. Postecoglou previously identified Mile Jedinak as being in charge of defensive set pieces with Ryan Mason mostly in charge of offensive corners and dead balls. Football.London reports this morning that starting this season, Montgomery in particular has involved himself in the organization of set pieces on both sides of the ball, though Alasdair Gold takes pains to mention that Postecoglou still sees coaching in all areas of his team as a collaborative effort and there are no coaching specialists.

This is anecdotal and very much based on the “eye test” from watching two Tottenham early season games — set piece statistics are difficult to find without an Opta subscription — but Spurs have looked different thus far. While much of this is a result of Tottenham’s overall tactical system, in their opening two matches against Leicester and Everton Spurs have attempted the most corner kicks (25) of any team in the league, converting one, and have faced just seven against. This is I’m certain partially because they have faced two very bad teams.

That said, I’ve noticed tweaked and different routines off of corners on both the offensive and defensive ends, and while new Premier League rules about impeding keepers on set pieces has certainly helped, Spurs also have defended the few corners they’ve faced more robustly and with fewer lapses in concentration. Not that there haven’t been nervous moments — set pieces are notoriously chaotic events and there have been a couple of scary set pieces where the ball’s pinged around the box or forced Guglielmo Vicario or Spurs defenders into making saves — but particularly on the defensive side Spurs’ players have looked generally more organized and disciplined, knowing what their assignments are and even employing some flexibility on zonal vs. man marking depending on the situation.

Gianni Vio is long gone, now working with the USA National Teams (and reportedly doing very good work), and it would be foolish to look at the opening two matches and think that Tottenham’s set piece woes are over. It’s a long season. Spurs will inevitably concede set piece goals, because every team concedes set piece goals. We won’t know whether this is a short term improvement or evidence of a systemic change until much farther down the road.

That said, Spurs HAVE looked better, and if Gold is right, Nick Montgomery taking a more active role in this area is a strong suggestion that, despite his terse comments to the press, Postecoglou did recognize that set pieces were areas of concern and has taken steps to address the situation. That’s a very good sign.

Tottenham Hotspur 4-0 Everton: Community Player Ratings

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Well, that was an improvement! Tottenham Hotspur fans were hoping their team would respond after a frustrating 1-1 draw away to Leicester in the first match of the season. They sure got an improvement. Tottenham got a brace from Son Heung-Min to go along with an opening blast from Yves Bissouma and a late header from Cuti Romero, as they rolled to a 4-0 home win over a pretty hapless Everton at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium.

This was pretty much a comprehensive beat-down, and it was super fun to watch. A club debut from Wilson Odobert, an incredible box to box run from Micky van de Ven, and some really good performances today, too and that’s where you come in!

It’s time to rate the players.

Rate the players from 1⁄2 to 5 stars. If the player doesn’t deserve a rating due to minutes played, DO NOT RANK. I will round the stars up/down to the nearest half-star for the player ratings later this week.