| Tottenham Hotspur: A Full History In Brief |
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| Written by Administrator |
| Wednesday, 18 April 2007 13:03 |
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Arthur Rowe really focused on Tottenham’s entertaining approach to the game and moulded his team around it, developing the ‘Push and Run’ variety of football that they were to become known for. Their first season back in the top flight Spurs ran the show and won the First Division title for the first time in their history. However, despite coming second in 1952-53, Rowe was never able to repeat that achievement in spite of managing to re-establish Tottenham a true First Division side. Toward the end of the Fifties Spurs started to show once more the quality they possessed and regularly finished within the top three. A player under Rowe, Bill Nicholson had assumed managerial responsibilities at the end of the decade and built a team that was one of the greatest in the history of the game. He achieved a third place finish in his first full season, missing out on the top spot by just 2 points. Spurs were not to be denied in the next season when they pulled off the domestic double, a feat that had not yet been achieved by any other team. They cruised to the 1960-61 Division One title by 8 points before sealing the double by defeating Leicester City 2-0 in the FA Cup Final. Those wins also meant that Tottenham were to compete in Europe for the first time the following season. Spurs managed similar rewards in 1961-62 as they retained the FA Cup by beating Burnley 3-1 in the Final before going on to be the first English team to accomplish a European trophy by outplaying Benfica over two legs. Although not actually repeating these achievements of the early sixties, Tottenham Hotspur remained one of the best clubs in the country for the rest of the decade, despite losing our impetus in the league. Only in 1967 did Spurs manage anything by winning the FA Cup by beating Chelsea in the competition’s first ever London derby final. Bill Nicholson’s team had changed a tremendous amount since they produced that famous double in 1961 and, although he had cunningly acquired quality replacements, he had not been able to fully replicate the rewards. Football had also changed, moving away from a skillful, entertaining style to accommodate a more workmanlike ethic that concentrated on defence, a switch in stark contrast to Nicholson’s approach and one that he was not initially prepared to make. English teams became increasingly difficult to break down, prepared to settle for a draw rather than go for the win and Tottenham began to suffer domestically. However, Bill Nicholson forced himself and his team to adapt and they started the Seventies by winning the League Cup for the first time by defeating Aston Villa at Wembley. The competition had gained weight when it was decided that its winners would be offered a place in UEFA’s new European cup competition. In 1971 Europe’s main governing body for football, UEFA, wanted to sanction a competition that would pit team’s from across Europe against each other and it replaced the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup with its own UEFA Cup. Rules of the original competition meant that only one team could represent each city and Tottenham became London’s entrants on winning the 1970-71 League Cup. Spurs went on to be the UEFA Cup’s first ever winners when they won against fellow English contestants, Wolverhampton Wanderers, in the final, notching up a 15-1 aggregate victory against Keflavik in the first round and brushing aside European giants AC Milan in the semis along the way. The last trophy Spurs won that decade was again the League Cup in 1972-73 but, despite again reaching the UEFA Cup final in 1974, things were about to rapidly go downhill. Bill Nicholson resigned as manager after a succession of poor results at the start of the 1974-75 campaign. It signified a particularly dark period of our history as the Spurs board inexplicably distanced itself from Nicholson and introduced a saboteur from down the road. Terry Neill was an unpopular choice at the time due to his strong Arsenal connections and only went on to consolidate his reputation as an infiltrator by wrecking the infrastructure at Tottenham that had been so carefully crafted by Nicholson over the years. He only lasted a couple years before he ran back down the road to take charge at Arsenal but the damage had already been done. Youth team coach Keith Burkinshaw took his place and immediately moved to bring Bill Nicholson back to White Hart Lane as a consultant. However, the two of them could not prevent Spurs from relegation following Neill’s chaotic tenure. Burkinshaw was a much more suitable successor and won back Tottenham’s place in the top flight at his first attempt. He built a truly talented squad and in his attempts to return Spurs to the entertaining, attacking football they were once known for, Burkinshaw pioneered the use of foreign players as the foundations of the team. In 1978 he brought a South American flair to North London by enticing two of Argentina’s World Cup winning heroes away from their homeland to ply their trade at White Hart Lane. Osvaldo Ardiles and Ricardo Villa became huge stars at Tottenham and quickly settled into life in England, developing dreams of taking their new club to Wembley. It was a new era for Spurs and for English football in general and in 1992 the Barclay’s Premier League was formed out of the old First Division. It was a transition that was sup-posed to signify the quality of the league and give it added impetus amongst the other great European leagues like Spain’s La Liga and Italy’s Serie A. However, this failed to transpire through to the Tottenham team and the club has remained the Premiership’s chronic underachievers. Not until 1999 did Spurs again win anything of note, with just one player still present from their 1991 FA Cup triumph, right-back Justin Edinburgh. The 1999 League Cup final however was not such a happy occasion for Edinburgh after he found himself sent-off after an hour but Spurs came through with just 10 men to beat Leicester City 1-0 in the 93rd minute. The new millenium saw Alan Sugar sell his remaining interest in Tottenham Hotspur to Enic Sports PLC who are still the club’s primary shareholders. Their first move was to bring club legend Glenn Hoddle back as manager with a wave of sentiment and expectation. It was not too be though and the club sacked him just two years later after his relationship with the players deteriorated. Tottenham have not settled since, twice thinking they had located the right manager to lead them back to their previous glory. Martin Jol arrived in 2005 and notably led Tottenham to 2 consecutive top 5 finishes making him the most successful, popular and longest serving manager of this period but a dire start to the 2007-8 campaign left Spurs in the relegation zone and got Jol the sack. His replacement, Juande Ramos, arrived from Spain with high accolades and he quickly got the team playing again and moving up the table. He took Spurs to Wembley for the first time since their loss in 2001, beating Chelsea in the 2008 League Cup final to bring back the club’s first silverware since 1999 and earn a place in next season’s UEFA Cup. However, his fortunes quickly deteriorated, winning just 3 more games that season. Ramos spent the summer completely changing the squad and started the 2008-9 campaign with high hopes but Tottenham failed to win a single game in what was to be their worst league start ever, leaving them stuck to the bottom of the table with just 2 points after 8 games . . . |
| Last Updated on Wednesday, 16 December 2009 00:31 |







