Where does it now leave Tottenham Hotspur?

There is no doubt that the battle for a place in the top four will be as fierce as ever this season. With Manchester City and Liverpool spending big to ensure they’re firmly in the mix and Arsenal doing some decent business on a frantic deadline day, where does it leave Tottenham Hotspur?

With so much money being spent by their rivals it seems that Spurs have been left behind in the race to grab that elusive place in the Premier League’s elite mini-league. Boss Harry Redknapp has been used to having a substantial bank balance to go out and buy players who command a hefty transfer fee but will also improve the squad. It wasn’t so long ago he was shelling out £20 million to bring Jermain Defoe and Peter Crouch to White Hart Lane but the 2011/12 summer window saw chairman Daniel Levy put a stranglehold on big spending. The ethos was to sell before you buy and by the 1st September the squad had been dramatically trimmed with 10 players either being sold or loaned out and four players being brought in. Around £30 million was brought in by the end of the transfer window along with getting some high earners off the wage bill which seemed like good business.

However with only Brad Friedel and Scott Parker signing on permanently and Emmanuel Adebayor and Yago Falque signing on loan till the end of the season the squad looks like it’s lacking at the moment. Whilst quality still remains in the ranks there is a worry that Spurs don’t have the strength in depth to mount a serious challenge for a top-four place. I personally think they should have looked to bring at least a few more players in to replace the ones that have departed. Looking at the squad they do have some very good players in all positions but as far as backup goes there isn’t much to shout home about. Throw Luka Modric’s yearning for a move to Chelsea into the mix and it could be recipe for disaster. Missing out on the Champions League last year hit Spurs hard in the arm financially. The extra money garnered from TV, sponsorship and actually finishing fourth severely hampered the budget Redknapp was hoping to get his hands on.

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The squad they are left with now, in my opinion, will struggle to break back into the top four simply because the players warming the bench aren’t good enough to compete at the level required. The likes of Rafael Van der Vaart, Gareth Bale, Tom Huddlestone, Adebayor, Michael Dawson, Modric and Niko Kranjcar are of Champions League quality. They’ve shown that they can perform on the biggest stage and will be vital to Spurs’ chances of actually achieving the goal of returning to footballs biggest club competition. In fact on paper they have a starting XI containing players that would walk into any team in the top six.

The main concern I have is that the backup players aren’t of a sufficient standard. Hypothetically speaking, what happens if Dawson or Bale picks up a long-term injury? Would, for example, Sebastien Bassong or Steven Pienaar (who has been dreadful since moving from Everton) be able to match up to them? Are they of an adequate calibre to come into the team and offer the same level of performance and quality? Not that I’m signalling those two players out but it is an example that Redknapp has limited options and weak strength in depth which is a vital component of any side challenging at the Premier League summit. Even Defoe and Roman Pavlyuchenko have seen their standards fall dramatically in the last 12 months with the pair mustering less than 10 league goals between them last season. Adebayor has been brought in to remedy that and he is undoubtedly a top player when his head is focused on the game. But the majority of the time he is anonymous on the field and Spurs need a forward who is going to perform week in week out along with scoring goals. Redknapp also seems to be relying on youth players to provide backup, which could further hamper his chances of regaining Champions League football should they be pressed into action.

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The 5-1 mauling at home to Man City certainly highlighted the division in class between a team who spends and one who doesn’t. I really can’t see Spurs making a major play for the top four especially if they pick up injuries to key players. Behind a very good starting eleven there are very few players who can step in and play to the same level. Unfortunaetly for Spurs fans the best you can hope for this season is anywhere between fifth and eighth spot!

Everton v Liverpool – Match Preview

Liverpool make the short trip to Goodison Park on Saturday lunchtime to take on fierce rivals Everton in the 185th Merseyside Derby.

An indifferent start to the campaign has seen David Moyes’ side struggle at home but excel on the road and he’ll be hoping that at won’t hinder the Toffee’s of victory. They were unlucky in last week’s 2-0 defeat at Manchester City with Moyes placing the onus on snuffing out the Citizens attack sacrificing his teams attacking capabilities in the process. That won’t be the case at Goodison on Saturday as the Scotsman becomes only the third boss to manage in 10 consecutive Merseyside derbies joining Harry Catterick and Bill Shankly. His players also have the edge on experience each member of last week’s starting lineup having played in this fixture before. Defender Sylvain Distin insisted it ‘just another football game’ but that is sure to change when the game kicks off. Tim Cahill could miss the game though after suffering a bruised shin at the Etihad Stadium.

Theres no doubt Kenny Dalglish will politely disagree with the Frenchman’s assessment having played in 24 derbies and managed in a another 21. The Reds got back to winning ways against Wolves last week at Anfield after a minor blip and will be looking to put one over on their Mersey adversaries. Taking all three points will be high on Dalglish’s agenda as he takes a Liverpool team across Stanley Park for first time since 1991. With six players expected to take part in this fixture for the first time the Scot will be relying on Jamie Carragher to take care of them on the field with the defender having played in 24 Merseyside Derbies in the Premier League – more than any other player. It will be a tough task though with the Reds having won only two of their last seven league games away from Anfield. Captain Steven Gerrard is expected to retain his place on the bench whilst Glen Johnson and Daniel Agger are still out.

Key Players

Phil Jagielka – A marvellous showing at Man City last week was testament to the defenders calibre as he held the rearguard together before being broken with 20 minutes to go. A similar performance will be expected from the Toffee’s skipper against Liverpool.

Luis Suarez – The Uruguayan was at his industrious best last week with his constant running and movement making him a handful for the Wolves back line. With pride on the line at Goodison there is no doubt that Suarez will be be more eager than usual to put the Toffee’s to the sword.

Verdict: 1-1

 Jagielka also has one Barclays Premier League goal this season and has won every one of the eight tackles he has entered in to this season. Jagielka has also made five clearances and six interceptions for the Everton cause already this season The Liverpool players covered a total of 112,645m (69.99miles) during their 2-1 win against Wolverhampton Wanderers last weekend Liverpool’s Charlie Adam is the player from either side to be currently ranked highest on the EA SPORTS Player Performance Index. Adam is currently in 23rd place while Everton’s highest ranked player is Phil Jagielka in 75th place

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The tough task facing Andre Villas-Boas

After the first half of Chelsea ’s humiliation at Old Trafford, one thing was evidently clear – this was the end of the Chelsea team as we know it. No longer does Lampard dominate midfield, or Terry anchor the defence, and concussed Drogba was nowhere to be seen.

In essence, the spine of the team that has been ever present during the most successful period in Chelsea’s history now has no place in the starting line-up of a team that wish to challenge for the top honours, both domestically and in Europe.

Most of the focus post match has been firstly on the chance Torres missed, which a one legged donkey could have buried, and the somewhat dubious tackle by left back Ashley Cole on United’s little pea. However the effects of the game may be longer lasting than the stud marks Hernandez is left with, as AVB faces the task of dismantling and phasing out players who have nearly as much power at the club as the ‘galacticos’ did during their heyday.

After the first Premier League game, AVB nailed his flag to the Torres mast, and made it clear that Drogba and Anelka were no longer first choice starters – the manager is not afraid to make big decisions, and is willing to drop anyone who is not performing, including the under fire Spaniard.

To Torres’ credit, his performance in the last two games has been markedly improved, with two assists against Leverkusen and the goal against United. Inevitably for any player under pressure, the main focus is going to be on the worst miss since time began, but there may yet be hope for Torres in a Chelsea shirt.

A huge issue for AVB is that of Frank Lampard , once the first name on the team sheet and scorer of 20 plus goals a season, yet now after an injury hit last season looks to be a shadow of his former self, and has lost at least half a yard of pace. Whilst the player can still offer a great deal to the club, ever the consummate professional and still able to take a cracking penalty kick, it is questionable if he should be starting games.

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The substitution of Anelka in Lampard’s place gave the blues something extra, and yielded a goal within the minute due to the sub’s assist. Whilst Chelsea have no one to replace him with, it seems Frank will be a fixture for a little while yet, however, in January the club must be on the look for a world class midfielder – the goals that Frank no longer scores have to come from somewhere.

From having one of the strongest midfield’s in Europe, Chelsea now not only get torn apart with the opposition going straight through the middle of the park, but also lack that creative spark and goal threat they once relied on so heavily. Juan Mata looks to be a brilliant buy, and provides a huge amount of creativity, but he alone cannot revive an aging team.

Although most Chelsea fans would berate Torres for his ill-advised remarks on the age and pace of the squad, there is some truth to those comments, and his form aside, the Chelsea team as a whole needs a good shake up if they want to retain their place as one of the best clubs in the world.

Players and fans may not like the situation Chelsea now find themselves in, and with the danger of sounding like Arsene Wenger, they are almost certainly going to have a period of transition. If they do not wish to end up like Wenger’s Arsenal who have been in transition for a trophyless six seasons and counting, full backing needs to be given to a manager who has an incredibly hard task, with fans and the owner having to ignore certain more established players who question the manager and nickname him ‘bambi’ and face facts that a new era is dawning at the Bridge, and players like Terry, Lampard and Drogba may not be part of it. There is no room for sentiment in football and Chelsea fans have to face that harsh fact sooner rather than later.

Article courtesy of Rebecca Knight from This is Futbol

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The key ingredient needed for QPR, Norwich and Swansea City

AFTER seven games of the season, all three newly-promoted teams find themselves safely nestled in mid-table, with tenth-placed Swansea City sandwiched in between ninth-placed Norwich City and 11th-placed QPR.

It is of course, quite a common occurrence for top tier newcomers, fuelled by early season optimism and momentum, to propel themselves towards the upper reaches of the league table. At the same stage last season West Bromwich Albion were riding high in sixth place, with Blackpool three places below them.

By the same token, a collapse in the second half of the season is a common theme amongst promoted clubs. Last season, relegated Blackpool won just three of their last 19 games, compared to seven in the first half of the season. Similarly, Hull City’s Premier League survival-securing side of 2008/09 won seven of their first 19 games, but only emerged victorious once in the second half of that season.

Whilst there is no template for prolonging a club’s tenure in the Premier League, there are a number of key factors which certainly make survival easier. The gulf in quality between the Premier League and Championship makes all facets of the game harder for promoted sides, but it is the ability to score goals and register prolifically that frequently eludes newly-promoted forwards.

Even at this embryonic stage of the season, it is possible to suggest that Norwich, QPR and Swansea could struggle to find the net on a frequent enough basis. Swansea, who took five games to break their Premier League duck, have averaged 0.86 goals per game so far. The statistic is even bleaker for QPR, who have managed just 0.71 goals per game this season. With seven goals in seven games, Norwich appear best equipped of the three to achieve survival.

A closer look at the three clubs’ results reveal that no recognised forward at either club has managed more than one league strike so far this term. Scott Sinclair, ostensibly a wide player, tops the scoring chart amongst the promoted sides with two goals in seven outings, whilst line-leaders Leroy Lita, Danny Graham, DJ Campbell, Grant Holt and Steve Morison have all managed one solitary strike each.

The acquisition of players with Premier League experience is frequently cited as a necessity, with this mantra particularly applicable to the forward department. Prior to the start of this season, four of Norwich’s five recognised forwards had had no Premier League experience whatsoever – indeed the injured James Vaughan is the only member of the quintet who has featured in the top flight before, with 47 appearances and seven goals for former club Everton.

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Rangers manager Neil Warnock wisely opted to boost his attacking options with the signings of Jay Bothroyd (29 appearances and three goals for Charlton Athletic/Blackburn Rovers in the Premier League) and DJ Campbell (14 league goals for Blackpool last season), but the former’s profligacy thus far suggests that he may struggle this season.

Swansea boss Brendan Rodgers lured Danny Graham and Leroy Lita to the Liberty Stadium, but their combined Premier League record (prior to this season) of 59 appearances and nine goals is hardly prolific.

It would be churlish to place undue reliance upon one such player, and there’s nothing to suggest that the aforementioned players will not adapt to the top tier, but history denotes that the presence of a consistent goalscorer is essential in the quest for Premier League survival.

Last season’s surviving promoted sides, Newcastle United and West Bromwich Albion, both scored 56 league goals (1.47 goals per game). Newcastle’s top scorer Kevin Nolan bagged 12 goals (constituting 21.4% of his side’s league goals), whilst West Brom’s Peter Odemwingie chipped in with 15 Premier League strikes (constituting 26.8% of his side’s league goals).

The percentages are similar for the season prior to that one too – Wolves’ leading scorer Kevin Doyle struck nine times (28.1% of his side’s league goals) and Birmingham’s Cameron Jerome scored 11 goals (28.9% of his side’s league goals) in 2009/10.

Going back, the examples of Sunderland in 1999/2000 and Ipswich Town in 2000/01 further illustrate the importance of a single prolific goalscorer. Although those clubs’ Premier League campaign finishes of seventh and fifth may be regarded as somewhat anomalous, there is no doubt that they were boosted by the exploits of Kevin Phillips (30 league goals; 52.6% of Sunderland’s league goals) and Marcus Stewart (19 league goals; 33.3% of Ipswich’s league goals).

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In each of the last three seasons, two out of the three promoted sides has avoided an immediate return to the Championship. Both West Brom and Newcastle managed this respectable feat last season, finishing in 11th and 12th respectively, so the omens do look good for Norwich, QPR and Swansea. However, the ability to rely upon a consistent goalscorer is crucial, and all three sides will be hoping that someone steps up to the plate over the next seven months.

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Wenger gives backing to Mertesacker

Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger has stated that he has every faith in summer signing Per Mertesacker, and that the defender will prove himself as a success at the Emirates Stadium.

The Germany international moved to England in the last transfer window, but has been lamented in the press for a number of mistakes since arriving in North London.

Despite this, the French coach believes his lofty centre back with prove the doubters wrong.

“I am very happy with Per,” Wenger told Mirror Football.

“The criticism in the papers has been very harsh, but when you play for a big team, you have to accept that.

“I also think it will take him some time. He came here not completely fit. Now he is getting stronger and stronger.

“I felt on Saturday he had not recovered from the Holland game [in midweek] and looked tired. But he has recovered now and will play against Dortmund.

“Of course he is under pressure and scrutiny. But you don’t feel sorry for a situation like that because that’s what happens at a big club,” he stated.

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Mertesacker is in contention to face an old Bundesliga foe in the form of Borussia Dortmund on Wednesday night in the Champions League, in which Arsenal can ensure qualification to the knockout rounds.

By Gareth McKnight

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Roberto Mancini goes on the defensive

Manchester City manager Roberto Mancini has defended his side from criticism from Bayern Munich chairman Karl-Heinz Rummenigge in relation to the Premier League club’s transfer indulgences.

The former West Germany international has been vocal in his disapproval of the Etihad Stadium outfit’s expenditure in the transfer market, and has asked Fifa to penalise the English club according to Financial Fair Play regulations.

In the build up to the two teams meeting in Manchester on Wednesday, Mancini has stuck up for the big-spending club.

“I don’t understand Rummenigge’s behaviour against Manchester City,” Mancini told The Guardian.

“This has been six months now that he talks against us because of financial fair play. He also says that he hopes Napoli get through to the second stage [instead of City]. I don’t know what his problem is with us.

“Manchester City are working for financial fair play for the next two years, so I don’t understand what has happened with Rummenigge.

“There are other teams in Europe that have problems with financial fair play, not just Manchester City. Rummenigge knows his football – he was an incredible player – but I don’t why.

“Every team is worried about Manchester City because now and in the future we could become one of the top clubs in the world,” he concluded.

Mancini also confirmed that Aleksandar Kolarov would miss the clash with the Bundesliga giants due to injury, whilst Micah Richards is due to undergo a late fitness test.

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City need to beat the Bavarians and hope Napoli do not overcome Villarreal at El Madrigal to progress to the knockout rounds.

By Gareth McKnight

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Who’s your money on at Goodison Park?

It’s been something of a rocky road for Everton this season. David Moyes’s men had their traditional slow start to the season and after a small recovery, back-to-back defeats have again hampered their progress in the Premier League. The Toffees currently sit in 12th position in the Premier League table, which is two places behind their opponents at Goodison Park on Saturday.

Newly promoted Norwich City have had a very encouraging start to the season. The Canaries have just snuck into the top half after a 4-2 win against Newcastle at Carrow Road, and Paul Lambert’s men have definitely shown that they’re no pushover in the top division. Norwich have just one away win to their name, a 2-1 victory against Bolton back in September, but will be full of confidence heading to Goodison.

Heading into this week’s game, unsurprisingly as the home team, Everton are strong favourites, priced at 4/7*. The Toffees are also 10/1* to win 3-1, while for Everton to be leading at half-time and at full-time is 4/3*.

What about our market of the week? Well, with Norwich’s free-scoring nature and their somewhat leaky defence, there are likely to be goals in the game. It’s evens* for there to be more than 2.5 goals in the game, which is pretty likely.

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*odds correct at time of writing

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Alan Pardew’s transfer priority in January

With January fast approaching the media is clogged up with rumours about big money signings that could go through in the New Year and one player in the North East is of particular interest. Cheick Tiote has built up a reputation in the English game as one of the best holding midfielders of the past two years and so it is not surprise that interest is high.

Manchester United, Arsenal and Chelsea appear to be the front runners to sign the Ivorian international with a fee of over £25million being reported in some newspapers over the past month. Considering Tiote arrived on Tyneside for just £3.5million less than 18 months ago from FC Twente and the fact that some would say Toon owner Mike Ashley is extremely money motivated, would it be a surprise if the club cashed in on a £20million plus profit next month.

Geordie fans are desperate to hold on to their prized asset who returned to Premier League action at the weekend in a goalless draw at home to Swansea after over seven weeks on the sidelines. The likes of Kevin Nolan and Joey Barton along with Andy Carroll may have been the prominent players at St James Park last season but the supporters will not have missed Tiote’s rise in the team and his consistency level that was hard to beat in the Premier League.

But the big question is going to be whether Ashley allows his player to leave just as he did this time last year with the before mentioned Carroll who turned out to be a great piece of business for Newcastle. However, the profit from the Carroll deal is yet to be spent and so the club are in a good position financially, meaning the need to sell Tiote is minimal. Selling the naming rights of St James Park has also increased revenue and so the club that seemed to have a different issue each month in years gone by appear to finally be on the straight and narrow.

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The consistency in the board room has reflected their excellent start to the season and Alan Pardew is continuing his impressive management record at a very big club. So if Newcastle want to be taken seriously and have the possibility of challenging for European football in the next 18 months they have got to keep players like Tiote. There is no need to sell financially and so Ashley has got to reward the fans and Pardew with not only keeping the top players but adding to the squad so they can attempt to get on the same level as the likes of Liverpool and Arsenal in the near future. Demba Ba and Tiote will be at the African Cup of Nations in January and miss crucial games and will need to be replaced.

Newcastle cannot afford to become a selling club to the top teams and holding onto certain players will be just as good as a new signing at the Sports Direct Arena. Ashley has got to stand strong with the fans and the manager and a top half finish will definitely be on the cards this season with the ability to improve on that in the coming years. Things are still looking good in the North East but transfer windows are always a nervy time for Geordies, but that has to change.

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Christopher Samba offers rejected

Blackburn manager Steve Kean has confirmed that the club have rejected two bids for defender Christopher Samba.

Both QPR and Tottenham have been linked with a January move for the centre half, but the Scottish coach has reaffirmed the Lancashire team’s sentiments that Samba is not for sale.

“There were two bids from one club, that were refused, and there was a statement put out from the club to say that he is not for sale,” Kean told Sky Sports.

“It is a strong statement and that is the statement we are backing all the way. He is an important player and we want him to stay.

“We committed ourselves to Chris. He is not a long time into a long contract. There has been an offer that has come in and we have said no.

“There was interest in the last window and I believe there has been interest long before I was sitting here.

“There has been interest all along. It doesn’t surprise me, because he is a quality player for us and we would like to keep him. I would like to end it at that,” he stated.

Blackburn currently sit bottom of the Premier League table and Kean has promised to bring new faces to Ewood Park during the current transfer window.

Despite this, the under-fire trainer would not speak about rumours linking Fulham forward Andrew Johnson with the Lancashire club.

“I don’t want to mention any names. I said at the beginning of the window, we will try and get bodies in and try and get them as quickly as we can.

“It has been slow. It has been slow for everybody.

“I don’t want to name anybody. I don’t want to give you numbers. I don’t want to give you figures. But we have been very busy over the last eight, nine days.

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“We would like to be here announcing people and you seeing faces, as opposed to speculation,” he concluded.

By Gareth McKnight

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Should Abramovich listen to his manager and not his players?

It was in 2006 when player power was introduced to Chelsea; Jose Mourinho announced his list of ‘untouchables’, what Mourinho had said that no matter what happened to them, they would always be in his first team. For all the success the ‘Special One’ brought to Chelsea, this comment sparked a chain reaction that would do more damage to the club that anyone could have imagined.

When Mourinho was sacked, Avram Grant took over and employed Henk Ten Cate as his assistant manager, the man dubbed ‘The Volcano’. The day before Chelsea played Tottenham in the Carling Cup Final, captain John Terry and Cate had a training ground bust up with the two men having to be separated by players. Speaking about the incident, Cate said:

“John wanted to have even more intensity in training but I didn’t agree as we were just one day before the match. That was all. John and I get on well. John won’t disagree.”

The first sentence is most important here, the captain was trying to dictate what happened in training, and surely this is the job of the manager and his coaching team? Needless to say, Cate and Grant didn’t survive and was replaced by a world cup winning coach in Scolari, he lasted just eight months at Chelsea before he was sacked, and he was less than complimentary about the Chelsea squad:

“The real owners of football at the moment are the players. The coach, in most European clubs, has no strength to contradict them.

“The people sacked are always the coaches. The main players already know this.

“That was my problem at Chelsea. Drogba, Ballack and Cech did not accept my training methods or my demands.”

It probably didn’t take long to work out that those three players were on the ‘untouchable’ list. The manager has to be the key-figure at the football club and the person who calls the shots, not a bunch of over paid prima donnas who don’t like the way a certain manager trains.

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There’s been much more controversy too, John Terry has been stripped of the England captaincy twice, Ashley Cole shot a work experience student and Didier Drogba disgraced the club with his actions after the final whistle in Chelsea’s 1-1 draw with Barcelona in the 2010 Champions League semi-final, yet all of them have escaped punishment by the club and remain as untouchable today, as they was back in 2006.

At Manchester United, when Sir Alex Ferguson feels a player is becoming to big for his boots, he sells them no matter how important they are too the team. Ruud van Nistelrooy, Jaap Stam and David Beckham are just three players that Sir Alex has moved on for the benefit of his team, while Chelsea still have many of their ‘untouchables’ still at the club.

More recently, Villas-Boas’ former employer has claimed Chelsea players who have reportedly been texting Mourinho, “He needs time to mould his own team and he can’t do that as long as there are players, as I’ve heard, who exchange text messages with Mourinho, have undermined the 34-year-old And Roman Abramovich knows this.”

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The so called ‘untouchables’ have been ever present while four different managers have come and gone at Stamford Bridge, as age is catching up with those six players that remain however, they are no longer are ‘untouchable’ as Lampard’s situation has shown. Villas-Boas’ should have total authority at the club and Roman should seek his advice, more than those who have their own agenda’s to promote.

Have your say by posting a comment or following me on Twitter @DeanMears

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