After so many lean years, Spurs’ attacking threat makes them contenders while Chelsea are left to rely on Sterling

As Chelsea and Tottenham contemplate Sunday afternoon at Stamford Bridge and the latest instalment in their own sub-epic two-hander, it is tempting to see another example of the Trigger’s Broom thesis, the search for the essence of things. Change the stadium, change the vibe, change the recruitment. Change the manager (key detail: get one who likes holding up trophies). Change the objective level of expectation. Is this thing still Spurs?

Or at least, is it still Spurs in that defining performance mode? Can this team be expected to defeat high-level opponents when victory matters most; or conform to muscle memory, romping proudly on those delicate foal-like legs before collapsing in a whirl of hooves whenever the prospect of actual success looms into view?

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

‘I always confront’: Guardian readers on the decline of cinema etiquette

After an article on the rise of audiences behaving badly at the…

Russia-Ukraine war live: Ukrainian air defence systems destroy Russian drones and cruise missile overnight

Ukrainian air force says 14 out of 17 drones and one Kh-59…

‘Really given me sleepless nights’: readers on their scariest movie endings

After Guardian writers shared the endings that gave them nightmares, you replied…

Mass coronavirus testing to be rolled out in England to head off Tory revolt

Proposals include plan to stop Covid contacts having to self-isolate and moves…