Friday 30 August 2013

Spurs have finished below Arsenal every year since 1995, but each new signing delivers a hammer blow to Wenger's penny-pinchers... So, will this finally be the year when AVB rules north London?

Arsenal v SpursThe north London derby. One of the fiercest battles in the Premier League. One of the great struggles between two clubs who, traditionally, have been at the top end of English football. The stage for ferocious and often controversial encounters.
Who could forget the return of Sol Campbell? Spurs' injury-time comeback in that 4-4 draw at the Emirates? Or Arsenal fans celebrating their title triumph at White Hart Lane?
Spurs may have won a few famous victories but there can be little doubt that - using the yardstick of league placings - Arsenal have won the war.

VIDEO Scroll down to watch Arsene Wenger and Andre Villas-Boas on their clubs transfers
Arsene Wenger
Andre Villas-Boas
The battle for north London: Arsene Wenger and Andre Villas-Boas meet again at the Emirates on Sunday
Not since 1994-95, when Bruce Rioch delivered a player called Dennis Bergkamp to the North Bank, have the bragging rights at the end of the season belonged to Tottenham.
Glory days? They have been few and far between - no matter that Arsene Wenger hasn't won a pot for eight years and counting - the Frenchman has always been able to peer down on his club's despised rivals.
Perhaps that is part of Arsenal's problem. The pressure on Wenger would be that much more oppressive if Spurs were finishing above them in the top four.
Yaya Sonogo (left)
Thrifty: Yaya Sanogo (above) and Mathieu Flamini (below) are Arsenal's only new additions this summer
Mathieu Flamini
Look familiar? Flamini previously spent four years at Arsenal from 2004, before leaving for AC Milan
Imagine if Daniel Levy and his cohorts had masterminded a triumph in the Premier League? Perhaps it might have persuaded Wenger to move more quickly in the transfer market.
Back in time, while Wenger was taking advantage of the old (an ageing but capable back four) and bringing in the new (a collection of wonderfully-gifted French talents) Spurs were flailing around. Trying, but failing, to get it right. 
Roberto Soldado
Flashing the cash: Roberto Soldado leads Spurs' heavy transfer spending, costing £26m from Valencia
Paulinho
Samba style: Brazil midfielder Paulinho arrived this summer from Corinthians in a £17m deal
Nacer Chadli (left)
Big boots: Nacer Chadli (left) could fill the void soon to be left by Gareth Bale on Spurs' left flank
Etienne Capoue
Spend, spend, spend: Etienne Capoue was brought in from Toulouse for £8.6m
Christian Eriksen
Target: Ajax star Christian Eriksen (above) also looks to be on his way to White Hart Lane
Erik Lamela
Vlad Chiriches
Done deals: Erik Lamela (left) and Vlad Chiriches (right) have already been snapped up this week

Premier League finishes since 1995 - when Spurs last finished higher

2013:
Arsenal: 4 – 73 pts
Tottenham: 5 - 72 pts

2012:
Arsenal: 3 - 70 pts
Tottenham: 4 - 69 pts

2011:
Arsenal: 4 - 68 pts
Tottenham: 5 - 62 pts

2010:
Arsenal: 3 - 75 pts
Tottenham: 4 - 70 pts

2009:
Arsenal: 4 - 72 pts
Tottenham: 8 - 51 pts
2008:
Arsenal: 3 - 83 pts
Tottenham: 11 - 46 pts 

2007:
Arsenal: 4 - 68 pts
Tottenham: 5 – 60 pts

2006:
Arsenal: 4 - 67 pts
Tottenham: 5 - 65 pts

2005:
Arsenal: 2 - 83 pts
Tottenham: 9 - 52 pts

2004:
Arsenal: 1 - 90 pts
Tottenham: 14 - 45 pts

2003:
Arsenal: 2 - 78 pts
Tottenham: 10 - 50 pts

2002:
Arsenal: 1 - 87 pts
Tottenham: 9 - 50 pts

2001:
Arsenal: 2 - 70 pts
Tottenham: 12 - 49 pts

2000:
Arsenal: 2 - 73 pts
Tottenham: 10 - 53 pts

1999:
Arsenal: 2 - 78 pts
Tottenham: 11 47 pts

1998:
Arsenal: 1 - 78 pts
Tottenham: 14 - 44 pts

1997:
Arsenal: 3 - 68 pts
Tottenham: 10 - 46 pts

1996:
Arsenal: 5 – 63 pts
Tottenham: 8 - 61 pts

1995:
Arsenal: 12 - 51 pts
Tottenham: 7 - 62 pts 
Sure, they had a go. They tried hard. But they couldn't quite make up that gap.
Of course, there have been highs. At his peak David Ginola would have added a dash to any team. 
But then, there have been lows. How much was it that was spent on Sergei Rebrov? £11m? That was an expensive mistake.
And all the while Arsenal were moving ever further away. A new stadium, increased turnover, higher profile. It all adds up to bigger, better and more expensive players. Culminating in a team they called: 'The Invincibles.'
It was about this time that Arsenal were at their peak. Could you ever have seen a time in the last 15 years when a player of Campbell's ilk would have left Arsenal for Spurs on a free? Not a prayer.
During the time since Spurs last finished above Arsenal, the Gunners have pocketed three titles, and been runners-up five times.
They have lifted four FA Cups. And qualified for the Champions League every year for well over a decade, losing in the 2006 final to Barcelona.
Spurs? They won the League Cup in 2008.
That year appears now to have been a watershed in the club's fortunes. Out went Juande Ramos - the latest attempt to find a foreign manager who could challenge Wenger - and in came Harry Redknapp. He sorted the wheat from the chaff and Spurs rocketed up the league.
The evidence? It lies in the final standings of the Premier League table.
In 2008-09 the difference between the teams was a whopping 21 points. Twelve months later it was whittled down to five. In 2010-11 - following Spurs' qualification for the Champions League it stood at six. In the past two seasons there has only been one point separating them.
With chairman Daniel Levy making better decisions and and nurturing an appreciating asset in Gareth Bale, the boys from White Hart Lane could no longer be sneered at.
Particularly as the gap has narrowed. There was but a dodgy lasagne between the two during Martin Jol's reign and it closed once more when Redknapp was in charge.
Now it has reached the point where Spurs are about to cash in on Bale for a world record fee.
And now Levy has decided it is time. It is time for his club to make a concerted effort - not just to burst past Arsenal - but to challenge the elite.
He has been out this summer. While Wenger has gone back to the future with the free signings of Mathieu Flamini and unknown Yaya Sanogo, Levy has bought the world for Andre Villas-Boas.
It's almost like something out of those 1960s Batman episodes. Bang! Roberto Soldado. Whack! Nacer Chadli. Sok! Etienne Capoue. Thump! Paulinho.
And there's more to come.
Spurs fans must be giddy with the excitement of it all.
It is still considered a tall order to win at the Emirates, but even if the battle is lost on Sunday afternoon, at this moment in time Spurs fans have every right to think they can win the war.

Arsenal fan's view - We'll see come what May...

Here we go again. Another season, another crisis at Arsenal, and another north London derby which will prove rivals Tottenham are finally better than us. 
That’s what we’re told, although we’ve been hearing that from our pals down the Seven Sisters Road for some time now and it hasn’t quite materialised yet, has it? 
Spurs fans don’t need to know that the last time they finished ahead of us in the league, Robson and Jerome were topping the charts with Unchained Melody while John Major was occupying Downing Street. 
It was supposed to happen last year, and the year before that, and the year before that, but it hasn’t. Yet there is real fear at the Emirates that this could finally be it. This could finally be the season when the tide turns in north London. 
While Andre Villas-Boas is going wild in the aisles, dear old Arsene appears to have lost the key to his war chest. Bless him. He is getting on a bit. 
Paulinho, Etienne Capoue and Roberto Soldado have all arrived at White Hart Lane. At the Emirates however, little-known Yaya Sanogo and Mathieu Flaimini – who ditched us to double his wages at AC Milan in 2008 – have signed on a free transfer while Nicklas Bendtner appears set for a comeback. Hardly Jesus Christ is it? If I don’t laugh, I’ll cry. 
Yet three games, three victories and eight goals suggest we might be OK come Sunday. 
Fenerbahce might be one of the worst outfits I’ve seen at the Emirates since Wenger last donned that farcical coat, and Fulham are hardly Barcelona, but wins breed confidence. 
Spurs fans are giddy at the moment, but will they be smiling in May? That’s when it really matters.
Phil Duncan (lifelong Arsenal fan and former ballboy) 

Spurs fan's view - I'm excited... and worried!

The first thing to say is that this is very, very exciting. I have never known such an amazing transfer window for Spurs, as we have turned the loss of our best player in Gareth Bale into a positive.
In the words of former Spurs player Garth Crooks — we have sold Elvis but have signed the Beatles! 
The word this summer was that Bale was staying and that Joe Lewis, the owner we don’t see much of, had sanctioned a spending spree of £50million to give us a real crack at breaking into the top three, let alone four.
Bale moved the goalposts on the tour of Hong Kong when he told Spurs he wanted to go to Real Madrid but Daniel Levy, a chairman who has at times frustrated me, has recovered from that blow to recruit a cohesive collection of top signings that gives us what looks like our strongest squad in years.       
While Arsenal, with the carrot of Champions League football to dangle in front of potential signings, have stumbled into one botched move after another we have brought in players of real calibre in Roberto Soldado, Paulinho and the one who could turn out to be the best in Etienne Capoue, who looks like the new Patrick Vieira. And more are on their way, headed by Erik Lamela.
But there is a snag. The down side to this sensational spree is that there does not seem to be much room for anyone from Britain. Tom Huddlestone, Steven Caulker, Scott Parker and Jake Livermore have gone while I am concerned about the opportunities which will be afforded to Jermain Defoe, Aaron Lennon, Tom Carroll and even Andros Townsend despite his England call-up. 
Only Kyle Walker, Michael Dawson and Danny Rose look like being English regulars.
The big risk in this is how what is virtually a new team of outsiders, with a strong South American feel, will gel and adapt to the Premier League, not to mention the lack of a homegrown identity that once used to be the domain of that lot from Woolwich.
If that is the price we must pay to challenge the perennial top four then I guess we must accept it.
Forgive me for getting carried away, but I think we are going to be title challengers either this year or next. And who would have thought that when it became clear Bale was going?
Paul Newman (Tottenham season-ticket holder and fan of more than 40 years)

North London derby results in the Premier League era

The start of a new era? Gareth Bale scored as Spurs won the most recent north London derby
The start of a new era? Gareth Bale scored as Spurs won the most recent north London derby
Derby roar: Theo Walcott celebrates scoring in Arsenal's 5-2 win in February 2012
Derby roar: Theo Walcott celebrates scoring in Arsenal's 5-2 win in February 2012
2012-2013:

Tottenham  2 Arsenal  1              
Arsenal  5  Tottenham  2  
2011-2012:
Arsenal  5 Tottenham  2   
Tottenham  2 Arsenal  1              

2010-2011
Tottenham  3 Arsenal  3                
Arsenal  2 Tottenham  3     

2009-2010:
Tottenham  2  Arsenal  1             
Arsenal  3 Tottenham  0     

2008-2009:
Tottenham  0  Arsenal  0            
Arsenal  4 Tottenham  4      
Breathtaking: David Bentley scored a stunning 35-yard volley during the incredible 4-4 draw in 2008
Breathtaking: David Bentley scored a stunning 35-yard volley during the incredible 4-4 draw in 2008
Thriller: Robert Pires shoots past Paul Robinson for the winning goal in Arsenal's remarkable 5-4 win in 2004
Thriller: Robert Pires shoots past Paul Robinson for the winner in Arsenal's remarkable 5-4 win in 2004
2007-2008:
Arsenal   2  Tottenham  1 
Tottenham  1  Arsenal  3               

2006-2007:

Tottenham  2  Arsenal  2                
Arsenal   3  Tottenham  0      
2005-2006:

Arsenal  1 Tottenham 1       
Tottenham  1  Arsenal  1              

2004-2005:

Arsenal   1 Tottenham  0
Tottenham  4  Arsenal  5          

2003-2004:

Tottenham  2 Arsenal  2           
Arsenal  2 Tottenham  1  
Invincibles: Arsenal's Lauren, Jose Antonio Reyes, Ashley Cole ,Robert Pires, Edu and Thierry Henry celebrate winning the title after their 2-2 draw at White Hart Lane in April 2004
Invincibles: Arsenal's Lauren, Jose Antonio Reyes, Ashley Cole, Robert Pires, Edu and Thierry Henry celebrate winning the title after their 2-2 draw at White Hart Lane in April 2004
Va-va-voom: Thierry Henry celebrates after scoring his wondergoal in 2002
Va-va-voom: Thierry Henry celebrates after scoring his wondergoal at Highbury in 2002
2002/2003:

Tottenham  1  Arsenal  1            
Arsenal  3  Tottenham 0        

2001/2002:

Arsenal   2  Tottenham  1        
Tottenham  1  Arsenal  1              

2000/2001:

Arsenal   2  Tottenham  0       
Tottenham  1  Arsenal  1       

1999/2000:

Arsenal   2 Tottenham  1 
Tottenham 2 Arsenal   1      

1998/1999
:

Tottenham   1 Arsenal  3           
Arsenal   0 Tottenham  0     
Mobbed: Tim Sherwood (third right) is congratulated after scoring from a free-kick in a rare Spurs win in 1999
Mobbed: Tim Sherwood (third right) is congratulated after scoring from a free-kick in a rare Spurs win in 1999
No quarter given: Sol Campbell blocks Ray Parlour in 1995
No go: Sol Campbell blocks Ray Parlour in 1995
1997-1998:
Tottenham  1 Arsenal  1           
Arsenal  0  Tottenham  0    

1996-1997:

Tottenham  0 Arsenal  0                
Arsenal  3 Tottenham  1       

1995-1996:
Arsenal  0 Tottenham  0 
Tottenham  2  Arsenal 1
 

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