An End of Season Ramble, and Thanks for Dropping By This Season

Endings matter. Settle with the past to move on. I’m not so bright with endings. Leaving dos are important, and I advise people I manage to always hold one, except I don’t go to mine. So here’s an ending to this season, it’s the right thing to do. Less of an analysis, more a ramble through events and emotions. Let’s see where this goes.

It’s been an odd season. It hasn’t, really, but it feels like an odd season, cluttered with mixed emotions. It occurs to me that early in my ramble, I have stumbled upon the single most significant element, which is that I still feel it. That powerful emotional attachment with Spurs has been severely challenged over the years but remains intact in this, my 54th season of going to the Lane and the single point of continuity with childhood. The team infuriate me, energise me, give me joy and sorrow, but they are all one and the same because football reminds me of who I am and what I feel, deep down. Of family and friendship, loyalty and camaraderie. Of how being a fan has sustained me through darker times. Of what’s important in life.  

I’m less demonstrative at games these days but that’s the only difference compared with when I was a kid, travelling across London on my own and queuing at the boys’ gate. Now, it’s dodgy knees and the family keeping half an eye on me in the crowds. A reminder of how my life is gradually changing. I used to keep an eye on them.

Now, less of a leap of celebration when we score, more an unsteady wobble to my feet.  I miss that, when the ball hits the net and the instinctive leap of celebration, or, better even, standing to crane your neck in anticipation as an opportunity opens up and the mighty Lilywhites bear down on goal.

So an odd season and mixed emotions. Ange has brought so much that is good to the club, chief amongst them that sense of anticipation that Spurs have the ball and something is going to happen. The thrill of early season as we, at the same time as the players, discovered Ange’s philosophy and style, fast attacking football in the Spurs way and players and fans released from the suffocating rigidity of our last three managers. Reading another end of season article this week reminded me that Spurs topped the league early on. I genuinely didn’t recall that. What mattered to me was the style, the excitement, going to the ground and looking forward to the football.

Later in the season, I still felt something could happen when we attacked, although I note that I typed ‘could’ not ‘would’, then thought we would concede every time the opposition attacked. It meant that I couldn’t enjoy games, or goals, because from my seat high in the South Stand, I had a perfect view of the yawning gaps we left behind. So this leaves the sobering conclusion that this was the most enjoyable season for several years but I didn’t enjoy it as much as I should have. This is what football does to the committed fan, the unspeakable emotional contortions of watching Tottenham play.

Odd too, in that our best players this season are all defenders. Van der Ven swooping down on attackers like an eagle closing on its prey, Romero rising as true leader on the field in the latter stages of the season, front foot defending at its best, Udogie such a prospect, Porro highly committed, and behind them Vicario excellent both on and off his line, exuding confidence. I am protective towards him – the corner thing has been over-exaggerated and is down primarily not to him but to weak organisation and defending at set-pieces, plus some rotten refereeing.

Football’s changing, I hear, I read, but it hasn’t really. Not in its fundamental nature. It’s highly tactical, the players are supremely athletic and meticulously prepared, but you have to defend, still have to be creative to score. If we make a ricket at the back, I curse out loud, but there’s a little voice inside saying, hey, human frailty, what can you do?

Well, at Spurs what Ange can do is sort out that defending better than he has. Good players need better organisation than we have, especially that they need more protection. I’m wholeheartedly supportive of our manager. In a single season, he’s had to overcome both the loss of one of the greatest players the club has ever seen (and do not doubt that Harry is that good), and the heaviest burden of all, the weight of history. It is impossible to underestimate his efforts to change the culture of caution and negativity imposed by That Man and Conte, which came on top of our lack of trophies during the Levy era.

He understands how to take the club forward and bring supporters with him, an understanding improved rather than harmed by the bruising experience of the reaction to the City game. But the relationship between fans and the club is reciprocal, and maybe we’ve learned about his infectious will to win and utter determination to succeed.

 He’s had to work with and revamp a squad made up of components from, what, four previous managers, each with their different perspectives, as well as integrate new players, several of whom are young and new to the PL. It is a mark of his success that we view Udogie, VDV and Sarr as established first choices when they were respectively 20, 22 and 20 at the start of the season.

Given all this, I’m delighted with fifth place. The Europa League is a winnable competition, and the manager deserves real credit for getting us there, however nervy it was getting over the line. It’s ok. First season, so much achieved and we know what the problems are. Result.

Turning points. I said at the time that he was wrong to field a weakened side at Fulham in the League Cup but at least he learned fast about weaknesses in the squad and our mentality. I see that Chelsea game as a one-off, not a turning point in the season.

What happened is what always happens in the PL. The league learns quickly and sussed us out before you knew it. Teams shut us down with blanket defences and cutting out passing lanes in front of goal. Some added intensive pressing in midfield and punished us on the break. W Ham and Villa at home come to mind as early examples the rest of the league followed. We struggled to get over this and to break down packed defences. We made mistakes, and Ange’s system relies on not giving the ball away in situations where we are moving into attack. Later, to make matters worse, we got in a right mess at set-pieces.   

So by and large, we need to improve collectively, rather than focus unduly on the faults of individuals. As an example, Bissouma is a fine player in my view, albeit his form fell away in early 2024, but the real issue is that alone, he cannot deal with all the defensive midfield responsibilities as well as perform his role in turning defence into attack.

By the end of the season, Ange dismissed one strand of criticism, that he had no plan B, by trying different set-ups out of possession. This needs more work and another player who performs the deeper-lying midfielder role.

Players in and out – go. Bear in mind we need squad depth too in what, all being well, will be a 50 plus game season, so don’t go chucking players out too readily. We need another 6 and a central striker with presence in the box, someone who will occupy centre-halves and be on the end of crosses. Too often this season we’ve played it wide, got the crosses in and it’s turned into heading practice for defenders. We need two central strikers – Sonny is wasted there. I wouldn’t sell Richarlison unless we have those two in place, unless of course the club know his fitness is more of a concern long-term.

We need like-for-like cover for both full-backs, who work so hard in our system and have to be rotated. I’d like another creative, busy midfielder, plus 4 centre-backs and cover for Vicario. Austin has just been given a long-term contract but I have no idea if he’s ready to step into the first team.

Also, it’s hard to gauge how close our group of promising youngsters are to the first team. Moore, Donley and Hall impress me in what little I’ve seen of them, while Devine, Phillips and Dorrington are rated, plus Keeley, the keeper who has been on loan at Barnet this year. And Bergvall arrives this summer (let him settle and play, set Youtube showreels aside).  They all deserve a chance yet the league is unforgiving in a team with Spurs’ aspirations.

Outgoings require the board to exhibit realism to move players on. I’m sure we can get N’Dombele a loan but he’s not going to go until his rumoured £200k a week contract runs out, surely, or is paid up. Thanks to Hojbjerg, Lo Celso, Gil, Sess and Emerson, and goodbye. Davies deserves our heartfelt thanks but with a year left on his contract his time may have come too. I would keep Skipp unless we can replace him, either with a transfer or the youngsters.

As always it remains to be seen if the board support their manager’s ambitions. The burden of history again. The board have consistently failed to identify the moments of opportunity where transfer commitment is an investment not a waste, and that must change, a sentiment I have repeated so many times, it should be my equivalent of a pinned post.  

I feel more confident about our recruitment processes now, another change that has come with Ange, an upgrade sanctioned by the club. We’re ready for a couple of top quality players, difference-makers, but I’ve said that several times under Redknapp, Poch and Jol, and they didn’t arrive. One shred of optimism here is the financial situation in the PL. In terms of FFP, we’re in a good position whereas other clubs need to sell. Levy came a cropper in recent years when his policy of exploiting weakness suddenly became outdated as clubs had the PL money to resist his lowballing and brinkmanship. Now, we’re in a stronger position but he must recognise market prices set the fee, not what he thinks the price is.  

And so to end with another reason for mixed feelings about the season. Our chairman often refers to his role as the club’s custodian but it seems this does not extend to looking after loyal Spurs fans. The season was bookended by fan protest summed up by the slogan ‘Stop Exploiting Loyalty’, beginning with the ticket price protest and ending with the Save Our Seniors campaign. The decision to reduce senior discount and, more perniciously, to refuse to allocate any new senior discounts to season ticket holders turning 65 the season after next is utterly disgraceful. I wrote more about this a while back.

I’m left with the inescapable conclusion that the board do not care about supporter loyalty. They just want people to pay the maximum amount and do not care who sits in those seats. This isn’t just about us seniors. That they choose to exploit and punish the club’s longest-standing fans demonstrates their contempt for loyalty, the one quality fans value the most.  

When I complained to the club about this, I received a standard reply. They said an increase in the number of senior concessions was no longer sustainable. They also said it will start to limit ticket choice for others. In other words, senior season ticket holders are blocking other fans getting a ticket. On one level, this is a lie – in respect of the waiting list my holding a senior ticket is no different from that of any other fan who chooses to renew. On another, it implies seniors are getting in the way, an encumbrance. The website trills about the Spurs family. The message to me is, this is a family where the younger members are keen to shift unwanted seniors into sheltered accommodation.

In response to adverse publicity, I understand Arsenal met with their supporters trust, who have not protested as vocally as we have, and reversed their decision. It gives Spurs the opportunity to follow suit. Acknowledging a mistake is a sign of strength, but I fear, despite critical pieces on Channel 4 News and the BBC (with ‘ahem’ me), the board remain intransigent. So, sadly, this is the feeling I’m left with.

To end on a more upbeat note, sincere thanks to everyone who has supported and read Tottenham On My Mind this year. Deeply appreciated, it means a lot and keeps me going. I’ll still be here come next season, writing as and when something is on my mind. Come on you Spurs.

This is How We Are.

This morning I checked in on social media to gauge reaction to the game, as I usually do. There’s a lot of criticism of the crowd’s reaction. Throw me a lifebelt, I’m drowning in a stream of moralistic pious sewage.

Have people ever been to a football match? Have they ever supported a team? Any team? Teams have rivals. They don’t want those rivals to succeed. It’s fundamental. You decide who you support and in that big bang moment of creation you also learn who your rivals are. Positive and negative. Yin and yang. Defines what you are by knowing what you’re not.

Last night, Spurs played a football match. I wanted them to win. I admit that I didn’t feel as bad about this defeat as I have done with others. That’s it.

Not every Spurs fan felt the same. I really don’t agree with them, but that’s not the point. The garbage I’m reading, from pompous sermons on how Spurs fans have desecrated the righteous values of football to small-minded snarking from small-minded fans of other clubs has one thing in common – they just don’t get it.

This is what football fans do. They despair when their rivals have the upper hand and gloat whenever they fail, or in this case might fail. Last night was an expression of this eternal truth. Cheering for City? From my corner of the South Stand, I didn’t hear any pro-City chanting. I did hear a lot of abuse directed at our north London rivals. I don’t need to stand up to know what I feel about them, although I did need to stand up to see the game.

Here’s Oliver Holt, now chief sports writer for the Mail:

In this tweet he manages to be so mistaken about football fans in so few words. “fans got it wrong” – don’t make judgements about how we fans are thinking and feeling, and don’t ever tell me how to feel. “Mocked” – Spurs fans around me did not fear being mocked, social media is not the real world. “an example of the very best of sport” – where Oliver transports us back to late Victorian times. ‘Play up lads, and play the game!’ Blimey, those Royal Engineers fans are going to give us some stick, eh.

And also in the Times, Martin Samuels:

Again, we Spurs fans have sadly failed to meet Martin’s exacting standards of fan behaviour. Moreover, we have let our chairman down in what to Martin is a clear statement of ingratitude towards our leader and benefactor. But then again, Martin doesn’t have to pay to get in. Or worry about being deprived of his chance for a senior concession when he turns 65. Which means he doesn’t have to consider these aspects of being a Spurs fan.

What angers me are the patronising judgements being made about Spurs fans coming from all sides this morning. Fans who wanted us to lose made me angry but I understand why they were conflicted. We all were to some extent. This was a highly unusual set of circumstances. I very much doubt that fans of other clubs would have behaved any differently. Remember the so-called Battle of the Bridge, when Chelsea prevented us from sustaining our title challenge even though they had only the prospect of a mid-table finish. Their crowd chanted for Leicester as one. Or here’s Tony Evans, a writer who does understand fans, writing about when Liverpool had a chance to stop United winning the league.

There’s no mention of fan loyalty, for example. Of capacity crowds every single week despite the extortionate prices and the fact that under this chairman we’ve won a single League Cup and nothing since 2008. Of British record crowds at Wembley.

And while I’m about it, there are endless examples this morning of how the expression of fandom on social media appears for many to be the only reality. My question asking if people had ever been to a football match is not entirely rhetorical. Many younger fans have not been to any or many games, for reasonable reasons of price and, where the fanbase is world wide, geography. So social media is the only place where they express themselves. The bantz, the ‘mocking’, the insults, these do not reflect the reality of fandom. Much of it is generated for the express purpose of getting clicks and hits, all of which are monetised. In other words, it is sustained, if not created, with profit in mind. In this world, cliches abound, convenient off-the-peg takes that mean anyone can join in without having to think for themselves, or indeed watch much football. In this world, Spurs fans today have no class, we’re two-bob and tinpot, we have loser mentalities.

This world is real to its inhabitants because this is their main source of information and the place where they express their fandom using these conventions. It’s not my world. I visit every now and again but I don’t live there. Other interpretations and realities are available.

By and large, Spurs fans in the ground handled it well. Fans got behind the team, for example after City’s first goal, there was a groundswell of singing to urge the players on, and we responded approvingly to our effort and good football, especially in the first half, both of which have been sorely absent of late. And barracked City for timewasting when they were a goal up. Those conflicted feelings emerged later, and once the game was gone, the balance tipped towards acceptance of a City win. Many left the ground as soon as the penalty was awarded, let alone scored.

There were quiet periods, but to be honest, that’s not unusual at Spurs, particularly when opponents are on top, as was the case for some of the second half. But ‘normal anxiety’ isn’t a hot take. Neither apparently is having fun. Samuels pictures a few Spurs fans doing the Poznan. Perish the thought that with the game lost, they had a bit of fun, last home game of the season. Because football fans can’t have fun. It would be an insult to our chairman.

This debate has been energized by Postecoglou’s post-match comments where he referred cryptically to problems at the club: “the last 48 hours to me have revealed the foundations are pretty fragile…inside and outside.” The focus of today’s coverage has largely been on the fans, the presumption being that we are the ‘outside’ bit, compounded by a video showing him having a go at a fan behind the bench who wanted us to lose.

He was obviously very angry in that press conference but it’s debatable whether he meant that there’s a fundamental lack of support from the crowd. Never a good idea to be seen to have a go at supporters but I think sections of the media and unchallenging social media discourse have made more of it than is justified and I don’t see anything in what he said that means he doesn’t feel supported by us. As Celtic manager, he’s seen all this at first hand and coped well in an atmosphere that’s frankly more combustible than the north London rivalry.

As for the game itself, I took away the positives of a committed, organised performance with Romero leading the way, and where Ange showed, belatedly perhaps, that he can adapt his tactics to match the demands of the league. Sarr as a false nine gave us more heft in midfield, the extra man being the basis of our better shape with better passing and covering options, unfortunately at the expense of weakness up front in the absence of a central striker. After a poor run of results, I hope this is the beginning of the changes that must surely come.

This leaves us with what to me is evidence of a more sinister problem – what does Ange mean about “inside”? Is he referring to the players – are some doubting his methods? Or does he know the summer transfer budget and he’s unhappy about it? I like the fact that he is angry about the club’s future and wants to do something about it. He has the ability and determination to address these problems but the board have to support the growth of the club. As I said last week, once more we’re ending the season on a sour note.

Let’s Straighten It Out Spurs

Contemporary top-level football is complex. Double pivots, inverted full-backs, gegenpressing, I’ve banned the expression A***ball but that too – I get it. But it’s not overly simplistic to say, at free kicks, get your big bloke on their big bloke. Or don’t get too many players upfield and let teams score on the counter. Or defend a bloody corner properly. And when we have a problem defending set-pieces, don’t give stupid free-kicks away.

What infuriates me are all these mug goals. We are total mugs, handing opportunities to opponents instead of making them work hard for them. Regardless of different tactical approaches, think of how many of the goals we’ve conceded lately are mug goals. Sitting in the Park Lane on Sunday, watching their players’ expressions as they celebrated their goals, they couldn’t believe their luck. Without playing well they held us in check but to score their goals required scant ingenuity or overpowering skill. On Thursday, three unnecessary tackles, three fouls, two goals.

And underlying those fouls is a sense of indecision laced with a liberal dash of panic. Minds as well as limbs are weary after a season of hard yards and tough matches. Nobody took control. Nobody settled things down. Nobody said, let’s be confident in our ability to resist when CFC attack, let’s keep our shape and keep the ball when we get it. Nobody assessed what was happening on the field and said, oi big bloke, get out there to mark that other big bloke. There are no gamechangers out there.

As a fan, I ask for, indeed demand, clarity of thought from players and manager, yet I find that impossible because of my attachment to the club. There’s so much to say, so many things going wrong lately, there’s disappointment and some anger obscuring the progress this season. Perspective is hard when you’re so invested.  

Ange has the right ideas, the right approach and – this is important for me – the right values. He understands the club’s heritage and what supporters want. It’s a philosophy that can change the ethos of the entire club and he has the capacity to get people to believe.

But now we’re at the sharp end of the season, time to take stock and do the accounts. And once more we’re ending a season wanting it to rush by and end before its time. Different players, different manager but that same sinking feeling.  

The biggest, perhaps insurmountable problem Ange faces won’t go away. The weight of expectation has become a burden, as his predecessor discovered and ran away. If anything, he’s added to it because he created such an exciting start to his time in charge, because he was so different from what had gone before.

We fans carry this too. Lately, it seems like each overhit pass carries not only too much weight but also the weight of past frustrations. As each cross sails into the distance, it becomes a symbol of serial failure. Not again, we lament, not again.

Save Our Seniors is the fan campaign to reverse the club’s decision to cut the discount on senior concessions and to not issue any more senior concessions after next season. It’s a disgraceful decision that directly affects not only the club’s most loyal supporters but also reveals how little the club values the loyalty of every fan. The campaign continues – updates on social media @SaveOurSenior66 and I wrote about it last time

So of the many things on my mind, a short list in no particular order.

Key players have disappointed in the second half of the season. Maddison is easily drawn into petty squabbles that distract him. If he wants to be a big player at a big club then he’s got to play like one and run the midfield, rather than be a bit part actor however scene-stealing his cameos are. Bentacur too is off his game, Bissouma is not a strong presence in that key centre mid role, while Sonny gave everything in the Asian Cup, as he should for his country, but he has little left for us.

That said, modern players expect to be coached into a system. I can’t escape the felling that too often our midfielders are not clear where they are supposed to be. They allow huge gaps to open up between them and don’t get this coaching fundamental about connection and awareness. And some of that has to be down to the manager.

I read that Ange has no plan B. While this was never truly accurate, we’ve seen plans B and C this week and neither has made a significant difference to the outcome. To me, the defeat to CFC was the worst of the lot precisely because we changed our set-up to be tighter out of possession and still the Blues easily circumvented our defence. And substituting the complete midfield smacked of desperation rather than a clear plan of action.

Compare with Them Lot up the road – I’m afraid we were forced to on Sunday – they’ve had several years of gradual development and are clearly well-drilled out of possession. They close down space and passing lanes. For a couple of minutes last Sunday, I watched Rice in defence – there was nothing much else to catch my attention. He’s constantly on the move even when in a relatively tight defensive situation, proactively thinking about space and angles. As for us in this respect, let’s just say we have much to learn. And also remember, it took them years and a lot of money to be where they are.

I’ve got to say something about corners. Vicario looks uncertain when earlier in the season I felt he was good at this aspect of his game, given that he doesn’t possess huge physical presence. But it’s wrong to focus all the attention on him. A firm low-ish ball around the packed 6-yard box is a favourite for many clubs at the moment. A lot of keepers have a problem with these. They simply do not have the time let alone the space to get to these crosses.

We don’t defend as a team in these situations. We have no presence at the near post, another reason to miss Harry as he was so effective there. We’re not a big side, and our smaller guys employed to do the blocking as part of the zonal set-up aren’t strong enough and are easily overpowered. Romero and VDV have many attributes but a standing jump without much of a run-up is not one of them. And every other team has at least one player to protect the keeper. We didn’t. Then we did. On Sunday, we didn’t again and gave two goals away at corners. Then we did in the second half when it was too late.

Mug goals, mug tactics. How on earth can we be so disorganised, so weak, so consistently. We adapted with a man to protect Vic, then on Sunday we left him exposed. I simply don’t get it. Admit it, it’s not just me who thinks, what’s the point, heart in mouth time every corner and free kick.

The same can be said for allowing teams to score so easily on the break, a regular feature of recent matches. Attention has focussed on the abilities or lack thereof of individuals – VDV against Newcastle, Davies on Sunday. But isolating a defender, any defender in the world, against a quick skilful forward is the stuff managers’ dreams are made of. Saka didn’t have to beat Davies, all he had to do was pull the ball across him because we left Davies unsupported. Again.

Anyway, that’s got that off my chest. Nobody said the rebuild would be easy. Ange made it appear it was with such a stunning opening to the season. In fact without going over this all again, it will take time, determination and clear thinking to turn around problems embedded in the club psyche, let alone our transfer policy.

Overall this season, we’re up a few points. We’re shite but 5th, a reasonable foundation to build upon. We know what the manager wants, and we all know from personal experience that we can learn from mistakes as well as successes. The question is, how willing is Ange to adapt? We are too open in midfield out of possession and rubbish at defending set-pieces, so two areas there where little apparent change has taken place despite strong reasons to act.

On the other hand, we forget how relatively inexperienced many of our players are, this is a the first season with a new manager and his very different ways. And we’ve not replaced Harry. Also, and I may be reading too much into this, but against both AFC and CFC, he altered tactics, certainly on Thursday out of possession we looked very different.

On Thursday, Ange was visibly furious at players who were not doing what they should, and yesterday’s press conference he declared, “We need change. Change has to happen.” Good. The question as always is, does the board agree with his plans? Past experience not only casts doubt over this but also tells us that the chairman does not react well to public criticism, overt or implied. Shots fired.   

Spurs Price Rises Test Loyalty to the Limit

Prices for next season up 6% and concession pricing hacked to bits. Costs have risen, I get it. But so has the club’s income, yet fans won’t receive any of the benefits. Everyone was expecting an increase, I’m not naïve. The point is, we hear how Spurs are reaping the rewards at last of financial prudence and the income from the new ground, but it seems the fans aren’t part of the equation.   

The decision to limit the number of senior concessions and the amount of the discount is disgraceful, a shameful, offhand disregard of decades of loyalty that impacts longstanding supporters, the people who have been there the longest. Good times and bad. Thick and thin. Thanks for your support. Crap football? We were there. Endless stick from fans of our London rivals? We kept coming. Now pay for it or sod off.

A reminder that not all of this is new. Last season I wrote about how the club had not only confined senior discounts to an increasingly smaller proportion of the ground but also that they had limited the number of tickets they would allocate in each section, which was not openly publicised.

They state that senior concession prices are “not sustainable”. The language is self-justificatory, a given, a fact of life. But this is deliberate obfuscation of reality, which is that they have a sum of money they can use, now and in the future, as they wish, and what they really wish, is, “if we keep the concessions, we make less money.”

With the 6% rise, when the tapered fall in the discount begins the season after the next, the club will get an extra £55.47 per season from me as I have a senior concession seat in the Park Lane. That’s less than the price of a first team shirt. Or between a third and a quarter of a premium seat. Or a tenth of the cost of one person sitting for one game in the best hospitality areas.

Here is an example of something that is sustainable, apparently. Spurs directors gave themselves a rise of almost £3million in the ending June 2022. Daniel Levy earned £3.265m in 2022, in comparison to £2.698m the previous year, while the total pocketed by Tottenham’s directors was £6.773m, up from £4m (source: The Telegraph 24.2.23). That year, Levy was the highest paid director in the PL.

But ultimately, the true indignity for supporters cannot be measured in monetary terms. Your support is wonderful, your loyalty is wonderful, and here’s what you get in return.

I’ve been talking to a lot of Spurs fans for some research. I’ve asked if they think there’s anything distinctive about being a Spurs fan. If you had to explain being a Spurs fan to someone who knows nothing about football, how would you describe us? Almost everyone includes two points in their reply: that we want to watch attacking football and that we are loyal. In our People’s History of support and supporters, Martin Cloake and I traced this back to our early days, even to the marshes when there were no stands. Away games, Europe, Tottenham Hotspur fans will turn up. Not to mention 62000 for every home game for a club that’s won a single League Cup this century. AFC fans staged protest marches to remove their most successful manager since Herbert Chapman, many CFC fans are currently apoplectic after half a poor season, yet we turn up because Tottenham Hotspur will be there.

Levy is fond of describing himself as a custodian of the club and its heritage, but the club is nothing without its supporters. This is a gross, clear-eyed attack on some of the most loyal fans not just in the club but in the UK. Me and Mal, we limp up to row 49 with our walking sticks, I’ve been coming since 67, he’s got an extra ten years on me. And come kick-off, there’s nowhere else in the world I rather be. Means nothing to the board. I’m surprised we haven’t had a email saying we should consider ourselves lucky that we have a concession at all.

Spurs fans, no differently from most fans, don’t expect too much. There is an unspoken bargain between us and the club. We’ll turn up and get behind the team, in return, give us your best. If it doesn’t work out in terms of trophies, that’s a shame but we can handle that, if you do your best. But please, behave like you appreciate we exist, and respect the heritage we hold in our hands and hearts. Not a lot to ask, but too much for the board.

When the prices were announced for the new stadium, I said at the time that the club could be creating a deep well of resentment that will stay underground while the team are doing well but could erupt at any time. The same is true today. Spurs fans are patient, goodness knows we have to be, but that resentment surfaces if it gets too much, and that does nothing to help the team or the manager. None of this is apparently part of the club’s decision-taking. It simply fuels suspicions that as far as the board are concerned, we’re not fans, we’re customer numbers. Worse, it shows that they really don’t understand us at all.

Once again, Spurs create goodwill only to chuck it all down the drain. I’m in favour of the non-football activities at the Lane, provided it doesn’t get in the way of it being a football stadium when we play, and to be fair, it doesn’t. It’s a great place to watch football. So what is the purpose of F1 karting, Pink, Pearl Jam and NFL if it doesn’t in some way benefit Spurs fans? £55.47 a year extra from me though.

And there is a broader context here. The game is changing, with the dominance of finance and the increasing influence of the perceived interests of television and the spectacle it creates. It’s impersonal, undermining fans who go to games and those who want to go but can’t afford it. We don’t want a superleague, blue cards or lengthy VAR delays, or going to Newcastle for a 12.30 kick-off for that matter. That’s if you can get a ticket, given that 20% go to premium season ticket holders. This move reinforces the view that the club doesn’t care. Somebody will sit in the seats, doesn’t matter to them who it is. The distance between club and fan, the game and the fans who love it, grows ever wider.

Still, I’ve got some good news for the board. I’m 68 now and beginning to feel it. Both my parents were dead by the time they were 70, so I guess there’s a chance of something in the genes and I won’t have too much longer. Seems obvious to me that the club are irritated by too many of us veterans living so long, and dying could be my final act of support, because my seat will become available. At full price.