COYS

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Re: COYS

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BATTLE OF THE JET ENGINES! SENIORS VS. U23s IN SECRET HOTSPUR WAY SCRIMMAGE

By: "Banging" Billy Boot, Chief Football Scribe

HOTSPUR WAY — While the world is still reeling from the financial shockwaves of the Semenyo and Joao Pedro deals, Tim Brown decided it was time to stop talking and start playing. In a move designed to test the structural integrity of his "Stealth Bomber" Senior squad, he pitted them against a U23 side that is—on paper—the most overqualified youth team in the history of the game.

Forget "friendly" atmosphere; this was a high-octane tactical war behind closed doors. Here is the exclusive "Billy Boot" breakdown of the roster depth and the ensuing carnage on Pitch 1.

THE SENIOR ROSTER: NO PASSENGERS ALLOWED
Tim Brown has finalized a Senior squad that feels like a pressurized cabin. The depth isn't just about talent; it’s about tactical roles.

The Goalmouth Dilemma: Jack Porter looks terrifyingly sharp. His reaction speed in training has been the talk of the canteen. However, Sam Lewis hasn't blinked. Lewis offers that veteran "Captains' Logic" that you can't buy at auction. It’s a dead heat for the #1 shirt.

The Defensive Architects: While John Stones and Aymeric Laporte provide the brickwork, the manager is raving about Javi Lopez and Haydon Roberts. These aren't just defenders; they are deep-lying playmakers. Their distribution allows the frontline to stay high, while Djed Spence offers the pure recovery speed needed to cover the "Jumbo Jet’s" high-altitude line.

The Engine Room: Jayden Luker has asserted himself as the premier DM. He is the "cleaner" who allows Gonçalo Guedes and Antoine Semenyo to operate as twin attacking monsters.

THE U23 SHADOW SQUAD: THE "CRABTREE" REINFORCEMENTS

If the Seniors are the Stealth Bomber, the U23s are the interceptors.

The Defensive Standard: Dropping Aaron Crabtree (Tk 22) into the youth ranks has fundamentally changed the squad's DNA. Alongside Tariq Hinds, Malachi Hardy, and Junai Byfield, the U23s are playing with a "Senior-Lite" defensive intensity.

The Midfield Laboratory: Pape Matar-Sarr and Tynan Thompson are a nightmare to press. They are joined by Dante Cassanova and the precocious 16-year-old Muslika, who looks like he could play in a tuxedo.

The Firepower: The buzz surrounding 17-year-old Oliver Boast is deafening. Partnered with Ellis Lehane, and with Dane Scarlett and Archie Griffiths waiting in the wings, this youth team is built for high-scoring routs.

MATCH REPORT: SENIORS 3 - 1 U23s

The Scrimmage of Secrets

First Half: The Semenyo Surge

The Seniors started in a 4-5-1 P, looking to dominate the ball. Within ten minutes, the 202m man Antoine Semenyo showed exactly why Tim Brown broke the bank. Receiving a ball from J_Lopez, Semenyo turned Theo Adelusi inside out and rifled a shot past Blake Irow into the top corner.

The U23s, however, didn't fold. Pape Matar-Sarr dictated play from deep, eventually finding Oliver Boast. The 17-year-old didn't show the Seniors any respect, nutmegging Aymeric Laporte before forcing a world-class save from Jack Porter.

Second Half: Pedro’s Samba & The Youth Fightback

Brown shuffled the deck, bringing Joao Pedro into the fray. Pedro’s chemistry with Désiré Doué was instantaneous. Doué’s vision found Pedro's ghosting run for the second, before Vladyslav Supriaha—reveling in his permanent status—tucked away a third after a defensive mix-up.

The U23s got a deserved consolation late on. Tynan Thompson won the ball in the middle and played a 40-yard peach to Oliver Boast, who composed himself to slot past Sam Lewis.

THE MANAGER’S NOTEBOOK: TIM BROWN’S TAKE

"The scoreline doesn't matter. What matters is the reaction. Seeing Oliver Boast score against our senior keepers tells me the future is secure. Seeing Jack Porter and Sam Lewis pushing each other to making saves they have no business making? That’s what I wanted. We have two squads here capable of beating almost anyone. Now, we take this intensity into the first game of the season."

PULSE OF N17: SOCIAL MEDIA BUZZ

@LukerLoyalist: "Jayden Luker as the starting senior DM is the move. He looks so calm on the ball. The Jumbo Jet is fueled! ⛽⚪️ #COYS"

@BoastWatch: "Oliver Boast scoring against the Senior backline at 17? This kid is a problem. A big, big problem. 🌟"

@PorterProtector: "Reports say Jack Porter was a cat in that scrimmage. Lewis has the experience, but Porter is the future. Hardest choice in football right now! 🧤"

@SemenyoSzn: "202m well spent. Antoine looked like a man playing against boys out there. Pure power. 🇬🇭🚀"
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Re: COYS

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TYNESIDE TRAGEDY: SPURS STALL AT THE GATES
By Barry "The Brick" Bazza – Voice of the Shelf Side

Well, there we have it. The "New Look Spurs" arrived in Newcastle with a plan so defensive it would make a tortoise look reckless. Tim Brown set us up with five at the back, presumably hoping the Magpies would just get bored and go home. It didn't work. We spent 90 minutes chasing shadows in the rain, and I’m already looking for the receipt for my season ticket.

THE GATES OPEN

From the opening whistle, Christopher Nkunku treated our backline like training cones. Jack Porter did his best, tipping an early effort around the post, but the pressure was relentless. In the 26th minute, the inevitable happened: Djed Spence was left for dead, and Nkunku smashed home a pile-driver. The defense had gone "walk about," and we were chasing the game before we’d even had a shot.

THE POST-CODE LOTTERY

We had our chances to make it a contest. Our "returning hero" Vladyslav Supriaha was desperate to haunt his old club. He forced a save early on and then, in the 40th minute, unleashed a strike that had the keeper beaten all ends up—only to see it rattle the woodwork. If that goes in, it’s a different story. Instead, it was just another "what if" for the Spurs travel diary.

SUBS, SQUEAKY BUMS, AND SHUTOUTS

Brown tried to change things, throwing on Kevin De Bruyne and Desire Doue to find a spark. Doue actually had a golden opportunity when the Newcastle keeper let the ball slip through his legs, but the ball drifted agonizingly wide. The misery was compounded in the 81st minute when Lesley Ugochukwu showed a bit of trickery, nutmegged his man, and fired in off the post to seal our fate. 2-0, game over, and a very long drive back to London.

SPURS PLAYER RATINGS

Jack Porter (GK) – 7.5: Made nine saves. Without him, this would have been a cricket score.
John Stones (DF) – 5.0: Part of a back five that looked more like a back "none". Subbed after an hour.
Aymeric Laporte (DF) – 6.0: Made one goal-saving tackle on Nkunku. Our best defender before he came off.
Djed Spence (DF) – 4.0: A nightmare day. Beaten for the first goal and nutmegged for the second.
Julio Lopez (DF) – 5.5: Struggled to contain the pace on the wings.
Harvey Roberts (DF) – 5.0: Busy, but ultimately ineffective against the Toon onslaught.
Antoine Semenyo (AM) – 6.0: Showed flashes of pace on his debut and forced a save.
Jayden Luker (MF) – 5.0: The game bypassed him a bit before he was replaced by De Bruyne.
Goncalo Guedes (AM) – 6.5: The most creative spark we had, recorded two key passes.
Vladyslav Supriaha (FW) – 7.0 (MOTM): Hit the post and looked the most likely to score against his former employers.
Joao Pedro (FW) – 5.0: Tried a bicycle kick that hit the advertising boards. Not his day.
SUBS:Desire Doue (FW) – 5.5: Brought energy and nearly scored a freak goal.
Kevin De Bruyne (AM) – 5.0: Couldn't find the killer ball in his 30-minute cameo.
Matty Cash (DF) – 5.0: Came on for Laporte but couldn't stop the second goal.

FANZINE MAN OF THE MATCH: VLADYSLAV SUPRIAHAHe played with heart against his old side and was inches away from an equalizer. At least someone looked like they wanted to be there
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Re: COYS

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BAGGIE SHAMBLES: SPURS SERVED A HOME HUMBLE PIE
By Barry "The Brick" Bazza – Still fuming in the Seven Sisters Road

TOTTENHAM HOTSPUR 0 - 1 WEST BROMWICH ALBION
Scorer: Adedeji (51)

If you’d told me on Friday morning that I’d spend my evening watching Tottenham Hotspur—a team supposedly chasing promotion—get tactically outmaneuvered by a West Brom side that most pundits picked to finish in the bottom half, I’d have laughed in your face. Now? I’m just staring at my pint wondering where it all went wrong.

Tim Brown’s home debut was meant to be a statement of intent. Instead, it was a statement of "incompetence." We welcomed Neil Rowley’s Baggies to the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, expecting a goal-fest. What we got was a masterclass in frustration, missed sitters, and a defensive lapse that cost us the world.

FIRST HALF: A COMEDY OF ERRORS

The game started with Spurs looking reasonably lively. Goncalo Guedes, who was arguably the only man in white who looked like he’d actually seen a football before, was pulling the strings early on. He set up Joao Pedro in the 4th minute, only for the lad to be bundled over by Quina Castro. In any other stadium, with any other ref, that’s a penalty. But Anthony Taylor just looked at his assistant, shrugged, and told everyone to keep running. Typical.

We had chances. Goncalo Guedes forced a smart save from Joe Whitworth, and Herbie James rose like a salmon in the 35th minute, only to head it wide when it looked easier to score. But the warning signs were there. West Brom weren't just here for the scenery. Jack Clarke was terrorizing Djed Spence, and Aari Whites—who, let’s be honest, played like prime Cafu today—was grazing our crossbar before the break.

THE MOMENT THE LIGHTS WENT OUT

The second half started with a yellow card for Jayden Luker for a body check that was more "Ice Hockey" than "Premier League." And then, in the 51st minute, it happened.

Aari Whites, the Man of the Match and the bane of my existence, played a beautiful ball through to Joshua Adedeji. Our defense stood there like they were waiting for a bus, and Adedeji slotted it past Jack Porter with the coolness of a man buying a Sunday paper. 1-0 to the Baggies. Silence in the North Stand.

THE PANIC STATIONS

To be fair to the gaffer, Tim Brown didn't wait around. He rang the changes on the hour mark. Off went the struggling Luker and James; on came the "Big Guns"—Kevin De Bruyne and the young spark Desire Doue.

Suddenly, it was a siege. We had ten attempts on goal. Vladyslav Supriaha—who clearly forgot his shooting boots in Newcastle—hit the side netting and then clipped the post. Desire Doue had a header hit the outside of the woodwork. It felt like there was a magnetic field around the West Brom goal.

In the dying minutes, we threw the kitchen sink, the microwave, and the toaster at them. Harry Winks came on and forced a world-class tip-over from Whitworth. We had corners, we had scrambles, we had Joao Pedro smashing shots into defenders' shins. But when the whistle blew, the scoreboard still read 0-1.

We had 17 key passes to their 8. We had more corners. We had "better" players. But West Brom had the goal, and we had nothing but a cold walk to the station.

SPURS PLAYER RATINGS

Jack Porter (GK) – 6.5: Couldn't do much about the goal. Made a few decent saves to keep it at one, but his distribution was "long and hopeful."

Aymeric Laporte (DF) – 6.0: Had a deft touch in the first half but looked sluggish when West Brom broke at pace.

Djed Spence (DF) – 5.5: Won a few tackles, but Jack Clarke gave him a right run-around. Still looks like he’s playing with his shoelaces tied together.

Julio Lopez (DF) – 5.0: Hooked at 60 minutes. Didn't offer much going forward or back.

Harvey Roberts (DF) – 6.0: One of the better defenders today. Won his headers and tried to spark a bit of life into the flank.

Antoine Semenyo (AM) – 5.5: A quiet afternoon for the debutant. Struggled to find space in a congested West Brom midfield.

Jayden Luker (DM/MF) – 4.5: Got a yellow card, got body-checked, and then got substituted. A day to forget.

Herbie James (MF) – 5.5: Missed a massive headed chance in the first half. Needs to be more clinical if he’s going to keep De Bruyne on the bench.

Goncalo Guedes (AM) – 7.5 (SPURS MOTM): The only bright spark. Three key passes and two shots on target. He deserved better teammates today.

Vladyslav Supriaha (FW) – 5.0: Two big chances, zero goals. The "returning hero" narrative is wearing thin if he can't hit the target.

Joao Pedro (FW) – 5.5: Busy, but wasteful. His 89th-minute shot was deflected wide when he had time to pick a corner.

THE SUBS:

Desire Doue (FW) – 6.5: Impact sub. Hit the post and forced a save. Should probably start next week.

Kevin De Bruyne (AM) – 6.0: Provided one great cross for Joao Pedro. Still looks like he’s playing at 60% fitness.

Harry Winks (AM) – 6.0: Nearly saved the day with a late header.

Matty Cash (DF) – 5.5: Came on to allow us to move to a back four, but the damage was already done.

FANZINE MAN OF THE MATCH: GONCALO GUEDES
While everyone else was panicking, Guedes was actually trying to play football. He’s like a chef trying to cook a five-star meal with ingredients from a petrol station.

Bazza’s Parting Shot: "Zero points from two games. We’re officially in a 'transition period,' which is football-speak for 'we're a bit rubbish at the moment.' Sort it out, Tim!"
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Re: COYS

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DARLO DELIGHT: SPURS SMASH FIVE PAST TEN-MAN QUAKERS

By Barry "The Brick" Bazza – Thinking of retiring in County Durham

DARLINGTON 0 - 5 TOTTENHAM HOTSPUR

Scorers: James (20), Semenyo (31), Doue (41, 60), Luker (75)

Forget the banana skin; we didn't just avoid it, we kicked it into the North Sea. After two miserable league defeats, Tim Brown finally got his "Spurs Seniors" to play like they actually knew each other. We headed to Blackwell Meadows for the first leg of this League Cup tie, and by the 90th minute, I was actually checking the scoreboard to make sure I wasn't dreaming. David Gooch had been moaning about his Darlington side's chances all week, and his players clearly got the memo. They were more hospitable than a B&B owner, especially after K_Griffiths decided to get himself sent off inside 16 minutes for two yellows. From then on, it was less of a match and more of a shooting gallery.

THE "BRUYNE" REVOLUTION

Tim Brown finally bit the bullet and gave Kevin De Bruyne and Desire Doue the starts we’ve been screaming for. It transformed us. KDB was pulling strings like a puppet master, ending the night with five key passes. The floodgates opened in the 20th minute. Jayden Luker—who was a man possessed today—threaded a pass through to Henry James, who powered home a diving header. Ten minutes later, Antoine Semenyo doubled the lead with a bicycle kick that actually hit the back of the net instead of the corner flag.

DOUE’S DOUBLE AND A LUKER LATE-SHOW

The man of the moment, however, was Desire Doue. He got his first in the 41st minute when a cross literally hit him on the backside and rebounded in. Hey, they all count! He added a much more intentional second on the hour mark, hammering home a pass from Semenyo to make it 4-0. To top off a perfect night, Jayden Luker—who I’ve been critical of lately—smashed one in off the post in the 75th minute. We had 34 attempts on goal. 34! If we’d been more clinical, we could have hit double figures. Darlington’s backup keeper, L_McGrath, made 16 saves after their starter went off injured, or it really would have been a massacre.

SPURS PLAYER RATINGS

Jack Porter (GK) – 7.5: Had a quiet night but stood tall when called upon, making six saves. Even showed off with a header to clear a ball.

Aymeric Laporte (DF) – 6.5: Solid for the hour he played. Darlington’s attack was so non-existent he could have played in his slippers.

John Stones (DF) – 7.0: Played the full 90 and kept things tidy at the back.

Julio Lopez (DF) – 6.5: Won his tackles and kept the clean sheet intact.

Matty Cash (DF) – 6.0: Got a yellow card for a silly foul , but offered a good outlet going forward.

Antoine Semenyo (MF) – 8.5: A goal and an assist. Finally showing the form that got us excited in pre-season.

Jayden Luker (MF) – 8.5: A goal, an assist, and five key passes. A complete turnaround from his league form.

Henry James (MF) – 8.0: Scored the opener and worked tirelessly.

Kevin De Bruyne (MF) – 8.0: The maestro was back. Five key passes and an assist. He makes this team tick.

Desire Doue (FW) – 9.5 (MOTM): Two goals and ten attempts on goal. He was a constant nightmare for the Darlington defense.

Joao Pedro (FW) – 7.0: Nine shots but no goal. He’ll be frustrated, but his movement created space for everyone else.

THE SUBS:Djed Spence (DF) – 6.5: Replaced Laporte and kept the intensity high.

Goncalo Guedes (MF) – 7.0: Came on for the final 30 and provided four key passes.

Kaj Sierhuis (FW) – 6.0: Hit the post and missed a sitter. Needs to find his shooting boots.

FANZINE MAN OF THE MATCH: DESIRE DOUE

He’s exactly what we’ve been missing. Direct, hungry, and has a knack for being in the right place (even if it's his backside). Tim, keep him in the starting XI for the league!

Bazza’s Parting Shot: "Darlo away? Easy. Now let's see if we can do that against a team with eleven men in the league!"
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Re: COYS

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DARLO DEADLOCK: SPURS COAST INTO NEXT ROUND AFTER STADIUM STALEMATE

By Barry "The Brick" Bazza – Trying to find the excitement in a 0-0

TOTTENHAM HOTSPUR 0 - 0 DARLINGTON(Tottenham Hotspur win 5-0 on aggregate)

Well, if you came to the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium tonight expecting a repeat of the five-goal mauling we handed out in the first leg, I hope you kept your receipt. In what can only be described as a "professional" (read: slightly boring) performance, Spurs safely navigated the second leg of this League Cup tie with a goalless draw that saw us cruise through 5-0 on aggregate. Tim Brown shuffled the pack after the dominant away win, handing starts to Harry Winks, V_Supriaha, and Kaj Sierhuis. While the goals didn't flow like they did at Blackwell Meadows, the job was done with minimum fuss and—most importantly—no fresh injury concerns.

A TALE OF TWO KEEPERS

The first half was a frustrating affair. Harry Winks was busy in the engine room, spraying passes and nearly catching P_Jameson out with a skillful early effort. Desire Doue, clearly still hungry from his brace in the first leg, rattled the crossbar in the 10th minute with a delicate chip that deserved better. Darlington, for all of David Gooch’s pre-match fuming, actually showed a bit of fight. C_Main forced a fantastic save out of Jack Porter just before the break, reminding everyone that even a 5-0 lead requires a bit of concentration. The second half followed a similar pattern. Brown rang the changes on the hour, bringing on Kevin De Bruyne and O_Watkins to try and find a winner on the night. Doue hit the post with a cheeky lob , and John Stones had to produce a heroic goal-line clearance in the 90th minute to deny Darlington a consolation prize they probably deserved for their travel efforts.

POST-MATCH INTERVIEWS: THE GAFFER & THE GRUMBLER

Tim Brown (Spurs Manager):"Look, we did the hard work in the first leg. Tonight was about game management and giving minutes to the lads who needed them. We hit the woodwork twice, and on another day, it's 2-0 or 3-0. But a clean sheet and progress to the next round? I’ll take that every day of the week. We're starting to find our rhythm."

David Gooch (Darlington Manager):"I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again—this whole setup is a nonsense. We’re a club that shouldn't even be forced to compete at this level against these resources. My boys played with heart tonight and kept a clean sheet against a team that probably spends more on socks than we do on our entire stadium. We leave with our heads held high, even if the system is rigged against us."

SPURS PLAYER RATINGS

Jack Porter (GK) – 7.5: Kept his focus during long periods of inactivity. That save from Main in the 43rd minute was top-tier.
Djed Spence (DF) – 6.5: Busy on the flank and put in a solid 65 minutes before being rotated.
Aymeric Laporte (DF) – 7.0: Handled everything Darlington threw at him with ease. A class act at the back.
John Stones (DF) – 8.0: Saved the clean sheet with that last-minute clearance. Real captain’s contribution.
Harvey Roberts (DF) – 6.5: Solid, dependable, and did exactly what was asked of him.
Antoine Semenyo (MF) – 6.0: Not quite as explosive as his first-leg performance, but worked hard for the team.
Harry Winks (MF) – 7.5: Sprayed the ball around well and was the heart of our creative play in the first half.
Herbie James (MF) – 6.0: Put in a shift but struggled to find the killer final ball before being subbed for KDB.
Desire Doue (FW) – 7.0: Hit the woodwork twice. On another night, he walks away with another match ball.
V_Supriaha (FW) – 6.5: Linked play well but lacked that clinical edge tonight.
Kaj_Sierhuis (FW) – 8.0 (SPURS MOTM): He was a constant thorn in Darlington’s side. Three shots on target and led the line brilliantly.

THE SUBS:
Kevin De Bruyne (MF) – 6.5: Showed glimpses of quality in his 31-minute cameo.
Ollie Watkins (FW) – 6.0: Didn't get much of a sight of goal but kept the defenders busy.
Matty Cash (DF) – 7.0: Came on and immediately improved the defensive stability.
Goncalo Guedes (MF) – 6.5: Brought some late energy to a tiring midfield.

FANZINE MAN OF THE MATCH: KAJ SIERHUIS
In a game where the regular stars were a bit quiet, Sierhuis stood up. He worked the keeper more than anyone else and deserved a goal for his efforts.

Bazza’s Parting Shot: "It wasn't a thriller, but we're in the hat for the next round. Now let's take this momentum back into the league and stop making me cry into my Bovril
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FIRST MINUTE FLOP: TEN-MAN SPURS SINK AGAIN AT COVENTRY

By Barry "The Brick" Bazza – Writing this from a service station on the M6

COVENTRY CITY 1 - 0 TOTTENHAM HOTSPUR

Scorer: Wright (23)

I don't believe it. I actually don't believe it. You wait all week, you pack your thermals for a Wednesday night trip to Coventry, you set up in a pragmatic, no-nonsense 5-3-2 formation, and the tactical blueprint is thrown into the nearest bin after literally sixty seconds. First minute. One single minute on the referee's watch. Coventry's Brandon Thomas-Asante breaks clear , and Haydon Roberts decides the best course of action is to completely haul him down. Straight red card. Cheers, Haydon, son. My pie hadn't even cooled down and we were playing the entire match with ten men away from home. Three league games, three defeats, and zero points on the board. I am sick to the back teeth.

THE WALL AND THE WRIGHT BLOW

To give credit where it's due, the remaining ten lads dug in. Destiny Udogie was a monster at the back, putting in a performance that belongs in a much better team. He made four key tackles and single-handedly cut out about three certain goals from Thomas-Asante and Haji Wright. But you can only plug a leaky dam for so long. In the 23st minute, the pressure told. Joao Palhinha found Haji Wright , who unleashed a low curler through the rain. Jack Porter got a fingertip to it, but it wasn't enough. 1-0 to the Sky Blues. At that point, the away end collectively sighed. We've seen this script before.

THE MISSED SITTERS AND LATE HEARTBREAK

The worst part is, we actually had the chances to steal a point. Joao Pedro and Vladyslav Supriaha both had sniffs in the first half but kept firing over the bar. In the second half, Tim Brown tried everything. He threw on Desire Doue and Kaj Sierhuis to try and find a miracle. Doue actually had the ball on a plate from a Goncalo Guedes cross in the 78th minute. He hit the post , followed it up, and somehow put the rebound wide of an empty net. I nearly dropped my flask. To compound our absolute misery, Jayden Luker was carried off motionless in the 88th minute with a nasty-looking injury. So not only do we leave with zero points, we leave with a suspended defender and a crocked midfielder. Brilliant. Just brilliant.

POST-MATCH INTERVIEWS

Tim Brown (Spurs Manager):"The red card after one minute completely changes the parameters of what we wanted to do here today. Haydon knows he made a mistake, and it left us with a mountain to climb. I have to praise Destiny [Udogie] and the boys for their resilience, and on another day, Desire [Doue] scores that equalizer at the end. We are having a terrible run of luck, but we have to keep believing."

Will Schoolar (Coventry Manager):"When the opposition goes down to ten men so early, it can actually make things harder because they sit deep. But Haji [Wright] took his goal brilliantly, and we managed the game well. Tottenham are a good side experiencing a tough spell, but we fully deserved the three points tonight.

"SPURS PLAYER RATINGS

Jack Porter (GK) – 7.0: Made eight saves to keep us in the contest. Couldn't do much about Wright's clinical finish.
Djed Spence (DF) – 6.0: Put in plenty of legwork down the flank but lacked quality when crossing.
Destiny Udogie (DF) – 8.5 (SPURS MOTM): Absolutely magnificent. Four key tackles and read the game like a veteran to bail out Stones and Lopez.
John Stones (DF) – 5.0: Struggled with the movement of Coventry’s front two before being hooked on 63 minutes.
Haydon Roberts (DF) – 0.0: Sent off after 60 seconds. Ruined the night for the fans, his teammates, and the gaffer. Absolute shocker.
Javi Lopez (DF) – 5.5: Moved to a central role after the red card. Tried a cheeky effort that was tipped over, but looked shaky defensively.
Antoine Semenyo (MF) – 5.5: Subbed early in the second half. The tactical shift meant he spent the night defending rather than creating.
Jayden Luker (MF) – 6.0: Worked hard to anchor the ten men before stretchered off late with an injury. Fingers crossed for the lad.
Goncalo Guedes (MF) – 6.5: Provided two absolute silver-plated chances in the second half that should have been converted.
Vladyslav Supriaha (FW) – 5.0: Missed a decent opening and was substituted as we chased the game with fresh legs.
Joao Pedro (FW) – 5.0: Had two bites at the cherry in the first half but lacked his usual composure.

THE SUBS:

Desire Doue (MF) – 5.0: How did he miss that open goal after hitting the post? A vital miss.
Kaj Sierhuis (FW) – 6.0: Ran hard and tried to make a nuisance of himself.
Herbie James (MF) – 5.5: Came on to shore up the midfield after Semenyo left.
Matty Cash (DF) – 6.0: Replaced Stones and brought a bit of stability.
Aaron Maguire (MF) – N/A: A late four-minute cameo for the injured Luker.

FANZINE MAN OF THE MATCH:

DESTINY UDOGIE The only man who can hold his head high. Without his tracking back and crucial interceptions, Coventry would have hit us for four or five.

Bazza’s Parting Shot: "Three games, zero points, one red card, and an injury. If anyone needs me, I'll be staring blankly at the wall until Saturday."
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BOSTON BASHTON: THREE-FRONT SPURS SMASH NON-LEAGUE PILGRIMS

By Barry "The Brick" Bazza – Celebrating with a lukewarm pie in Lincolnshire


BOSTON UNITED 0 - 3 TOTTENHAM HOTSPUR

Scorers: James (9), Doue (45), Sierhuis (79)

Now that is how you bounce back from an absolute horror show! After watching our tactical blueprint get thrown into a Coventry wheelie bin last Wednesday, I’ll admit I had the right jitters about a trip to the Jakemans Community Stadium. Non-league opposition, Round Two of the League Cup, away from home—it had "embarrassing headline" written all over it. But fair play to the gaffer. Tim Brown clearly lost his rag after the Coventry flop. He dropped Haydon Roberts completely, bit the bullet, and went for a gung-ho 4-3-3 with three proper forwards up front. The result? Absolute dominance. We controlled 60% of the ball, peppered their goal with 19 attempts, and frankly, if their keeper hadn't played like prime Lev Yashin, we’d have hit them for six.

HERBIE HITS THE MARVEL

The game started at a frantic pace, and it took us just nine minutes to silence the home crowd. Herbie James, who was the best player on the park today by a country mile, danced past a challenge like he was playing in the park and unleashed a rocket. The ball moved through the air, completely deceived Louie Chadwick, and flew into the back of the net. 1-0, and you could hear the collective sigh of relief from the traveling support. Boston tried to fight back, and Jack Porter had to earn his money by tipping a fierce Regan Coyle drive around the post. Our defense looked a lot sturdier with Destiny Udogie clearing everything in sight, and Javi Lopez putting in some crunching tackles before the break. Just as the referee was looking at his watch for half-time, we doubled our money. Joao Pedro turned provider, slipping a neat pass into Desire Doue. The Boston defense had completely gone to sleep, leaving Doue all alone to coolly dink it over the oncoming keeper. 2-0 at the break, and the Bovril tasted a whole lot sweeter.

KAJ SEALS THE COLD NIGHT

With the game comfortably in the bag, Brown rotated heavily on the hour mark. Off came James and Doue, and on came Kevin De Bruyne and Kaj Sierhuis to stretch their legs. Boston’s Kian Donnelly hit the woodwork to give us a brief scare, but we put the contest completely to bed in the 79th minute. Joao Pedro grabbed his second assist of the evening, spraying a cross-field pass to Kaj Sierhuis. The Dutch forward didn't look up, thumping a first-time effort that rattled off the post and flew into the back of the net. 3-0, clean sheet, and job done.

POST-MATCH INTERVIEWS: THE VIEW FROM THE DUGOUT

Tim Brown (Spurs Manager):"We needed a reaction after Coventry, and the boys delivered. Changing to three up front was a risk, but we wanted to assert ourselves early. Herbie [James] set the tone with a fantastic goal, and I thought our game management in the second half was top-class. We respect Boston, but we had to show our pedigree today."

Daniel Mason (Boston United Manager):"Look, we’re disappointed with the scoreline, but I can't fault the lads' effort. When you give a side of Tottenham's quality that much space, they punish you. Chadwick was brilliant in goal today, but we just couldn't find that clinical edge when we had our brief spells. We wish them the best in the next leg."

SPURS PLAYER RATINGS

Jack Porter (GK) – 8.0: Made seven saves and looked completely in command of his box. A welcome clean sheet.
Aymeric Laporte (DF) – 7.0: Much better from the veteran. Unlucky not to score with a header that was tipped onto the post.
Destiny Udogie (DF) – 7.5: Rock solid. Hoisted the ball clear whenever Boston threatened and read the game beautifully.
John Stones (DF) – 6.5: Had a relatively quiet evening but kept the non-league forwards at arm's length.
Javi Lopez (DF) – 7.0: Played 65 minutes of solid, no-nonsense football. Made three key tackles to stop the Pilgrims in their tracks.
Antoine Semenyo (MF) – 6.0: Worked hard on the flank but still looks like he's searching for his absolute top gear.
Herbie James (MF) – 9.0 (SPURS MOTM): Sensational. A brilliant goal, four key passes, and an assist. He ran the show.
Goncalo Guedes (MF) – 7.5: Provided six key passes and was a constant creative outlet in the middle of the park.
Desire Doue (FW) – 8.0: Netted a beautiful dink right before half-time and looked a threat whenever he broke forward.
Vladyslav Supriaha (FW) – 6.0: Led the line well for an hour but didn't get the clear sight of goal he was craving.
Joao Pedro (FW) – 8.5: Didn't get on the scoresheet but bagged two top-tier assists for Doue and Sierhuis.

THE SUBS:

Kaj Sierhuis (FW) – 7.5: Came on for the final half-hour and wrapped things up with a cracking finish off the woodwork.
Ollie Watkins (FW) – 6.5: Brought fresh energy to the front line and forced a smart save from Chadwick.
Matty Cash (DF) – 6.5: Replaced Javi Lopez and shored things up nicely, making a vital interception.
Kevin De Bruyne (MF) – 6.0: A comfortable 31-minute cameo to keep his fitness ticking over.

FANZINE MAN OF THE MATCH:

HERBIE JAMES

It has to be Herbie. His early goal settled all the pre-match nerves in the away stand, and he dictated the tempo of the entire first half. Class above.

Bazza’s Parting Shot: "Three goals, a clean sheet, and into the driver's seat for the second leg. Let’s take this three-pronged attack back into the league and start getting some proper points on the board, Tim!"
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Re: COYS

Post by Timbro »

BOSTON BOOTED: SENIORS STROLL INTO THE NEXT ROUND
By Barry "The Brick" Bazza – Celebrating with a kebab that doesn't taste like defeat

TOTTENHAM HOTSPUR 2 - 0 BOSTON UNITED
(Tottenham Hotspur win 5-0 on aggregate)

Scorers: Doue (46), Joao Pedro (89)

Well, bless my soul, we’ve actually gone and won a football match at home without causing me a minor cardiac arrest. After that absolute horror show away at Coventry, our seniors welcomed Daniel Mason’s Boston United to the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium for the second leg of this League Cup tie. We were already carrying a massive three-goal cushion from our brilliant 3-0 masterclass in the first leg, but Tim Brown's side didn't just sit on it; they went out, kept a clean sheet, and put these Pilgrims to the sword.

Brown shook up the line-up slightly, handing starts to Kaj Sierhuis and Matty Cash, while Jayden Luker managed to shake off that knock from Wednesday to anchor the midfield. We didn't completely dominate the ball—Boston actually had 51% possession—but when it came to premium quality, we had them trapped in our back pocket all evening.

A FRUSTRATING FIRST HALF
The first 45 minutes were a bit of a slow burner, the kind that makes you want to check your phone to see if anything else is happening. Boston’s F_Maggin gave us a brief scare in the 3rd minute when he hit the crossbar, but after that, our defensive wall of John Stones and Djed Spence completely shut the shop.

At the other end, we were knocking on the door but forgot the key. Matty Cash forced a fantastic point-blank save from L_Chadwick, and Kevin De Bruyne—who looked much sharper today—played a delightful ball to Kaj Sierhuis, only for the striker to lob it over the bar. Vladyslav Supriaha also had a couple of bites at the cherry, but his shooting boots seemed to be on the wrong feet before the interval.

THE DESIRE BREAKTHROUGH
Whatever Tim Brown said during the halftime tea break, I want a gallon of it. Literally one minute after the restart, Henry James nodded a beautiful ball into the path of Desire Doue. The young Frenchman—who has been my favorite player this month—latched onto it, left the Boston defense napping, and coolly nutmegged the keeper to make it 1-0.

Once we got the goal, Brown immediately ordered the lads to switch to a more conservative, counter-attacking shape. It frustrated Boston completely, and their afternoon went from bad to worse when Maggin had to be stretchered off with a nasty injury.

JOAO PEDRO PUNCTUATES THE TIE
With the tie completely secure on aggregate, Brown started rotating his assets for Saturday, throwing on Antoine Semenyo, Aymeric Laporte, and Joao Pedro to stretch their legs.

The final bit of magic came in the 89th minute. Doue turned provider, tracking a loose ball on the edge of the area and slipping it through to Joao Pedro. Pedro didn't need a second invitation—he rifled a devastating strike into the top corner, ripped his shirt off in front of the South Stand, and secured a thoroughly deserved 2-0 win on the night. 5-0 on aggregate, into the hat we go!

POST-MATCH INTERVIEWS
Tim Brown (Spurs Manager):

"It was a very professional performance today. We knew Boston would try to be physical, but the boys stayed disciplined. Desire [Doue] took his goal brilliantly right after the break, which allowed us to manage our legs and control the geometry of the tie after our 3-0 result in the first leg. Keeping a clean sheet after the disappointment mid-week was vital. We are building confidence in the cups; now we just need to translate this exact grit into our league campaign."

Daniel Mason (Boston United Manager):

"We gave it everything we had, but the gulf in resource and quality told across both legs. Trying to contain Doue or stopping Pedro when they've already hit us for three away from home is a massive ask for a club of our size. The goal right at the start of the second half killed our remaining belief. We wish Tottenham the best in the next round."

SPURS PLAYER RATINGS
Jack Porter (GK) – 7.5: Kept his focus beautifully. Made five saves, including a smart stop from Dylan Hill, and claimed every cross that came into his box.

Matty Cash (DF) – 7.0: An energetic display down the wing. Forced a world-class save in the first half and locked down his flank defensively.

Djed Spence (DF) – 7.0: Much better from Djed today. Three key passes and a brilliant tackle on Donnelly early on to set the tone.

John Stones (DF) – 6.5: Looked comfortable against Boston's long-ball strategy. Kept things tidy for the full 90.

Julio Lopez (DF) – 6.0: Did a solid, no-nonsense job for an hour before being rotated for Laporte to save his hamstrings.

Kevin De Bruyne (MF) – 7.5: The Belgian maestro was orchestrating the play today. Two key passes, including that delicious ball that should have resulted in a Sierhuis goal.

Jayden Luker (MF) – 7.0: Incredible recovery to make the pitch today. Put in two crucial tackles and a massive block to deny a Boston break.

Henry James (MF) – 7.0: Provided the perfect, headed assist for Doue’s opener and covered a mountain of grass.

Desire Doue (FW) – 9.5 (SPURS MOTM): Absolutely phenomenal. A gorgeous nutmeg goal, a late assist for Pedro, and he was the undisputed Man of the Match across this tie.

Vladyslav Supriaha (FW) – 5.5: Ran hard but lacked a clinical edge, missing a golden opportunity after hitting the post. Subbed on 61 minutes.

Kaj Sierhuis (FW) – 6.0: Led the line with a physical presence but was guilty of blazing a premium De Bruyne pass over the bar.

THE SUBS:

Aymeric Laporte (DF) – 6.5: Replaced Lopez and shored up the backline flawlessly for the final half-hour.

Antoine Semenyo (MF) – 6.0: Picked up a silly yellow card for a rash challenge but kept the midfield energy high.

O_Watkins (FW) – 6.0: Had a curling effort clip the outside of the post.

Joao Pedro (FW) – 7.5: Came on, looked hungry, and scored an absolute thunderbolt in the 89th minute to wrap up the evening.

FANZINE MAN OF THE MATCH: DESIRE DOUE
A goal, an assist, and total devastation for the Boston fullbacks over 180 minutes of football. He’s the undisputed star of this cup run.

Bazza’s Parting Shot: "5-0 on aggregate, safe passage secured, and no extra time needed. Now let's carry this exact energy into the league this weekend, Tim!"
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