Oct
31
2007

Juande Ramos, Ramon Monchi, Martin Jol and Damien Comolli – a synthesis

Written by Hugo Steckelmacher

Damien Comolli & Martin Jol

If you North Londoners poke your heads out of your window this evening only to encounter the terrifyingly pathetic sight of a six foot ogre bawling his eyes out, you won’t be dreaming, you won’t have accidentally turned on your much-thumbed copy of the Shrek 2 DVD, and it won’t be because it’s Halloween. It will be none other than Jolly Martin, still trying to recover from the progressive humiliation suffered in the hands of the Spurs board.

In what may well be my last Soccerlens article for a while, I’d like to take a giant leap away from La Liga – okay, more like a baby step – and investigate the path of Juande Ramos, Del Nido’s deserter extreme, as he seeks to launch my hapless Tottenham into the upper echelons of English and European football. And above all, I’d like to examine the credentials of the man deemed Spurs’ 1829399th Messiah.

Whilst the legal battle between Spurs and Sevilla rages on – don’t expect a resolution any time soon – the homilies continue to pour forth from Spain about Tottenham’s multimillion pound manager. Freddy Kanoute, formerly a Spurs player (and let’s pray that we’re not about to do a Newcastle/Solano or a Birmingham/Johnson by buying back the Malian for three times the amount for which we sold him), was unwavering in his praise for his former manager. Kanoute was quoted as saying the following:

“He just gave me confidence since I’ve been here. He has always given me the confidence I needed and that’s it. He just said to me that I have to play how I know my best. He gave me quite a lot of freedom on the pitch also to do whatever I want.

“Maybe this is someone who is on the pitch, who works on the pitch every day. He’s there to give advice. He’s very serious in his job and he’s not the kind of man who likes to speak a lot about his job, but he’s doing it well.”

Now, before the start of the season, the general media were falling over themselves to proclaim Tottenham as challengers for fourth spot, citing the strength in depth and the calibre of a bunch of surely maturing youngsters, such as the unstoppable (if you don’t start running, then you can’t be stopped…) Jermaine Jenas. If we stubbornly stick with this view, then there’s no problem – Ramos is a proven man-manager (we hope that he is good enough even to get Berbatov in order), a stickler for discipline and a great tactician, and he will surely get the most out of such a talented group.

However, and this is a galling thought, perhaps the Spurs squad simply isn’t as good as it is billed to be. It is entirely possible that instead of underachieving over the last two seasons when failing to nab fourth spot, we have instead been overachieving. Ramos is of course no slouch, and will not necessarily require world superstars in order to build a successful team. Indeed, Ramos managed to revolutionize a Rayo Vallecano side who had never played in Europe, taking the club first to the Primera Liga and then qualifying them for their first ever foray into the UEFA Cup – clearly Ramos has the ability to maximise the talents of his players.

However, at Sevilla, where he has enjoyed the greatest amount of success, Ramos was able to rely on a constant stream of excellent signings, courtesy of the hard work, eye for talent and business know-how of Ramón Rodríguez Monchi. The BBC’s coverage of the news has been comparatively extensive, and they were the only high-profile Sports site to mention by name, albeit a brief mention, of Juande Ramos’ technical director, Ramón Rodríguez Monchi. Monchi was the man responsible for picking up cut-price signings such as Dani Alves, Freddy Kanoute, Luis Fabiano, Drago, and countless others, and it was left to Ramos to train players and put together the pieces.

Damien Comolli & Martin JolAnother issue of the utmost importance to the possible success of Juande Ramos at Tottenham will be the relationship between the Spaniard and Director of Football Damien Commoli. Many will be quick to point out that Ramos had little problem working under Monchi, as a sort of proof that Ramos is not of a conflictive character and that he will work with what he’s given.

However, Martin Jol could hardly be accused of inciting argument with his technical assistants – indeed, the eager-to-please Dutchman was known to have an excellent working relationship with Frank Arnesen, and despite the rumours of backstabbing à  la Avram Grant, Jol has steadfastly refused to criticise any of his colleagues.

Damien Commoli, however, as the BBC’s Phil McNulty rightly observed, slimed his way uncomfortably through the presentation of Juande Ramos. Commoli is held by many Spurs fans to be the real reason for Jol’s untimely demise. Numerous signings were forced on the Dutchman (Darren Bent is known to have been Commoli’s choice) whilst his few demands (another centre back, the signing of Elano) were ignored outright by the technical staff.

Commoli the chameleon is supposed to be a difficult man to get on with, is always present to celebrate good news, but is rarely available to take responsibility for his actions – yet it is conspicuously clear that many of the Frenchman’s top-name signings have quite simply not made the cut. Ramos has never succeeded at a club surrounded by instability and in-fighting (he left the Espanyol hotseat after just five games because of rows with the board), and his every move will be under the microscope both of English and world football in a way he would never have previously experienced.

If Ramos is to enjoy any success, he will have to impose himself on Commoli, rather than the other way round, and some of the supposed “talents” of the Tottenham team will have to begin to perform.

As I said, the eyes of world football are on the situation developing at Tottenham, where Juande Ramos could turn out to be yet another expensive, unsuccessful risk. Because one thing remains quite clear – if Ramos fails, Spurs fans everywhere will be introducing Messrs Commoli and Levy to the magical land of last straws, egg-faces and bellowing fat ladies (Andy Reid? Thanks for that one Spooky). Again, I’m not talking about Halloween.

Though if you do see Jol tonight, please, my friends, be sure to give him a pack of sweets or a bag of popcorn, so that we can return to the Dutchman that “cheesy smile” (not in the Wenger way) that we love so much.




Discussion - 10 Responses

  1. 31/10/2007 Blaugrana

    Ramos will fail

  2. 31/10/2007 There's always next season

    “Commoli the chameleon is supposed to be a difficult man to get on with, is always present to celebrate good news, but is rarely available to take responsibility for his actions – yet it is conspicuously clear that many of the Frenchman’s top-name signings have quite simply not made the cut.”

    The Board have put their money in.

    BMJ put his heart & soul in.

    The fans have put their faith and support in.

    Commoli put the knife in. He adds nothing, and takes plenty away.

  3. 31/10/2007 SpiralArchitect

    I was just waiting for this kind of article to come from a Spurs fan. Well written & a balanced viewpoint that tries to separate the wheat from the chaff (truth from the crap…get it? :P ; yeah alright, dumb joke).

    Maybe the exodus of managers this season has been due to the weight of too much expectation. Mourinho left under the weight of Abramovich’s expectations, Jol left because of the Tottenham Board’s expectations & Sammy Lee left because the Bolton players expected him to be like another (Big) Sam.

    Contrast this with managers like SAF & Wenger who went through similar criticisms in their careers but received patience & forbearance from fans & owners alike. People forget that the first 3 years of SAF’s reign were absolute crap &, despite winning the Double in his first full season Wenger went through 4 lean seasons until he had another success.

    My point is, what will it take for Tottenham, as a club, to rise out of this level of mediocrity & see past the crap & hype to make the right decisions? Keith Burkinshaw once said “there used to be a football club here”. Maybe that statment still rings true after 20 years.

  4. 31/10/2007 daniel

    If Commoli makes the signings then lets look at his record at spurs:

    Good Signings:
    Berbatov, Bale, Chimbonda, Tarrabt, Rose,

    Bad Signings:
    Assou-Ekotto, Zokora, Rocha, Murphy

    Jury is Out:
    Bent, Kaboul, Malbranque, Prince Boateng, Alnwick.

    So I Guess its a bit of a mixed bag, but one thing is for sure he has to take some of the blame for the soft center of the spurs midfield….

  5. “Numerous signings were forced on the Dutchman (Darren Bent is known to have been Commoli’s choice) whilst his few demands (another centre back, the signing of Elano) were ignored outright by the technical staff.”

    Amazing! I love it that so many people, both in the media and on blogs like this, know for a fact exactly what has gone on behind the scenes at Spurs.

    The reality, of course, is that you are talking out of your arses. You haven’t got the first idea about what really happened. You don’t know for a fact that Bent was Comolli’s choice at all. You are simply saying it because it suits your argument to do so. The truth is that all the reports in the summer suggested that it was Jol who really wanted Bent. Now that it’s all gone wrong, the story has changed. Go figure!

    Frankly, it is a nonsense to suggest that any senior player was imposed upon Jol, against his will, or that all his requests were specifically ignored. Levy is not in the business of sabotaging his own interests.

  6. Jim B – The reason everyone started saying that Bent was Comolli’s choice rather than Jol’s was that a series of in-depth accounts of life inside Tottenham, published in The Guardian and elsewhere, reported that as a fact. It’s possible that they were wrong, but as they were clearly based on calculated leaks from within the competing Tottenham camps, it’s not quite fair to say that “the story has changed” for no reason. In the summer, we got the happy public face of the Spurs PR department; in the fall, we got insider accounts from employees in the middle of fighting for their jobs. Believe whichever you like. Neither is completely trustworthy, but in my opinion the latter has more of a ring of truth.

    Hugo – Thanks for the excellent post. I’m really glad to see someone else drawing attention to the role of Monchi at Sevilla!

  7. Good comment from JimB.

    daniel’s signing analysis also good, but i would add Assou Ekotto to the jury’s out list because of injuries disrupting his development. Also don’t forget we got almost all our money back on Murphy, and we were chasing him well before Comolli came to the club. So all in all, whoever is responsible it’s not a bad record.

    As to the treatment of MJ, yes it was poor, but no worse than Aresenal’s treatment of Bruce Rioch who wasn’t told he was only hired while they waited for Wenger and then dropped like a stone; snd not as bad as Chelsea who actually hired Mourinho’s replacement before they fired him! This is football today, all carried out in the media spotlight

  8. 01/11/2007 Hartfelt

    At last, a reasoned article on Ramos rather than annointing him the lastest messiah. Well done that man for pointing out one of the key reasons of Ramos’ success at Sevilla (who were lucky in both legs to get past Spurs in the UEFA).

    Unless the midfield, defence and left-side are properly attended to, I think Ramos will have no more success than Jol.Still back-to-back fifths would be great! Zokora needs to go, (it pains me to say it but I’m not convinced by the progress of Hudd either), we’ve got Bale but we need a proper LW for him to link up with from the back, and the defence, well say no more. No Ledley. No defence. It can’t carry on like that. Personally I think Robbo can be salvaged by the right coach. He hasn’t suddenly lost all the talent that made him so essential for the last two seasons.

    I also wouldn’t paper over Ramos’ poor English, even with Gus Poyet in place. Not great for establishing rapports with players.

  9. For the record, I am NOT saying that Ramos will be a failure, far from it. I’d just like people to put his achievements at Sevilla in perspective, and to point out that no matter what glossy exterior is shown on the 125 anniversary DVD, the situation at Spurs may well be at breaking point.

  10. 01/11/2007 Stuart

    I seem to recall a promise made at Spurs to “sign a world-class manager”. We waited and waited and then eventually got Jaques Santini after he was outed by France having failed to motivate a good side in a major tournament. We couldn’t really get one then and we’ve had to do some pretty nasty stuff to get one now. Santini’s conract was a joke and it was clear that their was no longterm hope of him staying at the club and it was just done to save the borads blushes and to restore confidence in share prices.

    I think when we do things like that, we show ourselves to be smalltime jokers at Spurs. I said it in another post tonight, but I think this guy (Ramos) will be off to a bigger club soon enough and we’ll be back where we were and may find we’ve turned an already unpopular and hard-to-do job into a real poisoned chalice.

    Those who run Spurs might as well put pots and pans on their heads and have headbutting matches like in that very funny scene from the Simpsons. We’re such a joke it’s not funny :P (does that make sense?). God Knows.

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