ostrov » 16 фев 2015, 20:50
Изложу здесь, в целом имеет отношение. Как всегда интересны наблюдения Гиллера.
Основная мысль: Дюма дал Трем мушкетерам девиз- один за всех и все за одного.
Француз Хуго Льорис воплощает его в жизнь как капитан Шпор. Слову "Я" нет место в работе команды. Большие эго не могут встать на пути камарадного духа , который набрал силу под управлением жезла молодого генералисимуса Почеттино.
Хорошо сказано! Факт, что минимальное поражение от Ливерпуля не поколебало чувство от убедительной победы над Ассаналом.
Интересна цитата, которой поделился с Гиллером его друг из спортивной редакции газеты L’Equipe.
Коротко: Льорис счастлив иметь привелегию быть капитаном Тоттенхэма. И он процветает на фундаменте этой ответственности. Он считает , что у Почеттино есть предвидение как должна строиться игра и тренерские методы. Он счастлив быть частью этого процесса.
В действиях Хуго в воротах виден превосходный ум. Его отец - французский юрист; и это отражается в подходе сына к подготовке к играм. Но кроме этого у него есть смелость и характер, которые выходят за пределы простой необходимости защищать ворота.
Виват, Льорис!
Submitted by Norman Giller
Norman Giller writes for Spurs Odyssey
Positive noises coming out of The Lane
Right, we’ve had our brief breather. Now back into the cauldron as Tottenham face four matches in eleven days that could define not only the season but also Mario Pochettino’s reign. Coming up are the two legs of the Europa League battle with Fiorentina, a home Premier League match with West Ham on Sunday, and – on March 1 – the League Cup final showdown with Chelski at Wembley. I’m exhausted just thinking about it.
What I like are the positive noises coming out of the Lane. The narrow defeat at Liverpool has not been allowed to dent the confidence built up by that annihilation of Arsenal, and the mood is buoyant going into Thursday’s first leg duel with Fiorentina.
It was French author Alexandre Dumas who gave the Three Musketeers their motto of Un pour tous, tous pour un (All for one, and one for all). And that is the battle cry coming from Tottenham’s French captain Hugo Lloris.
He talks about the importance of team spirit, and everybody playing for everybody else. There is no ‘I’ in team work, and huge egos will not be allowed to get in the way of the camaraderie that has gathered strength under the baton of young generalissimo Pochettino.
I am grateful to an old friend (mon ami) on the sports desk of the premier French sports paper L’Equipe for this quote from an interview with Hugo when asked how he has settled to football in England:
“I have been made to feel very welcome at Tottenham, both by the players and the supporters. It is taking us time to play exactly the way we want under the enthusiastic and visionary coaching of Mario Pochettino, but we are getting there and I feel privileged to have been made captain for many important Premier League games. It is a big responsibility on which I thrive. It is every bit as challenging to me as when I captain France. The coach has his own firm ideas about how the game should be played, and he is gradually getting his message across. We feel we are improving every time we go out to play.”
Asked about Harry Kane, Lloris said: “He is an exceptional prospect and we just don’t know where his limit is. He seems to improve with every game, and defenders find him very difficult to mark. It is exciting for me to watch his progress, as it is also with Christian Eriksen. And what I like about both of them is that they continue to work very hard in training to make themselves better players. We have developed a special team spirit, and we are all in this for each other. The best of this Tottenham team is yet to come and I am thrilled to be part of it.”
There is a superior mind at work when Lloris is revealing his magic on the goal-line. His father is a French lawyer, and there is intelligence shining through in the way he approaches his football, but there is also character and courage which comes to the surface when he makes saves that demand bravery beyond the call of duty.
What frightens all we Spurs supporters is that he is so good that a Real Madrid could come head hunting for Hugo The Boss. But he insists he is happy with us, and we are more than happy with him!
The same can be said of the master playmaker Christian Eriksen, who celebrated his 23rd birthday on Saturday. Christian is from Middlefart in Denmark, and he is certainly kicking up a stink in the Premier League with the accuracy and venom of his free-kicks and his controlled passing. He is filling that gap left by Luka Modric, and as his confidence grows so does his impact on each match.
All is looking good at Tottenham.
The eleven days from Thursday will tell us whether it is a mirage
"We are always confident because we trust our players, and we never give up,"--- said boss Mauricio Pochettino.