Erik Lamela's first
season at Spurs, in parallel with this season as a whole, has been
one of great disappointment. Signed from Roma in August, Lamela seems
to represent the plentiful nature of young talent in our squad
without there being any great, world-class specimen. He has featured
rarely, and his absence has become a great source of pain for Spurs
fans. As we begin to hunger for a new start, I begin to question
where exactly does the Argentinian go from here?
Let me give you the
skinny. 21-year-old Erik Lamela, one of the top (if not the top)
young talents in Serie A, signed for Spurs for £25.8million in
August. He, together with Christian Eriksen, came to replace the
departed Gareth Bale, last year's Player Of The Year. The two players
potentially and logically had what Bale possessed together: goals
from midfield, flair, creativity and an eye for set pieces. The eyes
of Spurs fans passively looked to Lamela for guidance.
I felt euphoric when I first saw this photo. How times change. |
With
the weight of expectation on his shoulders, a burden shared by all of
the summer signings, he was not planted straight into the first team,
but eased in by Andre Villas-Boas, kept out by the bright but
inconsistent Andros Townsend. Lamela and Spurs fans alike waited and
waited and did a bit more waiting to see a performance from him. The
wait briefly ended on November 7th
against Sheriff
Tiraspol in the Europa League – a goal, an assist and a
match-winning performance. This would be, arguably, the one and only
time we saw Lamela at his maximum.
The
Spurs fans were once again left starved of Lamela and starved of his
talent. When AVB was sacked in December, some began to speculate that
he could get his chance, get his moment he and we had craved. Sadly
not. Either by injury or (allegedly) through Tim Sherwood's
over-zealous repression, Lamela has not featured in the first team
since December 4th.
I
have too waited and, like this season, nothing”
is the cry from many a fan. “What a waste of money!” some would
even say. The outrage and knife-wielding cries of our fanbase forms a
clear, Machiavellin-esque purging of our squad, such a purging that
even Stalin could be proud. Out the signings. Out the deadwood. Out
Tim Sherwood. New man comes in. Chuck in a few expletives and that's
the gist of it, anyway.
I have become tired in my
disappointment. “Thirty-million pound and
This
may just be me – speaking as someone who has brooded over this
season in a melancholic state for four months since we sacked
Villas-Boas – but I once again will state that the worst thing for
this squad would be a purging. In that case, I believe Lamela stays.
But what do I expect from the young winger? Bale-esque glory? 30-yard
screamers? 90th
minute winners?
I
knew in my depths of my heart when we signed him that we were
unlikely to get a top quality player in his first season in England.
Across the road at Arsenal, the signing of Mesut Ozil has proved as
inconsistent as any of Spurs' signings, has it not? We took the
gamble of signing Eriksen and Lamela, two young foreign players to
replace Bale. One has flourished. The other has not. This is the
cold, disappointing truth.
Lamela gets his leg up against Tromso in the Europa League |
However,
it is not ludicrous to state that Lamela has a chance to flourish
next season. At Roma, he rightly rose to prominence in the team,
labelled by many of their fans as 'the next Totti'. He was versatile,
operating both on the right as an inverted winger, and as a creative
No. 10 on many occasions. He scored 15 goals and assisted five times
in his last season in Serie A. Quite simply, you never gain a
reputation as one of the best young talents in Europe unless you are
really talented.
Quite simply, there is no smoke without fire.
Erik
Lamela has been absent in his debut season, both in his minute
appearances on the pitch, and in his long time out of the Tottenham
squad. A disappointment and a dead cert on many 'Worst Transfers of
the Season' lists. It is my belief, however, that what will come of
Lamela in his Spurs career will be no disappointment; he may even
become extraordinary.
Last
December, Lamela said in an interview to the Standard a telling
quote: “I feel I need a bit of time. My moment will come and I will
make the difference.” Let's hope so too.