{"id":296101,"date":"2023-11-04T22:24:47","date_gmt":"2023-11-04T22:24:47","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/tellmysport.com\/?p=296101"},"modified":"2023-11-04T22:24:47","modified_gmt":"2023-11-04T22:24:47","slug":"riath-al-samarrai-how-ex-spurs-boss-rowe-inspired-puskas-and-cruyff","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/tellmysport.com\/soccer\/riath-al-samarrai-how-ex-spurs-boss-rowe-inspired-puskas-and-cruyff\/","title":{"rendered":"RIATH AL-SAMARRAI: How ex-Spurs boss Rowe inspired Puskas and Cruyff"},"content":{"rendered":"
One of the pleasures of filling this space can be the people with whom you end up conversing. Sometimes the opposite is true, but most weeks it means an email from a lovely chap named Terry, who is in his Eighties and a lover of all sport and particularly football.<\/p>\n
He is a historian of the game, you see. And one of his areas of greatest fascination is Tottenham Hotspur. Recently he gave a talk in his local pub in Lancashire about Arthur Rowe, whose influence on the game is rather incredible but whose name has largely faded from view.<\/p>\n
This weekend offers a particularly interesting moment to recall Rowe, because today marks 30 years since the passing of a manager who, in 1951, delivered Tottenham\u2019s first top-flight title.\u00a0<\/p>\n
That puts Rowe in the company of just two who could say the same at Spurs, but his broader mark of distinction comes from those he inspired, which is a fascinating and stylish line that meanders all the way to\u00a0Ange Postecoglou.<\/p>\n
Terry calls it \u2018the family tree\u2019 and the branches are something to behold \u2014 Alf Ramsey was his first signing at White Hart Lane, a disciple who went on to do pretty well, and his last was Danny Blanchflower, who captained Bill Nicholson\u2019s Double-winning side of \u201961.\u00a0<\/p>\n
\n<\/p>\n
The inflence of former Tottenham title winning boss Arthur Rowe has largely faded from view but his inspiration trickles all the way down to current manager Ange Postecoglou<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
Mail Sport’s Riath Al-Samarrai gives a history lesson into how Rowe inspired a raft of coaches<\/p>\n
Vic Buckingham was also in Rowe\u2019s team for a while and he would describe his old boss as a mentor long after he went to Ajax, where he discovered Johan Cruyff and pioneered the principles of Total Football.<\/p>\n
If you\u2019ll indulge the history session, they all fell for Rowe\u2019s way, which in turn was an enhancement of Peter McWilliam\u2019s way, otherwise known as the first draft of the Tottenham Way \u2014 McWilliam got the ball down and moving and Rowe gave exciting new meaning to the ideals.\u00a0<\/p>\n
He was a visionary who once used sugar cubes on a train home from a win at Bradford Park Avenue to demonstrate how seven passes in your own box was no bad thing; that players could interchange their positions and forgoing the long ball would all be OK if you \u2018make it simple, make it quick\u2019. He didn\u2019t just dare to do, he dared and did \u2014 Tottenham won the Second Division in 1950 and the First a year later.<\/p>\n
Rowe never much liked the \u2018push and run\u2019 tag which folk attached to his approach, but the point is that its echo travelled far and wide, up to and including the great Hungarian Ferenc Puskas.<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
Rowe was a visionary who used sugar cubes to demonstrate how to play out from the back<\/p>\n
Your browser does not support iframes.<\/p>\n
If we talk about pivotal moments in the evolution of football, Puskas and the Mighty Magyars of the Fifties hold a defining place, but as Terry reminds me, not much is ever said today of Rowe, who was once asked in his pre-Spurs days to be Hungary\u2019s \u2018professor of football\u2019.\u00a0<\/p>\n
World War Two kept him from taking the post, but his influence and contacts there are how he later came to know Puskas. It is also why Rowe\u2019s son once wrote to the Financial Times in 2006 to dispute the accepted wisdom that Hungary invented the game as we now know it.<\/p>\n
\u2018If anyone invented the beautiful version of the game, it was my father,\u2019 Graham Rowe said in his letter. For emphasis, he referenced the photograph he treasured at home of Rowe standing with Puskas, who years later, at South Melbourne, would talk football for hours with a young Aussie player-turned-chauffeur named Ange Postecoglou.<\/p>\n
It can be a flawed exercise, the tracing of ideology. Sometimes you have to squint to see the connection and sometimes the connections can be overstated.<\/p>\n
\n<\/p>\n
Rowe’s methods rubbed off on Vic Buckingham – who would go on to manage Ajax and discover Johan Cruyff (L). Rowe’s methods were also used by Ferenc Puskas (R)<\/p>\n
But there is beauty and relevance in those links from present to past, especially now when we assess a club who have spent so long looking backwards. It\u2019s a club who have lived there; sought comfort in what was rather than what is. The flick, the trick, the 30-yard free-kick and good ol\u2019 Billy Nich.<\/p>\n
It\u2019s right there in Tottenham\u2019s pre-match montage, coaxing a little mockery from fans whose clubs rely on less grainy footage.<\/p>\n
But football is nothing if not a game of moments and Spurs are in an awfully good moment with Postecoglou. They had more than a few under Mauricio Pochettino, too, and it makes for a compelling narrative on Monday that Pochettino\u2019s bad moment at Chelsea is colliding with Postecoglou\u2019s good moment at Tottenham.<\/p>\n
Even if he was a little unknown to many of us just five months ago, we\u2019re all Postecoglou admirers now. Or we should be.<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
Postecoglou has taken Spurs to the top of the league using the same principles as Rowe\u00a0<\/p>\n
It may not last and if we are to be realistic with title predictions it probably won\u2019t, but after three dour, loveless regimes at Tottenham, he has resoundingly succeeded.<\/p>\n
Has there been a manager in the recent history of any Premier League club who generated such a rapid change in mood and effectiveness? When was the last time a manager walked into a club of such chaos, as Postecoglou did in the summer, even prior to the immense loss of Harry Kane, and performed this level of transformation?<\/p>\n
The departure of Kane should have crippled them, but Postecoglou has made Spurs better. If they hold on to a top-four place, it would rank as a tremendous act of managerial alchemy.<\/p>\n
The perspective here should be obvious \u2014 just as Erik ten Hag has received no trophies for Manchester United\u2019s \u2018high-ball regains\u2019, Tottenham get none for looking good through 10 games of a kind schedule. It could all collapse \u2014 Spursy is a familiar word in these chats.<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
That attacking style Tottenham have enjoyed matters so much to the club and one that is helping to revitalise the team<\/p>\n
But let\u2019s not underplay how impressive it has been and a huge chunk of that is about style, which is important because style matters. It mattered to Rowe, it mattered to most who followed him, and it matters to clubs who make far less noise about it than Tottenham.\u00a0<\/p>\n
Style is one of the most important of football\u2019s unimportant things. Which is why it mattered so much when the functionality became dysfunctional under Antonio Conte.<\/p>\n
Results shape everything, but style can be a shield and there are ghosts attached to both. Look at Ten Hag \u2014 he has been at United for 18 months and still we cannot explain what he is trying to do. To him, Sir Alex Ferguson is the most conspicuous ghost at a table since Banquo.<\/p>\n
And yet Postecoglou is pulling it off at a place where they hark back to it more than most. They cling to it. Feel entitled to it. Use it as a crutch in rough times; use it as a crutch to batter those who fail.<\/p>\n
Shortlived or otherwise, Postecoglou has used that same crutch to take Tottenham to a place no one thought likely. In doing so, he has also breathed a little life into a forgotten legend in Arthur Rowe. Among the many ghosts at Spurs, he is surely enjoying the show.<\/p>\n
Gianni Infantino spoke in Trumpian terms a week ago about a \u2018full victory for me, for the new FIFA and justice\u2019 after being cleared of wrongdoing over meetings with Switzerland\u2019s former attorney general.\u00a0<\/p>\n
A few days later, he effectively gave the 2034 World Cup to Saudi Arabia. There is no suggestion of criminality by the esteemed lord of football, but a new FIFA? It smells an awful lot like the old one.\u00a0<\/p>\n
It’s All Kicking Off\u00a0is an exciting new podcast from Mail Sport that promises a different take on Premier League football, launching with a preview show today and every week this season.<\/span><\/p>\n It is available on MailOnline, Mail+, YouTube , Apple Music and Spotify<\/span><\/p>\n Your browser does not support iframes.<\/p>\n