Ledley King

Ledley King... 253 Premier League appearances for Spurs - 8 yellow cards.....

No other defender comes close to that kind of record.... an average of a booking a season (no red cards in his career)....

Overall stats in all comps and Internationals: 326 appearances - 12 yellow cards / 0 red cards.....

As for dodgy knees, they have found a way of managing the knee problems, but that has led to related muscular injuries as he does not train.... his last 4 injury breaks have all been groin related...

Having said that in 8 of the last 10 seasons he has played in more than 20 PL games and 4 of the last 6 seasons the same....

9 wins and 1 draw in his last 10 starts... the draw was at Newcastle where he went off at 1-0 to Spurs after 25 mins...

We need 25 PL games from him this season realistically....
 
THFC6061 said:
Unknown_Genius said:
If wasn't for a combination of his knees' and having Redknapp as his manager, he would be the best English defender at the moment.

What's wrong with Redknapp as Spurs manager?

He has the best statistics of any Tottenham manager since we joined the Football League in 1908:

Played 115 Won 57-Drawn 29-Lost 29 F180-A134 Points Won: 200 PPG: 1.74

What I mean by that is this:

Another criticism of Redknapp’s management that is worth extrapolation is the vast number of injuries we have endured under his leadership. According to Four Four Two, Spurs suffered more injuries than any other side last season – a massive 61 individual injuries. That resulted in an accumulative total of 1528 days lost through injury (the 4th highest in the Premier League), and no one Spurs player was available for every league game across the whole season. In the 2011/12 season already, Gallas, King, Huddlestone, van der Vaart, Pienaar, Modric, Palacios, Sandro and Jenas have all picked up injuries (some more serious than others, such as van der Vaart’s groin tear which will keep him out for several months). Though we’re not privy to the goings on behind-the-scenes, it is believed to be the case that each player follows a standardised, generic training regime, unlike at other clubs where each player is given a tailored, individual training plan to suit their particular needs. Fitness coach Raymond Verheije used Spurs’ preseason injury troubles to highlight the inefficiency of coaching: “As long as football coaches do the wrong football exercises at the wrong time or in the wrong sequence these injury crises keep happening [...] Clubs like Spurs have staff to avoid injuries but Modric, Pienaar, Jenas, Huddlestone, Sandro Gallas and King injured before start of season [...] But as long as people keep looking for excuses for these ridiculous injury crises the problem will never be solved. Players deserve better!”

The situation at Spurs is exacerbated by Redknapp’s reluctance to rotate his squad, and his insistence on playing players too soon (and for too long) after injury, and even fielding players unfit to play. Kyle Walker had picked up a bug prior to playing Man Utd last week, but Redknapp selected him regardless. Walker came off after 45 minutes having vomited at half-time, but not before being given the run around by Ashley Young. Similarly, Aaron Lennon was ill prior to Spurs’ trip to the Bernabeu. Despite his insistence that he could not play, Redknapp selected him in his starting XI. Lennon pulled out of the team at the last minute. Redknapp, typically, was quick to criticise Lennon, who in return wrote on Twitter: “Saying I fell ill be4 the game is bull***. I fell ill on Sunday morning where the med team put me on anti botics [sic], but only got worse b4 tues [...] Believe me this is 1 game I did no wnt to miss and still devo now!!!! But will not be made a scapegoat saying they only knew jus b4 KO.” Players are regularly thrust into first team action too quickly after a long lay-off – for example, after a few weeks on the sidelines, Jermaine Jenas started against Werder Bremen at home in the Champions League. He lasted just 19 minutes before limping off. Jonathan Woodgate, a player who made just four appearances in two years at Spurs, has already made four appearances for new club Stoke City in the space of a couple of weeks – with Spurs still seeking for a new centre-back, did Redknapp’s poor injury management result in Spurs losing a quality central defender who could have contributed this season?

<a class="postlink" href="http://oneinthehole.wordpress.com/2011/08/29/why-harry-redknapp-is-no-longer-the-manager-to-take-spurs-forward/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;">http://oneinthehole.wordpress.com/2011/ ... s-forward/</a>

If King was given a tailored, training regime, for his needs, maybe he wouldn't keep getting setbacks.
 
King is helped by the fact that he hardly suffers from fatigue because he doesn't play that often.

Ferdinand, as repulsive as he is, was much better at his peak than King will ever be.
 
Thierry Henry has stated on more than one occasion that Ledley King is the most difficult defender he has come up against in his career.
 
Ticket For Schalke said:
The Goat 10 said:
Thierry Henry has stated on more than one occasion that Ledley King is the most difficult defender he has come up against in his career.

Henry didnt play against Vinny for definite and not sure about Vidic so its understandable..
No, but he did play against Stam, Desailly, Ferdinand and Charvet all in there prime...
 
Top class defender, but I think he gets more praise than he should BECAUSE he is injured all the time.

Whenever they do bad they are apparently missing a Ledley King type defender - this raises his profile higher than it should. Also, he was a bit poor last night
 

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