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Hopperational Details | |||||||
| 
Date & Venue | 
Sunday 17
  November 2019 at The Tottenham Hotspur Stadium | ||||||
| 
Result | 
Tottenham Hotspur Women 2 Arsenal
  Women 2 | ||||||
| 
Competition | 
FA Women’s
  Super League | ||||||
| 
Hopstats | 
Ground 706 on
  the lifetime list. Restores for now my complete current “92” for the top four
  divisions in England (or 91 when you take account of Coventry City as a
  groundsharer). Likewise it means that I have been everywhere currently in use down to Step 2 National League N & S for the moment. Brentford’s and York City's new grounds will be opened sooner rather than
  later too so there will always be the need for restoration. | ||||||
| 
Context | |||||||
| 
Spurs Women
  usually play at The Hive, Barnet, but an international weekend and the
  prospect of a big crowd meant that this first WSL meeting between these local
  rivals was switched to the new place. The season is five games old. Reigning
  champions Arsenal have a slightly better win-loss record, 4-1 as opposed to
  Spurs’ 3-2. The hosts have priced the fixture very attractively (£7 for my
  ticket) and have made a pitch for parents-and-children attendance. I dare say
  there will be a few more groundhoppers dotted around too. | |||||||
| 
In one sentence | |||||||
| 
A record
  crowd (38000+) for a women’s club game in England saw Arsenal take the points with a
  composed, stylish and efficient performance. | |||||||
| 
So what? | |||||||
| 
Still early
  in the season but it seems that Arsenal will be title challengers and Spurs
  will be at least safely mid-table. | |||||||
| 
Match Report | |||||||
| 
I’m late with
  this and the game will have been covered in detail already for anyone interested,
  so I will be brief and impressionistic. It was a predictably cagey start to
  the game. Arsenal looked a touch more composed on the ball, and their
  patterns of movement looked promising. Spurs were more robust. There were few
  clear chances initially but by half-time Arsenal probably should have been in
  front. Spurs will also point to chances that could have gone in and changed
  the narrative, especially a shot by Kit Graham that went straight at keeper
  Manuela Zinsberger. In the end any Arsenal nerves were calmed by a great
  finish from Kim Little. She controlled a defensive header that fell nicely
  for her to control, manoeuvre and then fire into the corner of the net. 
Arsenal
  managed the game very well from then on. A short backpass gifted them a
  second, scored by Vivianne Miedema, and it looked for a moment as if Spurs
  could collapse. Anything more than 0-2 would have been harsh on the home
  side, who played a full part in an enjoyable, entertaining game of football.
  Rachel Furness caught the eye with an all-action and energetic display. 
As a neutral
  and blogger, I just have to comment on the cultural differences between the
  equivalent fixtures in the men’s and women’s game. I do not side with those
  who think the latter lacks something in the way of “passion”, that word that
  is so often used as an excuse or a proxy for poor personal standards or
  outright lack of self-control. The game played at this level deserves to succeed
  and all the signs are that it will. The men’s game changed forever once the
  suits realised there was so much money to be made from media and advertising. Like
  many groundhoppers, I lost a lot of interest from that point onwards and I
  hope the development of the women’s game does not make the same mistake and
  create too big a gulf between the rich and the poor clubs. There’s no
  evidence at all that Sky, BT and their sponsors really care too much about
  their wider unintended impact. There, I said it. 
I can only
  imagine that with a capacity crowd, the local infrastructure comes under severe strain. I watched a couple of teenagers deal with this by clinging
  limpet-like to the back of a bus as it headed south down the High Road. Not
  recommended. The teacher in me wanted to intervene, but I couldn’t get close
  enough and maybe it’s just as well. | |||||||
| 
Pix | |||||||
| 
It is a phenomenally impressive stadium. Up to now I’d have chosen The
  Emirates as best club stadium in England, but this one now takes the honour
  in my book. The asymmetry has been used cleverly to create a clear home end.
  The range of food outlets is impressive and diverse. Lighting, signage, sight lines and space are all excellent. | |||||||
| 
Goalkeeper Top Colour Stats | |||||||
| 
New this season – a pre-match
  prediction based only on keeper top colours as a preliminary test of the
  data.  Proper statistical significance
  test to follow in due course. 
Today was a
  contest between two very different shades of green. 
Pre-match Prediction based on Keeper
  Top Colour: 
 
Based on conventional 3pts for a win,
  1pt for a draw, but also -1pt for a goal conceded (GC) and +5pts for a clean
  sheet (CS).  Colours ranked on a points
  per game (PPG) basis. The odd decimal places were caused either by
  half-and-half tops or sub keepers in a different colour.  The Fire Cracker colour was confirmed with
  the help of the social media team at Dulux UK.  All of this arises from a comment
  attributed to Petr Cech that orange is the best colour for a goalkeeper
  because it changes the behaviour of other players around the box. 
Full table on
  this page: | |||||||
| 
What Next? | |||||||
| 
Follow @GrahamYapp
  on Twitter! I’ve been everywhere down to Step 2 now, and I have two grounds
  (Atherton Collieries & Radcliffe) left at Step 3 and seventeen at Step 4. I've not been very active as yet this season but these remain my priorities. | |||||||
Sunday, 24 November 2019
Restoration Drama
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