Fulham 0-0 Tottenham Hotspur | FA Cup match report

These two sides are hardly regulars in FA Cup semi-finals of late – Fulham have made only one appearance in the last four since reaching the final in 1975, Tottenham have not reached the semis since 2001 – and neither side seem hugely intent on breaking that run if this evidence is anything to go by.

This was a replay waiting to happen, a staccato midfield battle enlivened by occasional flurries at either end. The comfort for both is that, even at this late stage of the competition, priorities seem to lie elsewhere.

That both these teams have bigger fish to fry – Tottenham are deep in the race for a Champions League spot, while Fulham’s visit to Juventus in the Europa League on Thursday is billed by the club as “arguably the biggest” in their history – was painfully obvious in a first half played in and around the centre circle.

Harry Redknapp had pointed out pre-match that injuries had reduced him to around 12 first-team players. Indeed such was Spurs’ shortage that Jake Livermore and Andros Townsend were recalled from loan spells at Peterborough and Milton Keynes Dons respectively to take places on the bench. Gareth Bale was pressed into service on the left of midfield, with Luka Modric prompting in the centre.

Fulham were without their captain Danny Murphy, but that was not enough to explain their lacklustre opening. Tottenham, though cobbled together, began much the brighter but were hardly radiant. It took 18 mintues for their first genuine shot at goal, and that was an apologetic free-kick from Niko Kranjcar that bobbled well wide. That scare, however minor, briefly galvanised the hosts. Little more than a minute later Bobby Zamora, an angular, awkward, though largely ineffective presence throughout the first period, showed neat feet to cut inside and force Heurelho Gomes into a smart save at his near post.

It proved to be the first-half high-point for the home side. At the other end Peter Crouch and Roman Pavlyuchenko exchanged passes before putting Kranjcar in space, though the Croatian’s curling effort from the edge of the area was palmed away by Mark Schwarzer in the Fulham goal. The goalkeeper needed to be much sharper a few minutes later to scramble across goal and turn away Crouch’s goalbound back-post header.

The promise of a Wembley semi-final was all the motivation Fulham needed, Roy Hodgson, a cup winner in Sweden and Denmark with Malmo and FC Copenhagen, had insisted, though the message seemed not to have filtered through to his players. Damien Duff smited an optimistic effort wide after 33 minutes, but as the break approached the home terraces grew increasingly restless, with their hopes of a first visit to the national stadium in a generation threatened by a labouring on-pitch performance.

Tottenham, having raised their game for a while, also caught the bug. Bale marauded into space but failed to find Crouch with a routine pull-back that would have provided the England striker with a simple chance, while Vedran Corluka’s failure to collect Kranjcar’s superb through-ball was indicative of both sides’ malaise.

Craven Cottage’s appetite for the fray returned after the interval and so did their team’s. Hodgson is not a manager to threaten the half-time tea-cups but his side certainly emerged from the dressing room with a spring in their collective step.

Within 60 seconds of the restart Simon Davies escaped down the left, his deep cross was headed back across goal by Zamora and Zolton Gera, little more than six yards out, forced Gomes into a stunning save. Four minutes later the Brazilian had to be on his toes once more, making a routine stop from Dickson Etuhu after a Davies corner.

That brief storm survived, Tottenham turned the screw once more and the visitors twice claimed for penalties before the hour. Pavlyuchenko tumbled optimistically and was rightly turned down by Mark Clattenburg, though the referee’s decision to wave play on as Brede Hangeland, jumping with arms aloft, appeared to be struck on the hand was less clear cut.

Though the Spurs captain Michael Dawson was not far away from breaking the deadlock with a thumping volley, the home side were growing in confidence and competence. Damien Duff, enjoying his tussle with Benoît Assou-Ekotto, twice stabbed shots at goal from promising positions, the first zipping narrowly wide, the second acrobatically collected by Gomes.

At the other end Pavlyuchenko, enduring a quiet evening after his recent goalscoring fireworks, was well off target with an ill-judged overhead kick.

Hodgson handed Zamora some company in attack, replacing Davies with David Elm, while Pavlyuchenko was put out of his misery with 10 minutes to go,

Jermain Defoe replacing the Russian. But even with the additional firepower, chances remained at a premium. When Zamora, having narrowly failed to get on the end of the exact same pass minutes earlier, did collect a Chris Baird through-ball, he dragged his shot wide of Gomes’ goal.

With games mounting up a replay is hardly what Fulham need, though they will be grateful that a trip to Wembley remains possible. Tottenham, who have been taken to replays by both Bolton and Leeds in the previous two rounds, will be optimistic of completing the hat-trick a fortnight on Wednesday.

THE FANS’ PLAYER RATINGS AND VERDICT

CHRIS LLOYD, Observer reader The first half was nothing like what I expected. This was an important game for us. It’s not often you get the chance to go to Wembley. The second half was much better, with Zamora and Duff coming to the fore. Unfortunately, Zamora didn’t have his shooting boots on, while Gomes was excellent in the Spurs goal. Our defence coped easily with Crouch and Pavlyuchenko, with Hangeland outstanding. It was disappointing to see our midfield struggle. Davies and Greening were poor and it had quite an impact. We’ve got the replay now, but our away form is terrible. Let’s hope we can prove the critics wrong and do something special at White Hart Lane.

The fan’s player ratings Schwarzer 7; Baird 7, Hughes 7, Hangeland 8, Shorey 7; Duff 8, Greening 6, Etuhu 5, Davies 6 (Elm 73 6); Gera 7; Zamora 8.

DAVE MASON, Observer reader This will be our third replay and we are certainly doing it the hard way. We had loads of possession but hardly tested Schwarzer in the Fulham goal. Crouch was supposed to have had a great game for England in midweek, but he and Pavlyuchenko play the same game. We just lump it up to Crouch and expect him to hold it, but he can’t. The same with Pavlyuchenko – they play in each other’s shoes. I have to say we’re missing Bentley wide right, but Palacios was terrific. The amount of possession he wins for us is superb. Gomes was again outstanding. This time last year he was throwing the ball in his own net.

The fan’s player ratings Gomes 8; Corluka 6, Dawson 7, Bassong 6, Assou-Ekotto 6; Kranjcar 6, Modric 6, Palacios 8, Bale 7; Pavlyuchenko 5 (Defoe 81 n/a), Crouch 4.

TO TAKE PART IN THE FANS’ VERDICT, SPORT@OBSERVER.CO.UK

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Football transfer rumours: Everton to sign Cardozo and Pinola? | Rob Smyth

Today’s nuggets go out alone, if they go out at all

You don’t understand the sacrifices the Mill makes to bring you your daily bread. All you see are words on a page, a bon mot every year or two. What you don’t see is the work that goes into compiling the rumours. You don’t see us infiltrating the inner circle of the notorious Hainault Crew, risking life, limb and swingers just in case they have a snout who knows about a reserve full-back who might be going to League Two. You don’t see us leering our way out of bed at 5.19 on a Monday morning, leaving our beautiful imaginary girlfriend behind, before injecting caffeine in an attempt to wake ourselves up.

You don’t see us heading to a service station in the mezzanine hours, handing over our last monkey to a grizzled, pencil-thin septuagenarian in a fedora in exchange for an envelope full of priceless information, only to later find a single note inside which reads: Up yours, four eyes. You don’t see us, worst of all, reading the Daily Star.

Some days are good. Some days the rumours justify the means. But we can’t tell you all days are good days. Life’s not like that. And today is not a good day. After at least two minutes’ intense scrutiny of our various sources, the best we can offer is that David Moyes wants to sign two South Americans. They’re not even Brazilians. We can’t even type ‘David Moyes is going for a Brazilian’ with a little smirk on our face, before high-fiving our proud colleagues in celebration of the peerless delivery of an entirely original pun.

The two men Moyes wants to sign are Oscar Cardozo, a striker who plays for Paraguay and Benfica, and Javire Pinola, a left-back who plays for Nuremberg and Argentina. Pinola has one international cap but has not been picked under Diego Maradona. Given that Maradona has awarded caps to 74% of the country, and put Eva Perón, Jorge Luis Borges and Gabriella Sabatini up front the last time he submitted a teamsheet, this might be seen as a concern.

Not for Tony Pulis: he wants to add Pinola to the conveyor belt that is Stoke’s defence. (And, by the way, if Arsenal or Barcelona had as fluid a defence, we’d be hailing it as the latest manifestation of Total Football, wouldn’t we?)

Moyes also has competition for Cardozo, from Spurs, Aston Villa and Blackburn. Harry Redknapp, keen to sign the man described as the “new Sandra Redknapp”, is gathering testimonies from the likes of Darren Bent, Roman Pavlyuchenko and Florin Răducioiu to demonstrate how he really looks after centre-forwards; Martin O’Neill is pointing out that Emile Heskey averages a league goal every 481.5 minutes this season. And Sam Allardyce still bears an uncomfortable resemblance to Dame Edna Everage, at least to our caffeine-fuelled eyes.

Redknapp, that renowned Croatphile, also wants to sign Spartak Moscow’s goalkeeper Stipe Pletikosa, place him in a line-up alongside Vedran Corluka, Luka Modric and Nico Kranjcar, and shake his head in bewilderment as he marvels at how far the world has advanced since the days when the players he ever bought were dangerously hirsute Anglo-Saxons.

Hirsute Celts are just as good, and Birmingham’s strawberry-blond Alex McLeish is after a couple in Aiden McGeady and Kris Boyd. While McGeady has approximately 100% change of being exposed as a showpony by most Premier League defenders, Boyd’s case is an interesting one. He scores goals in industrial quantities, yet nobody seems to take him seriously because he a) offers little to his team apart from goals, and b) he plays in Scotland. This despite the fact that most of the old-school still cling to the delusion that Michael Owen should be at the World Cup even though he a) offers little to his team apart from missed chances, and b) doesn’t play at all.

Another man who hasn’t been playing much of late is Burnley’s Ecuador winger Fernando Guerrero. Their manager Brian Laws, in no way dealing in stereotypes, has apparently decided that Guerrero is not suited to a relegation battle and has decided to release him. Maybe Guerrero doesn’t look like the kind of man who would get sufficiently passionate about the cause to throw a plate of chicken wings at a colleague’s face. Those are the people you want in the trenches.

Finally, there’s a rumour going round that everyone’s favourite former Watford fan, Tim Lovejoy, did the FA Cup draw yesterday. This one can’t be true, because there is no way ITV would allow him to hammer the last nail into the FA Cup’s coffin. No way would they do that.

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Tottenham poised to sign £6m Sandro

• Work permit may be an issue for once-capped midfielder
• 20-year-old Brazilian also has third-party ownership issue

Tottenham have agreed personal terms in principle with Sandro, Internacional’s 20-year-old Brazil midfielder, and they are attempting to push through a £6m deal for him during this transfer window.

Harry Redknapp, the Tottenham manager who says that his chairman, Daniel Levy, held further talks with Internacional last week, hopes to finance the move by selling Roman Pavlyuchenko to Zenit St Petersburg. The Russian club have made a £10m offer for the striker.

Tottenham first showed interest in the tough defensive midfielder last August when they also announced a sporting and strategic partnership with Internacional which, among other things, is intended to give them the first option on the Brazilian club’s players. Levy visited Porto Alegre to meet Vittorio Piffero, the Internacional president, and also to discuss the possibility of signing Sandro. The player’s lawyer, Luiz Paulo Chignall, has since travelled to London for talks.

“We have now agreed all of Sandro’s personal terms – his salary, the length of his contract and so on, although nothing can yet be signed,” said Luiz Paulo Chignall. “Sandro is happy and ready to join Tottenham. We liked the offer. All that remains is for Tottenham and Inter to finalise the small details, including the transfer fee. I know that Daniel Levy is speaking to Vittorio Piffero.”

Redknapp has said that, together with a back-up goalkeeper to replace the injured Carlo Cudicini, he would like to add strength in central midfield where, at present, he has only three specialists – Wilson Palacios, Tom Huddlestone and Jermaine Jenas. “Ideally, you would want four central midfielders,” said Redknapp, who did acknowledge that Luka Modric could play there “at a pinch”.

Redknapp is leaving the negotiations to Levy. “Whether it happens or not, I’m not sure. He has been speaking to the people there [at Internacional] and I know that he spoke to them again last week.”

There are obstacles, most notably that Sandro has won only one cap for Brazil. He has a chance of being named in the squad for the World Cup finals in South Africa but is in competition with Gilberto Silva and Felipe Melo. At present he appears to fall short of the required number of international appearances to be granted a work permit in the United Kingdom.

There is also the question of his ownership. Internacional own 70% of his economic rights, with the remaining 30% held by third parties. They would be prohibited from retaining those stakes were Sandro to move. Chignall, though, does not consider the issue as problematic. “Third-party ownership is very common in Brazil,” he said. “Transfer fees are paid to the club and then they have to settle up with the third parties.”

The Brazilian league season is poised to start anew – it runs from January to November – and Internacional will kick off their Copa Libertadores campaign at the end of next month. The two-leg final of South America’s equivalent of the Champions League is scheduled for 11 and 18 August. Sandro’s price would surely jump were he to impress in the Copa Libertadores and/or be selected for the World Cup finals so it appears to be in Tottenham’s interests that they finalise a deal before the European winter transfer window closes and not wait until the summer.

Redknapp has been told that to make signings now he must generate the funds through sales and he hopes that Zenit’s offer for Pavlyuchenko, who has been a disappointment since his £13.7m move from Spartak Moscow the summer before last, will prove acceptable to Levy.

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