Groundhop: Southampton

After somewhat of an unplanned hiatus from groundhopping, this week we decided to visit Southampton for their clash with high-flying Leicester.

Sometimes there comes a game where your just left wondering did that really just happen?

This was one of them.

When me and Harry made the very short trip to St Mary’s Stadium, neither of us could even fathom the concept of a 9-0 home defeat.

Goals from Ayoze Perez (x3), Ben Chilwell, James Maddison, Jamie Vardy (x3) and Youri Tielemans saw Brendan Rodgers’ side leave the South Coast with a record-breaking win that will go down in Premier League folklore.

Atmosphere

Well this was one of the most bizarre yet incredible atmospheres I have ever been a part of.

The Leicester fans travelled in numbers and were in fine voice through out the game.

The St Mary’s faithful began to understandably grow more and more toxic as the first half grew older. However, as the second half kicked off Southampton fans began to make a lot of noise, out-singing the travelling Leicester fans with their own self-deprecating chants as well as some nostalgic chants that would warm the hearts of the more senior members of the Saints’ fanbase.

English football fan culture often comes under scrutiny in comparison to foreign fan culture, however, this was one of those games where everything was so wonderfully typical of the English game.

A goal-fest, torrential rain and a self-deprecating yet partizan atmosphere. You just love to see it.

For me, I am going to give atmosphere a five.

Cost

With both myself and Harry currently studying in Southampton, travel was always to be at a very low cost.

As a result of us living on the doorstep of St Mary’s Stadium, we were fortunate enough to pay absolutely nothing for travel having walked from our new home.

Tickets were priced at £30 for me as I had forgotten to apply the discount code which would lower the prices to £25 like Harry did.

£25 to watch a Premier League game regardless of the entertainment on the pitch is fantastic.

Five out of five.

Entertainment

Well, how could this be anything other than a five?

Nine goals, clear-cut chances at a premium, a penalty, a red card and some horrendous breakdowns within the home end, what more could you ask for?

In spite of the relentless and freezing cold rain, we were distracted by the continuous free-flowing attacking football, as well as the calamitous defending.

Quite simply, the easiest decision we have made since the birth of this blog.

Entertainment, five.

Food

Due to the fact that my frozen hands couldn’t unzip my jacket to grab my wallet, I was unable to consume any food from the stadium so unfortunately I am going to have to leave this section to your imagination.

However, based on Harry’s visit to St Mary’s in August he awarded food a five.

So food will get a five.

Facilities

The stadium itself is your typical Premier League ground. It’s capacity of around 32,000 make for a great atmosphere throughout the match. What also helps the atmosphere and is a reason I especially like the ground is the fact that it is a bowl.

The facilities are also very nice. The ground on the inside and out is just stunning and I will definitely look forward to attending more games there as soon as I can.

For stadium, four out of five.

Man of the match

Well with Leicester City scoring nine, and two players both grabbing hat-tricks it would be silly not to choose an attacker as man of the match.

Or would it be? For me in spite of the overload of attacking excellence, there was one man that I was in constant awe of all night. Wilfried Ndidi, it seemed like every time Southampton had even a glimmer of hope going forward, the Nigerian was relentless in winning the ball back and setting up attacking moves for the visitors.

So what does this mean?

Taking into account all these variables, the visit to Southampton ranks as a 24/25

Meaning that Southampton ranks top of the groundhopping table, and realistically probably will do for the rest of the season.

Groundhop: Southampton

With my new job as an Opta Analyst, I will spend every other Saturday morning and Monday evening watching the Southampton u18s and u23s. However one of the perks of the job is that I am first reserve for the first team matches. The first home match of the Saints’ Premier League campaign was against Liverpool and when I got the email saying I will be covering it, I was over the moon.

It would be just my second match working for Opta, but I had already made it to the Premier League and I could not wait. I have been to St Mary’s previously with my team Yeovil, but that experience is best left in the past. I genuinely can’t remember whether I have been there once or twice before but I do know we would have lost 100% of the games.

The game didn’t go as I thought but still entertained me none the less. Sadio Mane scored in second half stoppage time to give Jurgen Klopp’s side the lead before Roberto Firmino doubled it with 20 minutes to go. Danny Ings pulled one back after an Adrian howler and should have doubled his tally late on but missed a glaring opportunity to equalise.

Atmosphere:

I will mention this a lot during the season with my Opta games, but I wear noise cancelling headphones during the match so the crowd and other surrounding noises should be cut out. This wasn’t the case for the second match in a row as both Southampton and Liverpool were making noise throughout, especially the latter.

Liverpool fans are renowned for their atmosphere at Anfield, belting out You’ll Never Walk Alone before the match and they were on form on the South Coast as well. They kindly reminded everybody in the stadium that they are Champions of Europe on several occasions, but if you could, you would as well.

I am going to rate the atmosphere 4.5/5

Cost:

Once again, I din’t have to pay for this Premier League clash but if I wanted to go next time it would put me back £40. With the additional £15 train journey it equates to around £55, which sounds a lot, but for a day out watching Premier League football, that isn’t too bad.

There will be cheaper Premier League grounds to go to for sure and just a league below I have been to Bristol City that only cost £20 to get in, so value for money isn’t the greatest at St. Mary’s.

So for cost, I am going to rate it 3/5

Entertainment:

With the Saints coming up against the European Champions, I was expecting a one sided match which would see Liverpool come out comfortable winners, especially given the fact that Southampton shipped three against Burnley a week beforehand.

Well the first half was quite the opposite with Southampton having the better of the play and they could and probably should’ve gone ahead after a Maya Yoshida header from a corner was well saved by Adrian. He almost undid that good work almost immediately, playing the ball against James Ward-Prowse in his own box, only to see it squirt wide.

Ex- Southampton man, Sadio Mane scored in first half stoppage time against the run of play but I don’t think he or any of the Liverpool fans cared one bit. They doubled their lead after 70 minutes after a cool Roberto Firmino finish seemingly put the game away for Liverpool.

However Adrian tried one trick too many and rebounded the ball of former Liverpool striker Danny Ings who halved the deficit. He should have grabbed a point for Ralph Hassenhuttl’s side late on, but he couldn’t convert Yan Valery’s cross from only a few yards out.

For entertainment I wil rate it a 3.5/5

Facilities:

The stadium itself is your typical Premier League ground. It’s capacity of around 32,000 make for a great atmosphere throughout the match. What also helps the atmosphere and is a reason I especially like the ground is the fact that it is a bowl. There aren’t too many that come to mind that aren’t one of the top six sides, but I’m sure once Luke reads this he will come up with a list of 20 in a matter of minutes.

The facilities are also very nice. The ground on the inside and out is just stunning and I will definitely look forward to attending more games there as soon as I can.

For facilities I am going to rate St Mary’s 4/5

Food:

Immediately after I left the stadium I knew exactly what I was going to rate the food. In the press lounge there was a menu on offer but as I hadn’t heard of half the stuff on it I opted for a couple of slices of Naan bread pre-match. It was very nice but nothing spectacular so at that point I was expecting a 3/4 star rating.

However. Once the half time whistle went, the media flocked back into he lounge where we were greeted with a pile of sausage rolls accompanied with a pile of chocolate shortbreads. I was in heaven, and before I could check the half time scores, there were two of each on my plate. I demolished them in no time at all and they were the best sausage rolls and chocolate shortbreads I have ever had.

So I thought it would be rude not to grab a couple more during the break as there were still plenty on offer. I thought that would be the end of my devouring banquet but after the match I went back in to check the scores and there they still were. Another two more consumed before you could say “slow down fatty” and off I went to the train station.

For food I have to rate Southampton, 5/5.

Man of the Match:

Man of the match was a tough one for me as Liverpool weren’t exactly on their top form. Virgil Van Dijk for one wasn’t at his high standard and neither were the two full backs. I am going to give my man of the match to the final player in the back four, Joel Matip.

I think the Cameroonian centre back goes under the radar with all the other stars around him, but he just gets on and does his job well. He arguably played better than his partner Van Dijk which is a massive compliment considering the year the Dutchman has had.

Matip was a rock at the back all game and would’ve earned his clean sheet if it wasn’t for Adrian’s silly mistake.

So what does this mean?

This means Southampton fly to the top of the leaderboard with an overall score of 20, surpassing Spurs for top spot. I thoroughly enjoyed my time in Southampton and I literally can’t wait until I am back there again. Also I met Tony Pulis after the match, no relevance here whatsoever but thought I’d share it anyway.

Groundhop: Tottenham Hotspur

Yesterday was one of the most important days of my life, following Spurs for the best part of 14 years I’ve grown up on White Hart Lane, the Paxton, the Shelf Side, the Park Lane these were the surroundings that I grew up on and were some of the many things that made me fall in love with football.

After a two years away from Tottenham, playing at Wembley, I made the trip back to N17 for the first time in two seasons to feast my love struck eyes upon the The new White Hart Lane.

My first experience of my new surroundings was a pleasant yet dramatic one. John McGinn’s early opener for newly promoted Aston Villa had me fearing the worse yet a brilliant second-half equaliser from debutant Tanguy Ndombele and a late brace from Harry Kane saw Spurs claim all three points on opening day.

My man of the match could’ve easily gone for Jack Grealish had it not been for his error which led to the winning goal from Kane late on, however my man of the match is an Aston Villa player, Tyrone Mings. At 1-0 down it felt like every time we had the ball it had to be Mings either getting on the end of it or in front of it, a brilliant addition who will be integral to Aston Villa this season who will beat the drop.

Atmosphere:

Opening day of the season is always good for atmosphere, months waiting for a meaningful and competitive game and it was no different pre-game with Spurs fans getting behind the team whilst the few thousand Villa fans were giving a good account of themselves on their return to the Premier League.

However, the home atmosphere tailed off as John McGinn’s early strike left the White Hart Lane faithful stunned.

The home atmosphere picked up in the second half as Pochettino’s side asserted more pressure on Aston Villa, and raised significantly when Spurs were on level terms. For the last 20 minutes of the game, the atmosphere was good but due to the patchy and inconsistent noise during a nervy opening half I will give the atmosphere a 3.5/5.

Cost:

For the Matchday ticket, I had to fork out £45. Whilst this may sound like a lot of money it’s just the standard rate of football tickets in 2019, with some second tier sides charging £30 per game I felt this was just standard rate, so I am going to give cost a 3/5

Entertainment:

Opening day is always a cagey affair, with both sides wanting to get off to a good start and not show too much weakness ahead of a long campaign.

Aston Villa’s early lead made the game a much more entertaining prospect as it forced Tottenham’s hand to become more expressive and attacking which allowed Villa the opportunity for the occasional counter.

Despite being defensively solid for the majority of the game Villa were not afraid to attack Spurs when the opportunity arose, whilst Pochettino’s side also tested Tom Heaton on various occasions.

I saw many chances at each end, some great saves, some great last ditch challenges and four good goals so I am going to give entertainment a 4/5.

Food:

With a new stadium the architecture is often the main factor of the venue (for obvious reasons) yet Spurs offer the longest running single sporting bar in Europe as well as various food stands situated around the ground which are all sensibly priced and opened until 11pm on a Matchday.

The food was sensibly priced at £2.50 and was excellent value for money so I am going to give food a very impressive 4/5.

Facilities:

Wow, what can I say which hasn’t already been said by people before? It really is a truly elite sporting venue and as a Spurs fan I could not be more impressed or more in awe of the stadium. It represents the next step of Tottenham and truly highlights the clubs ever growing status in the footballing world whilst retaining the core values and sheer nostalgia that made White Hart Lane such a special and sentimental place.

With multiple food stands and bars that are open until 11pm on a Matchday allows fans to have the most enhanced Matchday experience whilst not tapping into the archetypal world of Modern Football.

Taking my spurs hat off for a second, I can honestly say that is a truly elite stadium and represents the strides made by Tottenham.

Facilities undoubtedly gets a 5/5.

Overall I will give the Tottenham Hotspur stadium a 19.5/25 taking it top of the leaderboards.