
There is no doubt that Wigan are a poor side - conceding ten goals in two opening home fixtures, four to the play-off promoted side, is proof of that. Wigan have since last season looked poor whenever going behind, choosing to collapse to crushing defeats more often than show the spirit that saw them overturn a two goal deficit to beat Arsenal 3-2 with ten minutes remaining. In the reverse fixture of this game last season this was proved, as Spurs rampaged to a 9-1 home win and eased to a 4-0 away thrashing. But when they have gone ahead they have looked a decent side, beat Liverpool 1-0 among other noticable results last season.
Spurs should remeber that last season's campaign was not without a hitch - despite home wins over teams including Liverpool, Arsenal and Chelsea, they still suffered the indignity of losing at home to Stoke and being doubled by Wolverhampton Wanderers. Finishing fourth was quite an achievement, but was down to the failures as others as much as their own success. While they may just sound like a Liverpool fan being bitter, it is notable that their main competitors could not perform to a consistant level - Manchester City ended up drawing around a quarter of their league games, seven in succession, Aston Villa often fell short at the crucial time, Everton failed to start playing to their potential until March and Liverpool's woes are well documented. Tottenham are succeptable to getting carried away with a good result or two, and then crashing against 'inferior' opposition - if they want another good league campaign they must resolve this, and they will be crushed in the Champions' League if they do not. No doubt the depth they have added and the squad built up will help to deal with the many games, with players like Rafael Van der Vaart likely to prove key.
Manchester City were the other aspirational team to be found wanting, succombing to the kind of late winning goal that they should be accustomed to by now after their red rivals won three games against them in this manner last season. Darren Bent stepped up to take a woeful penalty - not that the Black Cats will mind as it somehow went in - and steal the points at the Stadium of Light. Carlos Tevez put forward his effort for worst miss of the season with the sort of effort that would make an eight year old in a park cringe. City may have spent their hundreds of millions and may have a bench worth more than the bottom half of the table combined, but what will propel them up the league is results at Sunderland and the like, not at Anfield and Stamford Bridge.
The players no doubt find it easy to be motivated for the top draw games, when they take on other multimillionaires who are occupying the slots at the top half of the table. They may well get convincing results against these sides - last season they were the only side to double Chelsea. However, it is often more important to be able to defeat the sides you are expected to, as Liverpool proved when a single home goal in games against West Ham and Fulham two seasons ago would have been sufficient to win them the Premier League. If a side can beat every team at home and all of the bottom ten home and away that's 90 points and the title. The Sheikh's players may perform when they feel the need, but they will need to perform on cold nights in Wigan and Bolton and get three points when a goal down with stud marks in their legs if they are to truly realise their ambitions and not falter at places like Sunderland.
Elsewhere in the league the usual sides got their usual results. Liverpool managed to beat West Brom, and though I was disappointed that it was only by one goal, at leat Roy's boys have their first win and Fernando Torres has shown he is still capable of scoring with his hair a different colour. Manchester United eased past West Ham, who were once their bogey team, with a comprehensive win. Nani played the sort of game fans will hope he can every week, while Wayne Rooney still looks some way off the mark.
Chelsea had no problems in beating Stoke, proving that they can play fancy football and win a fight when they have to. More concerning was Frank Lampard's hat-trick of missed penalties - he seemed to emulate the Darren-Bent silly little sprint on the spot before running forward and aimlessly passing it towards the goalkeeper, which is clearly a bad strategy. Hopefully Steven Gerrard will be taking spot kicks for England from now on. Arsenal showed how they have matures past the team of three years ago who would always be bullied into defeat every time they travelled up the M6 with a win at Blackburn. Theo Walcott seems to be developing well which can only bode well for the national team.
Wolverhampton Wanderers look increasingly like an established Premier League side every week, and this time succombed to a draw against Newcastle. There are already calls for Andy Carrol to join England and the centre forward seems to be proving himself at the top level. I expect Newcastle to steer comfortably clear of relegation this season and quickly establish themselves as a mid table side. Blackburn took a point from their first home game and suffered the heartache of a late equaliser against Fulham. While it is always nice to see a team take the fancy football approach rather than the Stoke throw-it-and-head-it-in appraoch, team's that play this style without the quality are always likely to get relegated for their naivity, as West Brom prove every other year.
Birmingham are another intimidating looking side who should steer well clear of the bottom three, especially with their recent transfer activity in securing ex-Arsenal playmaker Alexander Hleb among others.They took a 2-0 lead on a tough trip to Bolton before throwing the game away, and were no doubt helped by Jussi Jaaskelainen's red-mist moment that saw him slap Roger Johnson. Johnson acted surprised at the petulant outburst and didn't retaliate - why these footballers show petty violence and not just a good thump and a proper fight is always bemusing. Aston Villa were the other team to get back to winning ways after their thrashing at St James' Park the week before. Everton continued to look blunt up with Jermaine Beckford struggling to make an impact outside of League One - they missed the chance to sign another striker but will need to sharpen up if they are to realised their potential early on this campaign.
So the teams in and around the top half of the table need to become consistant if they want to challenge for honours - and invariably make the Premier League a more exciting an unpredictable one for its followers. Chelsea and Man Utd will always be near the top and regularly grinding out the important results - now we just need a more wide spread winning mentality and focus in other teams to have six or seven teams scrapping at the top instead of just two.
(Picture: Daily Mirror)