Spurs are better off in the Champions League than winning Cup, insists Harry

01 December 2009 10:15
Tottenham boss Harry Redknapp believes qualifying for the Champions Leaguewould be a bigger success than bringing a trophy to White Hart Lane.[LNB]A grand day out: Juande Ramos celebrates winning the 2007 Carling Cup with Robbie Keane - within eight months he had been sacked [LNB]Redknapp is ready to utilise his squad for the Carling Cup quarter-final at Manchester United, illustrating the seriousness of Spurs' push for the top-four place in the Barclays Premier League that earns a shot at Europe's top club competition.[LNB]Spurs ended their silverware drought with glory at Wembley in 2008 under Juande Ramos but the slump that followed led to Redknapp's appointment - and just over a year later a trophy is no longer seen as something to salvage their season.[LNB]'Wembley is a great day out but I would love to get into a Champions League position with Tottenham,' Redknapp said.[LNB]'You can win a cup and have a bit of luck on the way but to get to a Champions League position would be done through a whole season. It would be great for us.[LNB]'It is a one-off game at Wembley, a great day out for the fans. If you win it everybody enjoys it but Tottenham won it two years ago and then went into freefall. So it didn't do them any good.'[LNB]Redknapp feels the title will be won by Chelsea or United, leaving Arsenal and Liverpool to scrap with Spurs, Aston Villa and Manchester City for the final spaces at Europe's top table.[LNB] 'The four clubs have had a monopoly on it,' he said. 'I'm not saying we're going to do it but we have got a chance. It's not impossible. If we sit here and say we're never going to do it, we never will.[LNB]'If the manager doesn't believe it, the players would think "why should we?" But it is possible. We have a good squad here.'[LNB] That's what I'm talking about: Harry Redknapp (left) is not bothered by the Carling Cup, wanting more Premier League goals from the likes of Jermain Defoe[LNB]Redknapp was encouraged by the manner of his team's performance against Villaon Saturday, showing the progress being made.[LNB]'This time last year, you wouldn't even have considered us breaking in there, we were at the bottom of the league,' he said.[LNB]'But you look at the way we played during the second half on Saturday and to dominate a team like Villa as we did second half.[LNB]'Normally, you see a Man United dominate someone like that or a Liverpool. I think we are getting to the stage where we it is possible for us to go away (to top-four clubs), we can play at these places and feel we've got a chance of winning.'[LNB] Darren Fletcher hits back at Manchester United critics and insists youngsters learn quicker at Old TraffordSportsmail asks football's leading figures who they would pay £40 to seeGravy train: Big spenders are City and Chelsea as clubs pay £70m to agentsMagic Messi beats rival Ronaldo to land European Footballer of the Year awardTOTTENHAM HOTSPUR FC

Source: Daily_Mail