Daily Mail

Kane playing his best ever football...and amazingly it’s OUTSIDE the penalty area!

- LADYMAN

HARRY KANE had a difficult start to last summer’s European Championsh­ip which led to immediate questions about how he fundamenta­lly plays the game.

Kane, the England captain, had scored 34 internatio­nal goals back when the tournament started so maybe we should have trusted him more. But many who should have known better did not.

Kane was coming too deep to get the ball. He should have been playing on the shoulder of the last defender. He wasn’t spending enough time in the penalty area. This is what we were told by former players on the television and in the written press.

Kane improved throughout Euro 2020 and eventually scored four goals in the knockout stages. So when England needed him, he came through.

But that is not the evidence we should look at when we talk about exactly how the Tottenham forward plays his football. It was not, in truth, his best tournament. Above all else, Kane looked shattered at the end of a long season.

No, the evidence — the vindicatio­n of Kane’s methods — is here to be seen right now in the middle of this Premier League season.

Kane is playing some of the best football of his career under Antonio Conte at the moment and the majority of it is taking place outside of the penalty area.

Last weekend at home against Newcastle, Kane was magnificen­t as Spurs won 5-1. He did not score but he was the best player on the field by a distance. His instinctiv­e ability to drop into space — often as deep as the halfway line — to receive the ball and link play was superb. His use of the ball, often over mid to long-range, was just about perfect.

There are two kinds of effective passers in football. Those who hit their team-mates regularly, accurately and reliably and those whose deliveries are slightly braver and as a result carry more risk. Their passes inject speed and purpose into a team’s play, they switch direction and find new angles. Kane, quite unusually for a centre forward, fits into the latter category.

Strange as it sounds, Kane is one of the best passers in the Premier League and this was evident once again as Tottenham scored four against Aston Villa on Saturday.

Routinely, Kane’s main beneficiar­y is the lovely South Korean footballer Son Heung-min. It stands to reason that, as Kane’s nominal strike partner, it is Son who drops into the advanced spaces that Kane’s thirst for the ball leaves behind.

Of Kane’s 42 Premier League assists over the years, Son has now scored from exactly half of them.

Kane is a confident player right now and that makes a difference. A player with his blood up will happily deliver a 30-yard pass off the outside of his foot while someone in poor form will maybe look for a five-yard lay-off. That’s human nature.

Equally, Kane’s ongoing developmen­t as a footballer teaches us that there comes a time when we just have to trust our best players to know what they are doing and let them get on with it.

In a World Cup year, we will look to Kane again but it should not only be for goals — even though he remains Gareth Southgate’s best player and England’s most expert finisher.

If we reach Qatar with the likes of Raheem Sterling and Phil Foden not able to flourish off the back of service provided by the 28-year-old then I would suggest the problem will lie not with him, but perhaps with them.

All players have to play within a system. There always has to be a method. Equally, there are some footballer­s who should be left to stretch the margins and boundaries of that tactical structure by following their own instincts.

Harry Kane very much belongs in that category now.

Ian.Ladyman@dailymail.co.uk

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 ?? PA ?? Deep destroyer: Kane during his masterclas­s at Villa Park
PA Deep destroyer: Kane during his masterclas­s at Villa Park

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