Harry Kane’s meteoric rise sees him match Messi and Ronaldo

Updated 30 December 2017
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Harry Kane’s meteoric rise sees him match Messi and Ronaldo

LONDON: It was almost exactly three years ago, on New Year’s Day 2015, that Harry Kane finally began to be taken seriously, scoring twice and playing with an unexpected menace as Tottenham beat Chelsea 5-3. It is fair to say that even at that point, nobody imagined that three years later Kane would be outstripping Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo.

Nobody, of course, is saying that he is a better player than either Messi or Ronaldo — although his club manager Mauricio Pochettino continues to insist that he belongs in the same bracket. And statistics that deal with a calendar year always seem a little forced in football. Who, after all, knew that Alan Shearer held the record for most Premier League goals in a calendar year before Kane took his record with the hat-trick against Southampton on Boxing Day?

But still, to score 56 goals in 2017, to outstrip both Messi and Ronaldo and end seven years of domination by the eternal duo, is a remarkable achievement which suggests just how extraordinary Kane’s goalscoring this year has been. To hit eight hattricks in a 12-month spell, six of them in the league, is a level of performance beyond reason. Already, aged just 24, he is tenth on the all-time list of Tottenham goalscorers.

What is most inexplicable is that it is so hard to pinpoint what makes Kane good. The reaction after that New Year’s Day game against Chelsea was a mixture of skepticism and amusement. Kane had scored three goals in six league games the previous season and had been prolific in the Europa League but still, nobody was convinced.

He was almost flamboyantly ordinary. He did not look like a star. His appearance was of a minor RAF officer in a Second World War film, doomed to be tragically shot down on his final mission before a spell of extended leave. He was not noticeably quick. He was not noticeably tall. He was not noticeably powerful. He did not take the breath away with his close technical skill. He was not dominant in the air. He is still none of those things. And yet, as the months have gone by and his goalscoring has continued unabated — apart from his odd inability to score in August — it has become apparent that he is very special indeed.

What has become apparent is that Kane has an astonishing football brain. Rather than being exceptional at any one striker’s attribute, he is quite good at all of them. But what makes him truly dangerous is his reading of the game, his capacity to find space, his instincts for what to do in any give situation. The goal with which he completed his hat-trick against Southampton on Boxing Day was typical as he delayed his shot, letting the ball keep rolling, taking him beyond Maya Yoshida’s stretch and persuading Fraser Forster to commit himself before dinking the ball over him.

But to say that decision-making capacity is an instinct perhaps does Kane a disservice. It is to an extent innate and there are others who will never have his clarity of vision, but it is also something he has strived to improve. It is not just that he works hard; it is that he is inquisitive and open to new ideas about how to improve. A year ago he decided he could be fitter, and on Jan. 1 appointed a nutritionist who lives in his family home six days a week ensuring his diet is as good as it can be. His added strength and sharpness this season — as seen best, perhaps, in his burst through the Borussia Dortmund defense to score in the Champions League — is probably in part the result of that.

On afternoons off, he works on his finishing. For a long time he focused on low hard strikes with his right foot. Then, Spurs’ Under-15 coach Bradley Allen asked why he always came onto his right side. In the summer, Kane began to work on scoring with his left foot: eight of his 18 Premier League goals this season have been scored with his left.

Kane may not catch the eye like Messi and Ronaldo, but his relentless desire for self-improvement has turned him into a staggeringly successful player.

Harry Kane’s goal tally

2013-2014: 19 appearances — 4 goals
2014-2015: 51 appearances — 31 goals
2015-2016: 50 appearances — 28 goals
2016-2017: 38 appearances — 35 goals


Inter continue Scudetto march after Champions League humbling

Updated 01 March 2026
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Inter continue Scudetto march after Champions League humbling

  • Milan will be favorites to win at Cremonese in Sunday’s early fixture, with the local rivals set to face off next weekend in a match which will in all likelihood have little impact on the destination of the Scudetto

MILAN, Italy: Inter Milan bounced back from Champions League elimination with Saturday’s 2-0 win over Genoa which continued their march toward the Serie A title.
Federico Dimarco’s brilliant volley just after the half-hour mark and Hakan Calhanoglu’s second-half penalty were enough for Inter to extend their already huge lead over AC Milan at the top of the table to 13 points.
Milan will be favorites to win at Cremonese in Sunday’s early fixture, with the local rivals set to face off next weekend in a match which will in all likelihood have little impact on the destination of the Scudetto.
Inter, whose fans unloaded a collection of anti-Milan chants in anticipation of the derby, have dropped just two points in 15 league matches and have been a cut above the rest in Italy’s top flight this season.
Their domestic dominance comes in stark contrast to the humiliating manner in which they were dumped out of the Champions League by Bodo/Glimt on Tuesday night.
A 5-2 aggregate defeat to the Norwegian minnows cast doubts over not just the quality of Cristian Chivu’s team but of Italian football as a whole.
There was plenty of quality in Dimarco’s opener however, the Italy full-back beautifully placing a first-time finish from a tight angle after exchanging passes with Henrikh Mkhitaryan.
Little else happened in a humdrum encounter until Alex Amorim handled a cross from Luis Henrique, whose shot had been tipped onto the post just moments before.
Calhanoglu calmly stroked home the spot-kick on his return to action following niggling muscle problems which have caused him issues since before Christmas, sealing the points for Inter.
Big Rom back
Romelu Lukaku kept Napoli on course for a Champions League spot with a last-gasp winner in the champions’ 2-1 victory over rock-bottom Verona, the Belgium forward’s first goal of the season.
Lukaku forced home Giovane’s cross to snatch the win for third-placed Napoli with the last kick of the game at the Stadio Marcantonio Bentegodi.
Napoli had looked like dropping points in northern Italy when Jean-Daniel Akpa Akpro levelled Rasmus Hojlund’s early opener in the 65th minute.
But Lukaku, who only played his first game of the season in late January, gave Napoli a huge win with both Como and Atalanta pushing for a top-four placing.
“I was a dead player before coming here,” said Lukaku to DAZN.
“This season has been difficult, but we’ve got to aim high.”
Napoli’s title defense is all but over as they trail Inter by 14 points after an injury-ravaged season.
Napoli were missing key midfielders Scott McTominay, Kevin De Bruyne and Andre-Frank Anguissa on Saturday, as well as captain Giovanni Di Lorenzo.
Verona, under interim coach Paolo Sammarco following the sacking of Paolo Zanetti earlier this month, are 10 points from safety after a 12th straight match without a win.
Como, who face Inter in the first leg of the Italian Cup semifinals on Tuesday, strolled to 3-1 victory over strugglers Lecce to continue their push for a first-ever qualification for European football.
Cesc Fabregas’s team are two points behind Roma, in fourth and Juventus’ opponents on Sunday, and five behind Napoli.
Como are also two points ahead of sixth-placed Juve who face Roma trying to stay in touch with the Champions League places after being eliminated from Europe’s elite club competition by Galatasaray on Wednesday.