On 15 January 2011, Rochdale drew 1-1 at home to Leyton Orient in League One. The match was played on a waterlogged Spotland pitch, in front of a crowd of 2,371, and afterwards the Rochdale manager Keith Hill gave the referee both barrels. “That wasn’t a spectacle, it was a farce. The biggest loser was the pitch. The pitch is an absolute disgrace, so whoever wanted this game on, for whatever reason, they are not looking at the long-term future. I don’t think the game should have been played. That’s forgotten now, it’s history.”
A few years later, the match became historic. In the 74th minute, Orient replaced their grizzled 36-year-old Scottish striker Scott McGleish with a chubby-cheeked 17-year-old, making his professional debut. According to this BBC report, jogging on to the field was Harry Kane’s only notable contribution. Eventually he scored five goals in 18 appearances for Orient, the first of four loan spells in the lower divisions. “Kane was OK for Orient but no netbuster,” wrote one Orient forum member a few years later, indicating the two other Spurs loanees, Tom Carroll and Paul-José M’Poku, looked far better than Kane.
Funny old game. Carroll is at Exeter, M’Poku plays in South Korea for Incheon United, and Kane — who in the intervening 12 years has demonstrated a startling aptitude for things like “goals”, “assists” and “making Arsenal fans foam with impotent rage” — may be about to complete the lesser travelled journey from Spotland to the Allianz Arena. This morning, news broke that — in the most out-of-character response since the Man from Del Monte lovingly tasted one of his new pineapples, started retching, told his labour staff they were an egregious disgrace to horticulture, sacked them all on the spot and went into the used car industry instead — Daniel Levy has reportedly said yes to Bayern Munich’s near-£100m offer.
Kane must now decide whether to join Germany’s finest or see out his contract at Spurs before joining another English club and breaking Alan Shearer’s Premier League goals record. He could do both, by having a couple of years in Germany before returning to knock off the remaining 48 goals needed to force Shearer into an awkward, not entirely convincing display of magnanimity on live television.
If Kane does move to Bayern, all those brilliantly hilarious memes about him winning nothing will go up in smoke. Bayern have won 11 consecutive Bundesliga titles, and last season they couldn’t even give the trophy away. The signing of Kane would also make Bayern serious contenders in Big Cup and continue an unlikely development in which English football’s growing dominance of Big Cup is being threatened by its own: Jude Bellingham at Real Madrid and Kane at Bayern.
Mind you, our print-only predecessor Football Yearly predicted the same when Kevin Keegan went to Hamburg in 1977, and English clubs won six of the next seven Big Cups. And knowing Levy, and football, and life, we won’t believe it’s a done deal until we see Harry Kane forced to pose in lederhosen, supping a stein, looking as at home as he did at Spotland all those years ago.