They couldn’t wait for Mondays at Larkswood Primary, in northeast London near the Essex countryside.Five or six local clubs played in the Premier League every year. After each weekend’s games, the boys would come to school ready to argue about which of them was best.”You’re going back and forth with each other whenever you pick up a good result,” Harry Kane says.”But obviously at the time, Arsenal and Chelsea were stronger than Tottenham. Finishing higher, winning trophies.”In 2003, when Kane was 9, Arsenal placed second in the league and Chelsea fourth. The next season Arsenal won the title, with Chelsea right behind. The year after that, they switched places and Chelsea won.Tottenham Hotspur? Keep looking down the table. Further down, past Fulham, past Charlton Athletic and if you’ve never heard of Charlton Athletic, well … that’s the point. Both of those London clubs finished ahead of Spurs in 2003, and it was no aberration. The following season, they did it again.Still, Kane stayed steadfast, even when he briefly played in Arsenal’s youth program. You pick a team when you’re small, he explains, and often for no logical reason. If you’re loyal and determined, you stick with it.It couldn’t have been…