Manchester United and Tottenham will slug it out in the Europa League final on Thursday morning (AEST) in Bilbao, with both sides desperately seeking salvation from dismal Premier League campaigns through silverware and a golden ticket into next season’s Champions League.
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A potential £100 million ($A208 million) honey pot for reaching Europe’s top competition is on the line at the San Mames stadium between two sides languishing near the bottom of the English top flight.
Ruben Amorim’s Red Devils are 16th and with 18 league defeats are enduring their worst top flight campaign in half a century, since their 1974 relegation.
One place lower lie Ange Postecoglou’s Spurs, beaten a club-record 21 times in the league, and on course for their worst season since returning to the top tier in 1978.
With both teams fixated on Europe, their plunge towards the table’s lower echelons has only accelerated in recent weeks.
United are winless in eight league games, their worst such run in Premier League history, falling at Chelsea on Friday in their last outing ahead of the final.
Tottenham also slumped to defeat at Aston Villa for their fifth loss in six league matches.
Spurs are twice winners of this competition, but their victory in 1984 was the club’s last European trophy and they have not won any silverware for 17 years.
They reached a maiden Champions League final in 2019 but came up short in another all-English battle in Spain, losing against Liverpool in a drab contest.
Postecoglou said last week that winning this week’s final “could be a turning point” for the club.
“For me personally, great, it’s another trophy I can reminisce about in my old age,” the Spurs boss said.
“But more importantly for the club, I’ve always said that it’s the significance of what it does to people that really impacts you.
“A lot of the success I’ve had has been really significant stuff. Yokohama hadn’t won the championship for 14 years, Australia had never won a continental championship, and Brisbane hadn’t won one.
“South Melbourne, my first job, hadn’t won in seven years and Celtic was one year, but that’s a long time in Scotland. They had to wrestle back the dominance they’ve had for so long.
“When you look at the historical backdrop of this club for the past 20-odd years, it feels like a turning point for how people perceive this club and how this club perceives itself, which I think is the biggest thing.
“Until you do it, irrespective of what else you accomplish, people are going to say you haven’t won anything. In our game, and in life in general, that’s the things that matter most when people asses where you are at.”
Despite United’s gradual decline since legendary former manager Alex Ferguson retired in 2013, they did win the FA Cup and League Cup in the past two seasons under Amorim’s predecessor Erik ten Hag.
The Portuguese has endured a torrid time since taking charge in November, winning just six of his 26 Premier League games.
But the Europa League has been a different story as United thrashed Real Sociedad and Athletic Bilbao, either side of a famous fightback from 6-4 down to beat Lyon 7-6 on aggregate in the quarter-finals that sparked memories of the club’s dramatic Champions League final victory in 1999.
Amorim, though, is aware of the scale of the task he faces to turn around the 20-time English champions.
“I’m not concerned about the final, it’s by far the smallest problem in our club,” said the former Sporting Lisbon boss.
“We need to change something that is deeper than this.”
Tottenham were once seen as not much trouble for an all-conquering United. Former United great Roy Keane revealed once Ferguson’s team talk was limited to a dismissive “lads, it’s Spurs”.
This season the London side have won all three meetings, twice in the Premier League as well as in the League Cup, with Postecoglou unbeaten in five matches at the helm against United.
“If you think about the odds it’s hard for the club to lose four times in a row,” said Amorim.
With players like Bruno Fernandes and Casemiro, United have both experience and quality at their disposal.
“They know how to win trophies, Tottenham don’t,” said former United midfielder Paul Scholes, who played alongside Keane.
Despite the team’s diabolical domestic form the Portuguese coach is expected to stay, bolstered by the thrilling unbeaten surge to the Europa League final.
The same cannot be said for Postecoglou. The Australian is almost certain to depart if he fails to deliver on his promise to win a trophy in his second season in charge.
Spurs’ bad luck with injuries this season continues with midfielders James Maddison, Lucas Bergvall and Dejan Kulusevski all missing for the final, but captain Son Heung-min is back fit.
They survived an Arctic trip in the semi-finals at Bodo/Glimt, but Postecoglou may still be frozen out even if his team triumphs.
“(If we win) it’s going to upset a lot of people isn’t it?” said the Australian. “Who cares if we’re struggling in the league ... I’m looking forward to it and it should be a great game.”