Tottenham forward Randal Kolo Muani was involved in a "minor" car crash on Tuesday, but is fine according to head coach Thomas Frank and expected to feature at Eintracht Frankfurt on Wednesday.
Kolo Muani took part in open training at the club's Hotspur Way facility in Enfield, north London but pictures circulated on social media that showed the Paris Saint-Germain attacker and team-mate Wilson Odobert standing next to a black Ferrari that had sustained damage.
Spurs boss Frank confirmed later on Tuesday that Kolo Muani was "fine" after the accident and ahead of the midweek Champions League tie.
Odobert reportedly was in his own car but stopped to assist his team-mate and they travelled to Germany together.
"Everyone else involved in that accident was fine," Frank told a press conference.
"It was a tyre blowing up, so, they are a little bit delayed but they will land later tonight."
Pushed for further details on the incident, Frank explained: "They’re fine, it was on the way to the airport.
"I haven’t spoken to them personally yet. The first message is that they are fine and nothing happened, as I said the first time.
"They will fly out later and I fully expect both to be available for tomorrow."
Frank (above) also insisted that "a lot of things" are going in the right direction behind the scenes at Tottenham despite Pedro Porro and Micky van de Ven becoming the latest to join the club's injury list.
Right-back Porro was ruled out for four weeks, whilst Van de Ven has not travelled to make it 14 players unavailable.
"Pedro hasn't travelled. Unfortunately he picked up a hamstring injury to be out for four weeks. Micky has not travelled. Minor thing. It’s possible he’s available for the weekend (against Manchester City)," Frank told a press conference.
Frank clarified Van de Ven’s "minor" issue was not hamstring-related after the Netherlands international suffered injury problems in that area during the 2024-25 campaign.
It is a case of deja vu for Spurs, given they have again struggled domestically this season but excelled in Europe, with last week's victory over Borussia Dortmund a much-needed lift for Frank at a time when the fanbase has turned on the Danish coach.
He faced more chants about "getting sacked in the morning" after Saturday’s 2-2 draw at Burnley, which made it two victories in 14 league matches to leave Tottenham only eight points above 18th-placed West Ham.
Yet, Frank’s current full focus is on the Champions League and he added: "We have a great opportunity to secure a position in the top eight, which would be a very good result, a very good achievement.
"Be very positive, we’re looking forward to that. That’s what we are focusing everything we can on.
"The other thing is that I think the performances for a while have been good in many ways. We just haven’t got on the right side enough to get the three points.
"We are working very hard on that. Sometimes you are on that spell, the players are giving you everything but for me tomorrow, it’s all about the opportunity.
"Again, it’s my job to look a little bit in the bigger perspective. Even though we haven’t won as much as we want, it’s very, very few things that need to go our way, the small margins, keep doing the right thing.
"Sometimes it’s the small things where even if you’re doing them you don’t get the result and then the whole thing is a catastrophe but actually behind the scenes, there’s a lot of things going in the right direction."