Tottenham Injuries Pile Up as Spurs Juggle Short-Term Relief and Long-Term Concern
Tottenham’s season continues to be shaped as much by the treatment room as by events on the pitch. A 2-2 draw at Burnley offered brief emotional lift through a late Cristian Romero equaliser, but it also added two more names to an already crowded injury list. For Thomas Frank, the task is no longer simply about improving performances, it is about navigating a squad whose availability changes week by week.
With key fixtures approaching and Tottenham injuries continuing to disrupt continuity, Spurs are being forced into constant recalibration. The margin for error is thin, particularly in defence and midfield, where absences are now defining selection and structure.
Romero and Porro offer cautious optimism
Cristian Romero once again proved decisive, scoring deep into stoppage time to rescue a point at Turf Moor. Yet even that moment came with a sting. The Argentine was later seen crouched in discomfort and was substituted late on, raising fears of another defensive setback.
Frank, however, attempted to calm concerns afterwards, saying, “Romero was cramping in the end.” That assessment points towards fatigue rather than structural damage, and with Romero having scored in three consecutive matches, his availability remains critical to Spurs’ stability at the back.
Pedro Porro followed a similar pattern. Withdrawn at half-time, the right-back’s absence initially appeared worrying, especially given the volume of football he has played. Frank again framed it as load management rather than injury, explaining, “Pedro was physical, [having] played a lot of minutes.”
Porro has started 14 straight games in all competitions, and with Eintracht Frankfurt, Manchester City and Manchester United ahead, rotation may be as much about preservation as necessity. Both Romero and Porro are currently pencilled in for potential returns against Frankfurt, a fixture that could define Spurs’ short-term momentum.
Midfield depth tested by persistent absences
If defence carries uncertainty, midfield is where Tottenham injuries are most deeply felt. Rodrigo Bentancur’s hamstring surgery has removed one of Spurs’ most reliable performers for three months. His absence strips experience and balance from the centre of the pitch, and it leaves Frank short of players capable of controlling tempo.
Joao Palhinha is another unresolved case. The Portuguese midfielder has missed multiple matches after picking up a knock in training, with Frank previously describing his availability as “tight.” That tightness has translated into continued absence, and his return date remains tentative, again pointing towards Frankfurt as a possible target.
Lucas Bergvall’s situation is more severe. The teenager suffered an ankle sprain in the Champions League and is expected to be sidelined for two to three months. Frank confirmed it was a “contact injury,” a setback that will likely rule Bergvall out of a significant portion of the season, including potential European knockout matches.
Together, these Tottenham injuries have thinned options in a department that thrives on rotation and intensity, forcing Frank to lean heavily on those still fit.
Defensive reshuffle after Ben Davies blow
Ben Davies’ injury may prove one of the most disruptive. The Welshman broke his ankle against West Ham and required surgery, with no clear return timeline. The early indications suggest a lengthy layoff, potentially season-ending, which leaves Spurs short at left-back.
Djed Spence and Destiny Udogie are now sharing responsibilities in that area, while the club has also explored market options, including interest in Andy Robertson and the signing of Brazilian Souza. Davies’ contract situation adds further uncertainty, raising the possibility that his final appearance for Tottenham has already passed.
Attacking options stretched thin
Further forward, Tottenham injuries have stripped Frank of several key attacking outlets. Richarlison is sidelined for up to seven weeks with a hamstring issue sustained in the FA Cup, with Frank confirming, “Richy unfortunately got a hamstring injury that will keep him out for up to seven weeks.”
Mohammed Kudus is another major loss. The Ghanaian winger suffered a quad tendon problem, with Frank explaining, “Mohammed, unfortunately, is a bigger one to the tendon in the quad. That is one where we expect him back after the March international break.” His absence leaves Spurs without a natural right winger, especially after Brennan Johnson’s January departure.
Dejan Kulusevski remains out with a complex patella issue, and Frank has stressed caution, noting, “We know it is a complicated injury.” James Maddison’s ACL injury, suffered in pre-season, is likely to keep him out for the rest of the campaign.
For Tottenham, injuries are no longer isolated incidents. They are shaping tactics, squad balance and long-term planning. Each update brings small relief or fresh concern, but the broader picture remains one of a squad forced to adapt, week after week, to an ever-changing availability list.