Football.London

Ange Postecoglou delivers Tottenham injury update as four ruled out amid Cristian Romero decision

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Ange Postecoglou provided the latest team news for Tottenham ahead of the clash with Ipswich Town. There were some questions about a few players ahead of the defeat to Galatasaray which needed further clarification from the Australian.

Postecoglou said that both Timo Werner and Cristian Romero were in contention for the weekend but their absence in Turkey raised questions. Luckily, it seems there is some good news following the Thursday night defeat.

"Everyone came through unscathed so no issues there," he said. "Cristian we'll see how he goes in the next couple of days. He has a chance for the weekend."

There was however, worse news for the other pair of problems. "Mikey, not right for the weekend," Postecoglou said. "Timo too."

Richarlison suffered a problem once again. It was evident in Postecoglou's thoughts that he was gutted to lose him again. "Very disappointed," he said. "We tried to take a different approach.

"He trimmed down. We were doing everything right, trying not to overload him but unfortunately he broke down again. He's disappointed."

The Spurs head coach also gave further clarification on Micky van de Ven. While he will not be ready for the weekend, hopefully it will not be too long after.

"Yeah, it will be after the international break," he said. "When after, it will be dictate his progress during that time."

Ange Postecoglou could be without SEVEN players for Tottenham vs Ipswich Premier League clash

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Ange Postecoglou will face the media today ahead of Tottenham's Premier League game with Ipswich Town on Sunday. The Spurs boss is holding his pre-match press conference at Hotspur Way ahead of the return to Premier League action.

Tottenham go into the match off the back of a fine 4-1 win over Aston Villa in the Premier League. However, they followed that up with a 3-2 defeat to Galatasaray in the Europa League on Thursday - their first defeat in that competition.

Spurs know that they could leap as high as third in the Premier League table with a win over the Tractor Boys, if results elsewhere go their way - and that would be a huge tonic as we head into the third and final international break of 2024.

Postecoglou is sure to be questioned on the state of his squad heading into the match at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium though. There are question marks over a number of high-profile players, with Spurs forced into big changes in the defeat to Galatasaray.

Micky van de Ven will be missing for the Ipswich match, having picked up a hamstring injury against Manchester City in the Carabao Cup. Richarlison and Wilson Odobert are also ruled out with hamstring and thigh injuries respectively.

However, there are other concerns. Cristian Romero was not risked for the Galatasaray clash, staying at home with a foot injury. Timo Werner was another to remain at home with a groin complaint.

Djed Spence has been missing for a number of weeks, while teenager Mikey Moore also missed the trip to Turkey with a virus.

Tottenham are walking wounded, particularly in defensive positions, and Postecoglou will be hoping to hve better news to share with the assembled media ahead of the game with Ipswich.

Ben Davies reveals Will Lankshear dressing room reaction after Tottenham red card vs Galatasaray

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Ben Davies has admitted that Will Lankshear was "devastated" in the Tottenham dressing room following the team's 3-2 Europa League defeat against Galatasaray. It proved to be a night of mixed emotions for the young striker as he marked his second senior start for Spurs with his first goal for the club.

Lankshear, who plundered goals for fun for the club's Under-21s last season, was in the right position in the 18th minute to convert from point-blank range from Brennan Johnson's cross. It was an extremely impressive Tottenham goal as Archie Gray played a delightful ball over the top to Johnson, who then crossed first time for the striker to finish off and silence the fans inside RAMS Park.

Lankshear did have a chance to double his tally early in the second half but experienced goalkeeper Fernando Muslera was on hand to deny him in the area. Not long after that miss, Lankshear saw red after picking up his second bookable offence.

Seven minutes after his first caution, the 19-year-old was given a second yellow after fouling former Norwich City man Gabriel Sara. Lankshear believed he should have won a foul seconds earlier, thus seeing him immediately get to his feet before catching the Galatasaray man with a late challenge right in front of the dugouts.

He was given his marching orders as a result and looked completely gutted to be dismissed from the field. Tottenham teammate Pedro Porro did sprint over to console him before he headed down the tunnel.

The 10 men of Tottenham did manage to find a way back into the contest courtesy of Dominic Solanke's cute finish but there was to be no third goal for the visitors as Galatasaray held on for victory. Speaking to SPURSPLAY after the game, Davies revealed that Lankshear was "gutted" in the dressing room after the game but he knows his young teammate will learn from it.

"Probably a little bit too late," he said when asked about the second-half fightback and getting on top in the closing stages. "Unfortunately for Will it is tough and these things happen but he'll learn from that. Look, he's pretty devastated in there but it's up to us to help him through it now. It was a valiant fight in the end but not quite enough."

He added: "He's gutted in there, he feels like he's probably let the team down. It's just part and parcel of football. Every game is different, every circumstance is different and tonight when he went off we went down to ten men and we had to work hard. It's one of those things. The game is done now and he will learn from that for sure."

Davies also gave his verdict on a game where Tottenham gifted their opponents chance after chance, notably in the first half and immediately after half-time.

"It was a tough game, especially in the first half our mistakes were our biggest downfall," explained the Wales international. "We need to handle the atmosphere a bit better than we did in the first half because by the end of the game, even with ten men, we were probably the only team really pushing for it.

"We always felt we had a pretty good chance if we kept pushing but we probably left ourselves a little bit too much to do."

Listen to the latest episode of Gold & Guest Talk Tottenham for reaction to Spurs' victory against Man City! Click here for in-depth Spurs chat on your preferred podcast platform.

Every word Ange Postecoglou said on Will Lankshear goal and red card, Lucas Bergvall and defeat

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Tottenham Hotspur lost 3-2 at Galatasaray in the Europa League on Thursday night and we've got every word Ange Postecoglou said in his press conference after the game.

Spurs went behind when the hosts took the lead six minutes in thanks to a terrific half-volley from Yunus Akgun from outside the box which flew into the top right corner of Tottenham's net. Tottenham levelled though when 18-year-old Archie Gray picked out Brennan Johnson's run with a wonderful pass and he cushioned the ball across to 19-year-old Will Lankshear to smash home his first goal for the club on 18 minutes.

Galatasaray found another goal when Spurs messed about with the ball in their own half and it was worked to Victor Osimhen to poke home. The on-loan Napoli striker bagged another goal five minutes before the break when he side-footed a deep cross into the net.

The home side continued to heap the pressure on Spurs, who lost Lankshear to a second yellow card before the hour mark for a late challenge. The 10-man visitors did grab a goal back when substitute Dominic Solanke executed a lovely dragged back flick to score from Pedro Porro's low cross, but despite some late openings could not find a leveller.

Here's every single word Postecoglou said to the assembled media with football.london's Spurs correspondent Alasdair Gold among those putting the questions to him in Istanbul.

What did you make of your team's performance?

Obviously disappointing result. First half wasn't great, you know, we just didn't handle things well at all, particularly with the ball, just really wasteful and gave it away way too many times, unnecessarily. That allows them to get a foothold in the areas that they're good at.

They got some good players in the front third and we just allowed that to happen way too often and ultimately paid a price for it because I thought, you know we always finish strongly and I knew we would in the second half. Obviously going down to 10 men didn't help, but even with 10 men, I thought we probably played the best football, we did all game and got our second goal, had some opportunities to get a third there, but I thought we were looking the better side. So disappointing outcome, unfortunately, brought on by a disappointing first half.

This is your first loss in the Europa League, did you expect Galatasaray to play like this?

We expected a tough game here. Obviously, they've been in good form all year and undefeated at home. And, I thought the game was as expected. They have some dangerous players and you need to control the game with the ball better than we did tonight. I think that first half ultimately cost us the game and disappointing for us. Galatasaray are a good side. We know that. They're in a good position in the Europa League as are we. Hopefully that continues.

Will Lankshear scored his first goal but also picked up a red card, what did you make of him tonight?

Yeah, look Will took his goal well, he worked hard for the team. Obviously he hasn't had a lot of experience at senior football so he would have learnt a lot today. The red card, it was a bit of overenthusiasm in that moment to give away a foul, but he'll learn from that. The same with Lucas here. Giving him an understanding of the levels here. It is not easy when you are playing away in Europe. You can only allow them to learn that by exposing them to it. I thought Archie was great. It was a tough game for us defensively at different times but I think we'll get so much growth out of him because he's not playing in his position. I guess for three teenagers in the starting line-up, I think they'll learn a lot from it and hopefully it helps with their development.

Did you have some problems with set pieces and did you expect Galatasaray to start with three centre-backs?

Yeah, I don't know what you mean by set pieces, I think we're fine on set pieces and yeah, we expected them to start like that, even when they play with four at the back, they really build up with three. So we expected that.

If you look at the away games Spurs play they mostly have possession but with Galatasaray it wasn't like that, did you expect this or was it a choice?

As I said, especially in the first half, we gave the ball away too much. Not because of the opposition, we just lacked composure and we needed to be a bit more calmer on the ball. Because we weren’t we allowed Galatasaray to get a foothold in the game. We knew if we could keep the ball well in the first half we would finish strong but we didn’t do that and paid the price.

Why did you struggle to control the game in the first half? Did the atmosphere play a part or is that part of the risk when you make so many changes? Or were Galatasaray too good?

No I don’t think so. It was probably a combination of all those things. I just felt it was self-inflicted. We had real simple solutions out there to keep the ball and as we showed with 10 men it wasn’t that difficult to do. We just didn’t. Individuals within needed that to be stronger on the ball and make sure we play the kind of football we try to do every week and we didn't do that. Maybe it was a little bit the changes I made and the environment or the atmosphere or whatever you want to call it, the opposition. The moments that stick out to me are when there was no pressure on us and we are still giving the ball away.

I think we need to be better in those moments because if we are better in those moments then you minimise the threat the opposition has but also we get a foothold in the game in the areas we want to. We did it with 10 men. We were playing through them quite easily with 10 men but with 11 we just didn’t have anywhere near the conviction we needed to so it’s disappointing.

Listen to the latest episode of Gold & Guest Talk Tottenham by clicking here for in-depth Spurs chat on your preferred podcast platform.

Tottenham boss on Will Lankshear and Galatasaray defeat

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Ange Postecoglou is speaking to the media after Tottenham Hotspur lost 3-2 to Galatasaray in the Europa League on Thursday night.

Spurs were in Turkey in a hostile atmosphere at RAMS Park in Istanbul against a Galatasaray side which included on-loan Napoli striker Victor Osimhen and former Tottenham man Davinson Sanchez. They sit top of the Turkish top flight with an unbeaten record and came into this match fifth in the big Europa League group table.

The visitors had been second in that table after three straight wins and Ange Postecoglou made seven changes to his team from the one that beat Aston Villa 4-1 on Sunday, despite having six players unavailable. Spurs welcome Ipswich Town in the Premier League just two-and-a-half days after they land back in the UK on Friday morning and Postecoglou will need fresh legs.

The hosts took the lead six minutes in thanks to an excellent half-volley from Yunus Akgun from outside the box which flew into the top right corner of Tottenham's net.

Spurs levelled when 18-year-old Archie Gray picked out Brennan Johnson's run with a great pass and he cushioned the ball across to 19-year-old Will Lankshear to smash home his first goal for the club on 18 minutes.

Galatasaray found another goal when Radu Dragusin let the ball run across him and it was worked to Osimhen to poke home. The on-loan Napoli striker bagged another goal five minutes before the break when he side-footed a deep cross into the net.

Postecoglou made a couple of half-time changes with Sunday clearly in mind with Rodrigo Bentancur and Dejan Kulusevski coming on for Son Heung-min and Brennan Johnson.

Galatasaray continued to heap the pressure on Spurs, who lost Lankshear to a second yellow card before the hour mark for a late challenge. The 10-man visitors did grab a goal back when substitute Dominic Solanke executed a lovely dragged back flick to score from Pedro Porro's low cross.

Our Tottenham correspondent Alasdair Gold is among those putting the questions to Postecoglou after the match. Scroll down for his latest updates from the press conference at RAMS Park in Istanbul.

The player who consoled Lankshear after red card

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Tottenham's 100% start to their Europa League campaign came to an end on Thursday evening following a 3-2 defeat against Galatasaray. Fresh from last Sunday's 4-1 win over Aston Villa, Ange Postecoglou made a total of seven changes to his Spurs team as players such as Archie Gray, Lucas Bergvall, Yves Bissouma and James Maddison came in for a start.

Will Lankshear was also named in the team as he led the line in place of first-choice striker Dominic Solanke. Six minutes were on the clock when Yunus Akgun opened the scoring for the hosts with an unstoppable volley from 25 yards that flew into the top corner of Fraser Forster's goal.

Galatasaray would only lead for a total of 12 minutes as Lankshear levelled things up from close range to register his first senior goal for the club. Moments after having a goal chalked off for offside, Victor Osimhen's next attempt counted as he took advantage of some sloppy play from Spurs to put the Turkish giants ahead for the second time in the encounter.

The Nigerian was to add another goal to his tally seven minutes later as he got between Pedro Porro and Radu Dragusin to convert Dries Mertens' cross. Spurs' evening was to go from bad to worse on the hour mark as Lankshear, not long after seeing a chance saved, was given his marching orders for his second bookable offence.

Tottenham did give themselves some hope going into the final 20 minutes as substitute Solanke pulled one back with a lovely flick from Porro's driven cross but they were unable to get a third and leave with a point. Here are five things we spotted in what was a crazy match in Istanbul:

Light in attack

Postecoglou took the opportunity to rotate his Tottenham stars in Istanbul but he didn't have the option to rest some players he may have liked. to Already short in attack heading into the game due to Wilson Odobert and Richarlison's respective injuries, Spurs were dealt further bad news on the injury front on the eve of the showdown with another two players missing out.

Postecoglou revealed in his pre-match press conference that Timo Werner was not available due to a "groin complaint" and Mikey Moore would also not make the trip after picking up a virus. That meant Brennan Johnson and Son Heung-min had to start on the right and left flanks respectively, with Lankshear the man up top instead of Solanke.

Already having to deal with some injuries to key players, Tottenham really cannot afford to pick up any more issues right now. That probably explained why Johnson and Son made way at the break ahead of Sunday's game against Ipswich Town.

Squad numbers confirmed

Due to the amount of players missing out in Turkey, Postecoglou had to call upon some of the club's most talented youngsters to help bolster his squad. Joining Lankshear in the travelling party were Alfie Dorrington, Dante Cassanova, Callum Olusesi and 16-year-old Luca Williams-Barnett.

The inclusion of highly-rated Williams-Barnett went down extremely well with Spurs supporters going on the forward's outstanding form for the Under-18s this term. As both Olusesi and Williams-Barnett were named in the first-team squad for the very first time, the duo were handed the No.64 and No.78 shirts respectively.

Gray's magic moment

Unable to mark his senior Tottenham debut with a goal in their previous European away tie at Ferencvaros, Lankshear ensured he found the net against Galatasaray. The youngster was presented with a glorious opening inside the first couple of minutes when played through but he appeared a tad hesitant and that allowed former Spurs man Davinson Sanchez to get back and produce a timely block. Lankshear's blushes were to be spared by the offside flag, however.

He was to make no mistake with his next attempt as he restored parity on 18 minutes. It was such a good goal from a Tottenham perspective as Gray picked out Johnson's run and the winger put the ball on a plate for the striker to net from point-blank range.

Lankshear will of course get the plaudits for his goal but Gray deserves so much praise for his floated pass that put Johnson in such a good position to register another assist. It was sublime play from the summer addition.

Spurs their own worst enemy

Tottenham really were their own worst enemy over the course of the game at RAMS Park. Postecoglou's men just gifted Galatasaray chance after chance due to their incredibly sloppy play in their own half.

Spurs were rather lucky Galatasaray hadn't scored more than three in the first half going on the amount of openings the Turkish side had. Osimhen had the ball in the net three times but only two of them counted, with his first of the evening coming after Bergvall had his pocket picked after dallying on the ball in the middle of the pitch despite having a clear opportunity to pass to Maddison.

Even after a Postecoglou team talk at the break, Spurs allowed their opponents to have two chances within the first 30 seconds of the restart and they were then thankful for Rodrigo Bentancur's block on the line moments later after Forster had dropped a simple ball from a free-kick. It was just relentless from Galatasaray and it was completely self-inflicted from a Tottenham perspective.

How Spurs only lost by the one goal was quite remarkable. Galatasaray had 28 shots on goal and had more than enough chances to score six or seven at RAMS Park.

Lankshear reaction

On what was such a memorable night for Lankshear after scoring his maiden Tottenham goal, it was to end in disappointment for the young striker as he was sent off on the hour mark for two bookable offences. Firstly seeing yellow after catching his opponent in the face following a long ball towards him, seven minutes later he received a second caution for a foul on Gabriel Sara.

After not getting a foul himself, Lankshear caught the Galatasaray player a bit late in front of the dugouts and it resulted in his dismissal. Bissouma ran straight over to remonstrate with the official and made it clear that Spurs should have had a free-kick for the foul on the frontman seconds earlier.

Lankshear looked completely gutted to have seen a red card brandished in his direction and he had one hand on his head as he reflected on the referee's decision. Porro showed his class by coming straight over to the player and giving him a slap on the back to console him before the striker made the walk back to the dressing room.

He was still in shock over the red card and walked through the tunnel with his hand still on his head. It's fair to say that the 19-year-old will never ever forget what happened on the night he scored his first senior goal for the football club.

Listen to the latest episode of Gold & Guest Talk Tottenham for reaction to Spurs' victory against Man City! Click here for in-depth Spurs chat on your preferred podcast platform.

Joy and despair for Will Lankshear, pain for Dragusin

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Tottenham Hotspur fell to a 3-2 defeat at Galatasaray in the Europa League on Thursday night and here are our Spurs player ratings from the game.

Spurs travelled to Turkey for a tough game in a hostile atmosphere at RAMS Park in Istanbul against a Galatasaray side with a host of stars in their squad including striker Victor Osimhen and former Tottenham man Davinson Sanchez. They sit top of the Turkish top flight with an unbeaten record and came into the game fifth in the big Europa League group table.

The visitors were second in that table after three straight wins and Ange Postecoglou made seven changes to his team from the one that beat Aston Villa 4-1 on Sunday, despite having six players unavailable. Spurs welcome Ipswich Town in the Premier League just two-and-a-half days after they land back in the UK on Friday morning and Postecoglou will need fresh legs.

The hosts took the lead six minutes in thanks to a terrific half-volley from Yunus Akgun from outside the box which flew into the top right corner of Tottenham's net.

Spurs levelled though when 18-year-old Archie Gray picked out Brennan Johnson's run with a wonderful pass and he cushioned the ball across to 19-year-old Will Lankshear to smash home his first goal for the club on 18 minutes.

Galatasaray found another goal when Spurs messed about with the ball in their own half, first Lucas Bergvall turning away from an open pass to James Maddison and then Radu Dragusin letting the ball run across him and it was worked to Osimhen to poke home. The on-loan Napoli striker bagged another goal five minutes before the break when he side-footed a deep cross into the net.

Postecoglou made a couple of half-time changes with Sunday in mind with Rodrigo Bentancur and Dejan Kulusevski coming on for Son Heung-min and Brennan Johnson.

Galatasaray continued to heap the pressure on Spurs, who lost Lankshear to a second yellow card before the hour mark for a late challenge.

The 10-man visitors did grab a goal back when substitute Dominic Solanke executed a lovely dragged back flick to score from Pedro Porro's low cross, but despite some late openings could not find a leveller.

Here are our Tottenham player ratings:

Fraser Forster

Couldn't do much about Akgun's great early strike but made a great save low down to deny Osimhen in the first half. The same player then hit a clinical low shot into the corner to beat him later in the half. Forster saved from Osimhen again in the box but was beaten by his side-footed effort moments later from a dangerous curling deep cross from Dries Mertens. Dropped a ball into the box early in the second half but was rescued by a Bentancur block on the line. Made a good save from Akgun's powerful effort but got worse and worse with his feet as the game wore on. Made a number of good saves but was just shaky in other moments and parried a couple of efforts back into the six-yard box. 5

Pedro Porro

Osimhen got in between him and Dragusin for the third goal. His defending was sloppy at times, like the rest of the backline, but he did grab an assist with a low cross for Solanke to score. 5

Radu Dragusin

Made a mess of taking Davies' ball, turning into trouble for Galatasaray's second goal, and then let Osimhen get in behind him for the next. Looked affected by the atmosphere with his passing at times and positioning. 3

Ben Davies

Didn't need to play the pass to Dragusin that resulted in the Romanian making a mess with it. Otherwise he was by far the better of the two centre-backs on the night. 5

Archie Gray

Played a fantastic ball into the path of Johnson for Lankshear's leveller. Worked hard down the left but struggled to get up the pitch as he would have wanted. 6

Lucas Bergvall

Really off the pace in the first half with loose touches and passes and him turning away from a simple pass to the open Maddison and playing the ball back to his defenders began the problems for the hosts' second goal. Was given more time in the second half but never really found the pace of the game. 3

Yves Bissouma

Combined some good moments with an ability to overhit every second or third touch of the ball, but was still one of Spurs' better players, especially when they went down to 10 men thanks to his workrate. 7

James Maddison

Barely any better than Bergvall. This wasn't the performance to show that he should be starting on Sunday as he struggled to make anything happen. 4

Brennan Johnson

Grabbed an early assist with his cushioned ball to Lankshear. Didn't get the chance to do much else before coming off at half-time with Sunday in mind. 5

Will Lankshear

What a moment for the 19-year-old on 18 minutes as he smashed home his first goal for the club. He had another chance in the second half which Muslera saved but he then ended his night prematurely after lunging in for a challenge when on a yellow card and duly got another one to see red. 5

Son Heung-min

Didn't see much of the ball in the first half and struggled to make things happen when he did. 4

Subs

Dejan Kulusevski

Brought some strength to Spurs' attacking play and was involved in the build-up to Solanke's goal. Worked really hard for the other nine men of Tottenham during his time on the pitch. 7

Rodrigo Bentancur

Spurs' best player with an excellent performance in the centre of the park when he came on, driving the team forward. 8

Dominic Solanke

Scored a lovely dragged backheel of a goal for the 10-man visitors to give them some hope. 7

Pape Matar Sarr

Another who injected energy into the ten men on the pitch late on. 6

Listen to the latest episode of Gold & Guest Talk Tottenham by clicking here for in-depth Spurs chat on your preferred podcast platform.

Latest score as Lankshear sent off, Solanke pulls goal back

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No goal

Icardi finds the net after a lovely pass from Ziyech but the flag goes up for offside.

Galatasaray sub

Ziyech is on for Mertens.

Solanke scores

Solanke gets a goal back. Kulusevski plays in Porro and his low cross is met by a lovely back flick by the striker. 3-2.

Spurs subs

Solanke and Sarr come on for Maddison and Bergvall.

Save

Forster with another save from Akgun's powerful volley from the edge of the box.

Red card

Second yellow card and a red for Will Lankshear. Caught his man a bit late after not getting a foul himself. Tough on him but it was a challenge he didn't need to make when on a booking.

Lankshear chance

After plenty of Galatasaray pressure and opportunities, there's a chance for Will Lankshear at the other end but Muslera saves.

Block

Osmihen denied a hat-trick following a fantastic save from Forster.

This is so, so easy for Galatasaray right now.

Blocked

Spurs so lucky to get away with one there as Forster drops a simple free-kick and the attempt is blocked on the line by Bentancur.

Over

Two chances for Galatasaray inside the first 30 seconds of the second half.

Icardi blasts over their second attempt following a Mertens pass.

Peep

We're up and running again.

Spurs subs

Bentancur and Kulusevski coming on for Son and Johnson.

Half-time

Spurs trail 3-1 at the break in Istanbul.

Added time

There will be three minutess added on at the end of the first half.

More on the goal

It's 3-1 to Galatasaray now as Osimhen doubles his tally with a left-footed finish.

He gets between Porro and Dragusin to finish off Mertens' cross and Forster has no chance.

Save

Another chance for Osmihen and Spurs have Forster to thank for a good save.

More on the goal

Some really sloppy play from Spurs there and it results in Galatasaray playing through Osimhen and he finds the bottom corner with a cool finish.

GOAL!

Osimhen scores again and this one counts!

No goal

Osimhen has the ball in the net this time but the flag goes up for offside.

Big chance

Osimhen passes up a great opportunity to score when played clean through as Forster saves well down low.

Mertens then fires wide on the rebound.

Will Lankshear scores!

Will Lankshear scores his first goal for Tottenham Hotspur! Brilliant ball from Archie Gray into the run of Brennan Johnson and he cushions it across for the 19-year-old to volley into the roof of the net. 1-1.

Yellow card

Mertens receives a yellow card after bringing Bissouma down when the Spurs man was running through midfield.

Over

Akgun volleys over from a similar distance to where he scored from after Son's loose pass had fallen kindly to him.

More on the goal

That is some strike from Akgun as his left-footed volley from 25 yards flies into the top corner of Forster's goal.

Gray had headed away a free-kick and the Galatasaray man took full advantage.

GOAL!

Akgun makes it 1-0 with a stunning goal from distance.

Lankshear involved

Johnson plays in Lankshear, who's tackled, but he was offside anyway.

Peep

We're up and running here at RAMS Park.

Will Lankshear, Lucas Bergvall and Son Heung

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Ange Postecoglou has made changes to his Tottenham team to take on Galatasaray in the Europa League. Three from three in the competition so far, Spurs will be aiming to keep up their 100 per cent start to the league phase when they face the Turkish giants this evening.

In what will be Tottenham's toughest European game so far in 2024/25, Postecoglou's side are going to have to try and contend with a very hostile atmosphere inside RAMS Park. Galatasaray have made a strong start to the competition after winning two and drawing one of their first three fixtures.

Fresh from last Sunday's 4-1 win over Aston Villa, Postecoglou has made changes to his Tottenham team for the encounter against Galatasaray. Fraser Forster continues in goal in Europe once again after excelling against AZ Alkmaar two weeks ago, with Pedro Porro, Radu Dragusin, Ben Davies and Archie Gray making up the backline.

In midfield, Yves Bissouma, James Maddison and Lucas Bergvall all come in after not starting last weekend against Villa. Will Lankshear then leads the line for Spurs, with Brennan Johnson and Son Heung-min starting either side of him.

Speaking to the media ahead of the game in Istanbul, Postecoglou opened up on the challenge facing his team.

"They definitely have a lot of threat in the front third," said the 59-year-old. "As I said, their attacking players are very, very good individually. They're a strong team physically, so we're going have to match the attacking threats they have with the way we play.

"Obviously, like I said here at Galatasaray, at this home stadium with the fans behind them, there's a great energy in all their games, so it's a great test for us, but as I said one we're looking forward to. We're in good form, we're playing good football ourselves. It should hopefully be a good game."

Here is the Tottenham team Postecoglou has selected to face Galatasaray:

Confirmed Tottenham XI: Forster; Porro, Dragusin, Davies, Gray; Bissouma, Maddison, Bergvall; Johnson, Lankshear, Son.

Subs: Vicario, Austin, Udogie, Dorrington, Cassanova, Kulusevski, Sarr, Bentancur, Olusesi, Williams-Barnett, Solanke.

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What delighted mischievous Ange Postecoglou and the Tottenham transfer target he denied

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For a man dealing yet again with the absence of a large group of players, Ange Postecoglou was laid back and slightly mischievous in his press conference ahead of Tottenham's match at Galatasaray.

Delays at Istanbul's main airport meant that the squad's bus arrived at RAMS Park, the big stadium built 13 years ago in the Turkish city, just under an hour after they were meant to on Wednesday evening.

While the Tottenham players and staff were whisked away to the changing rooms to begin getting ready for their training session out on the pitch, Dominic Solanke was first led down a different corridor towards the press conference room.

It was the England international's first club press conference since his £65million move from Bournemouth. A handful of British reporters had made the trip to Istanbul, with the rest of the room packed with Turkish media.

The assembled journalists were informed that due to the late arrival of the squad and the need for Solanke to get out to train, there would only be a five minute window for questions.

football.london kicked things off, simply asking the 27-year-old how his body was holding up after a run of games in a short space of time during which he had left everything out on the pitch for his new club. The question was as much about trying to see if Solanke gave any hints towards whether he was starting or not in the Europa League match.

For being put up for the press conference before a European game does not necessarily mean the player is set to start, or even play. Micky van de Ven was selected to answer questions at the press conference ahead of the home match against AZ Alkmaar a fortnight ago and didn't even come off the bench in the game.

Once, under Jose Mourinho, Toby Alderweireld was chosen to speak to the media ahead of Tottenham's game in Belgium against his hometown club (and current employers) Royal Antwerp. Surely the centre-back would play in such a poignant match? Nope, he sat on the bench unused.

With that in mind, Solanke's answer did begin quite generally, rather than focusing on himself and spoke about needing everyone in the squad. Take from that what you will.

"I feel great. We've got a lot of games this season which we want. Obviously there's a lot of competitions we want to do well in and go for, so we’re going to need everyone," he said.

"But yeah, me personally, I'm quite a fit person. I like to work hard. So I think with the staff that we've got, everyone's looking out for us and making sure we get right for each game. So we're thankful for that."

Solanke is a really polite, pleasant person and popular within the squad already, but he's not one for giving too much away to the media, perhaps simply a by-product of being new to the club.

With time in short supply, Spurs will have known that the striker would have dealt with questions as he would chances in the box, quickly and efficiently with little fuss.

He spoke about the intense atmosphere the team are expecting from the passionate Galatasaray fans inside the stadium on Thursday night. Those British journalists who have covered games in Turkey always claim that there are no games louder and the near-54,000 capacity RAMS Park is meant to be up there in terms of the decibel levels.

The Spurs players have been warned that they may not even be able to hear each other when standing near one another on the pitch during the game. Various players have mentioned that is sometimes the case at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium near the big South Stand so hopefully it won't come as too much of a shock.

Solanke explained that it will be a good experience for the young players and Postecoglou, when he swept into the room after the striker was done, believes that the youthful members of the travelling squad should relish such an occasion rather than fear it.

"No. I’m sure that they’re all looking forward to it. That’s why you play football. I kept saying, especially with this generation, a lot of them have experienced what football is like without supporters. You certainly don’t like that when we went through Covid," he said.

"We’re looking forward to it. It’s a fantastic stadium, the supporters create an unbelievable atmosphere here, they love the big European nights.

"They’re a very, very good team. It’s exactly the kind of games you want to be involved in in Europe, whether you’re young, you’re old, irrespective of the role you have, you look forward to it."

Spurs certainly have some young players on this trip in the shape of academy products Will Lankshear, defenders Dante Cassanova and Alfie Dorrington, 17-year-old midfielder Callum Olusesi and Luca Williams-Barnett, who will make you feel really old when you find out his age.

For the teenager was born in late 2008 and only turned 16 last month. That he has been brought on this trip shows not only how well he's been playing within the academy but also how keen Tottenham are to show the gifted attacker what the future will hold for him if he commits to it with them.

All eyes have been on Mikey Moore this season and understandably so with the winger, who only turned 17 in August, already playing in the Premier League and Europa League after starring in pre-season and in training last season under Postecoglou.

Moore picked up a virus this week which meant he had to remain at home while the club got to the bottom of it.

Many within Spurs' academy believe Williams-Barnett has the ability to follow in Moore's footsteps into the first team if he continues work hard and steers clear of injury.

Often playing more centrally as a number 10 or striker, but with the ability to play out wide or up front, the teenager has stepped up to U18s football effortlessly despite starting this season as a 15-year-old. He has plundered eight goals and three assists in just seven U18 Premier League matches, while played for England U17s as well.

Whether he makes his debut or not, the experience will be a big one for the schoolboy. If he does step on that pitch to play at any point, he will become Spurs' youngest ever player by around four months, taking Alfie Devine's record.

Postecoglou also spoke about the injury news regarding the senior players with Cristian Romero's foot problem not too serious, but Richarlison's hamstring issue more so. Timo Werner also joins the injury list with a groin complaint he has been carrying recently.

It might be better for Werner not to experience the noise in Istanbul on Thursday night. The Champions League-winning German famously asked to come off as a 21-year-old during a defeat in that competition for RB Leipzig at Besiktas, the Bundesliga side's first away Champions League match.

The noise and atmosphere was so electric in Turkey that night that Werner had to ask for earplugs on the half hour mark after covering his ears several times, and later he asked to be substituted.

"I had never seen such an atmosphere in my life, I couldn't concentrate on the game. I asked for some earplugs, but that didn't help either," explained Werner after the game.

Various medical tests were carried out on him for weeks afterwards, with some suggestions that it may have stemmed from a neck or back problem caused by excessive travel prior to the game.

The problems he was having caused him to miss two of Germany's qualifying games before the World Cup in Russia in 2018 and it was only after some time off that he was able to return to playing.

Postecoglou was asked a different kind of question about sport being a release and escape from the politics of the world and the current return to power of Donald Trump in the USA. The Spurs boss hinted at an even more newsworthy answer than the one the media ended up getting.

"I could give you a cracking non-football answer but I'm not going to," he said with a grin. "It's where we are as a society at the moment. Sports always provides a constant in terms of escapism for people whether in the broader context of global political landscapes or people’s lives in general.

"We've all got things in our lives that sometimes aren't in the greatest shape so I think sport, and football in particular because it's the global sport, does. It provides some escapism, hopefully some joy, and some collective tribalism in a positive way. You feel part of something, connected to something on a weekly basis which is your team and you share that with other people.

"I've always felt sport and football, for me, has always been a great avenue for people to enjoy something in a community aspect and hopefully that continues."

Postecoglou was pressed again if he would in fact give that non-football answer to which he politely declined.

Then came a final question from the local media about 24-year-old Galatasaray winger Barış Alper Yılmaz, who Spurs had been linked with this year during Postecoglou's tenure and whether there was any truth in the interest.

"No, no, no, not from us," replied Postecoglou after the translator quietly put the question to him.

As he got up to leave, the Australian looked towards the British journalists and our confused faces with a mischievous grin, well aware and tickled that the Turkish questions were only being translated for him rather than the whole room.

"I think these guys are going to want to know what the question was!" he turned back towards the translator and said with a chortle, knowing the media's love of a good transfer story - true or not in some cases.

Later listening back to the translator's whispered question into Postecoglou's ear, which can be picked up clearly on the official UEFA microphone, it remains to be seen whether the Spurs boss was actually able to hear which player was referred to anyway. If he couldn't hear, he may well have guessed from the flurry of Yilmaz links back earlier in the year.

Either way he was in a surprisingly good mood for someone who will go into this latest game without six first team players and needing to play some others he would have liked to rest. He admitted on Wednesday that he will still make changes.

That good mood is what nine wins from 11 games does for you along with the knowledge that this manic schedule will briefly pause soon for the coming international break so Postecoglou and everyone can take a breath.

First though comes the noisy atmosphere at RAMS Park. Spurs have given themselves a good cushion in the competition but they will not take this match lightly, regardless of whoever goes out to play in a Tottenham shirt.

Manchester United were greeted 31 years ago by a banner declaring 'Welcome to hell' when they travelled to play Galatasaray at their old ground. Spurs will be hoping to find a little slice of heaven amongst the din on Thursday night.

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