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What Son did after Tottenham's Villa win as former player admits Ange Postecoglou 'blew my mind'

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"It got loud. Probably as loud as I've heard it as an away player," Aston Villa's shell-shocked captain John McGinn admitted after the referee blew his whistle on Spurs' 4-1 victory at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium.

Spurs and their fans responded to a first half which was often fragmented by the visitors and had ended with a smattering of boos after Morgan Rogers' goal from a corner - only the second set piece goal Tottenham have conceded this season.

Those boos became roars as the hosts began to find ways through Villa's tightly-packed defence while containing their counter attacking threat.

First the returning Son Heung-min swung in a beautiful low ball for Brennan Johnson to slam home his seventh goal of the season. Then Dominic Solanke was finally provided with the ball and did what a £65million striker will do with it, dinking a delightful chipped effort over the recently-crowned world's best goalkeeper Emiliano Martinez.

Solanke soon added another, smashing in Richarlison's pinpoint low ball across the box and then James Maddison provided the perfect response to being left out of the previous two starting line-ups with a curling free-kick into the top right corner in added time to place a cherry on top of Spurs' cake.

Villa had only lost one Premier League game going into this encounter but Spurs ensured another match rests in that column now and they eventually swept aside Unai Emery's side in some style.

Ange Postecoglou's Tottenham Hotspur are the Premier League's top scorers and at the other end of the pitch, only three teams have conceded fewer than them in the competition this season.

The Australian's side have now won nine of their past 11 matches in all competitions, triumphing in every single one of their cup matches and the response to the turgid display at Crystal Palace has been to beat Manchester City and Aston Villa in the space of four-and-a-half days.

This Tottenham team has character and a belief in themselves even when they concede. They have scored 32 goals across 15 matches in all competitions so they know they're unlikely to be kept at bay, with only two sides managing it this season.

On Sunday, they equalled the Premier League record for home wins when conceding first in a single year with what was their eighth comeback. In total, they have claimed 24 points at home from losing positions in 2024, 10 more than the second-placed team in the stat - Manchester City.

Spurs' energy levels are there for all to see. Aston Villa had changed most of their team in midweek for the defeat to Crystal Palace in the Carabao Cup. Postecoglou made just three changes to face Emery's side from the one that took on and beat Manchester City in a draining match on Wednesday night.

Much was made of City's youthful line-up that evening, even if the average age of Spurs' starting XI was 24.8 compared to the visitors' 26. Tottenham had to do plenty of chasing and running that night, yet they were by far the stronger, fitter side as Sunday's game against a fresher Villa side went on.

Tottenham won the ball back 11 times in the final third while Villa could not even manage it a single time during the encounter at the other end of the pitch, such was Spurs' passing around them. In all the hosts ran a combined 110.5km to Villa's 104.4km despite their extra midweek efforts.

"You're playing a top team and you know with Villa that they're always going to have a really strong performance because they're very, very consistent. They rarely have off days and you've got to be ready for that," said Postecoglou.

"I thought we had to match it with them in the first half. We had to draw on their energy and make them work really hard. Obviously we conceded a goal, but I still felt like we made them work really hard in that first half.

"And, you know, the thing with us is we've got another gear in us, two or three gears and we keep going and we felt like we could really break them open in the second half if we just really stayed focused on making sure the football was up tempo and there was intensity in the game and credit to the players after a massive effort on Wednesday night, at least they know that physically they did it again."

The Spurs boss used an answer to football.london about Pape Matar Sarr's excellent performance to mark an emotional day for the club and one of his coaches in particular.

For Sunday was the birthday of Ugo Ehiogu, the former England international and Aston Villa defender, who became a big part of life at Tottenham as U21s manager. The popular 44-year-old had worked at the club for three years in the role - having worked part-time in the academy beforehand - when he suffered a cardiac arrest at Hotspur Way on April 20, 2017 and died the following morning.

It left the club in shock and nobody there more so than his assistant manager in the U21s, Matt Wells. The 36-year-old is now assistant to Postecoglou in the first team set-up and the Tottenham boss explained that during this week Wells left his mark on the players as he spoke to them about Ehiogu.

"I'm really proud of the lads. It was an important day for us today, because it's also the birthday of the late Ugo Ehiogu and he had a big influence on Matty Wells here at the club," said Postecoglou.

"I know he played for Villa but he was obviously a coach at our football club. Matty spoke really strongly about him. When you hear things like that, and how people affect your life, it helps give clarity to the players about what we're trying to do here.

"Obviously for his wife and his son probably a tough day, but hopefully they get a little bit of cheer from the fact Wellsy made it a really important point, that he may be gone but he's not forgotten."

On Wells' talk to the players he added: "He just spoke about it during the week. We mentioned him today because it was his birthday today. Like I said, you don't dismiss those kind of things, because he was with our football club when he sadly passed away. So it's important that the memory lives on."

It was a fitting way to commemorate the day both on and off the field with a performance that everyone was proud of.

Solanke and Johnson run away with it

If you wanted the perfect example of selfless players who got their rewards on Sunday, look no further than Dominic Solanke and Brennan Johnson.

The duo ended up as Tottenham's two top ranked players during the match on the stats-based website WhoScored, Solanke with 8.76 out of 10 and Johnson 7.8. They managed that despite being the two players who touched the ball the fewest times out of Spurs' starting XI with Johnson touching it 36 times and Solanke only 19.

That's because the duo worked so hard off the ball. In the first half Johnson chased down every lost cause and got his reward just four minutes into the second half when he took up the position that Postecoglou and the coaching staff have constantly drilled into him, smashing home Son's delicious ball into the box.

After that run of scoring in seven consecutive games for club and country - six for Spurs - Johnson has had to wait three Premier League games for the next goal to arrive.

"Especially in the last few games and most of the season, I've been getting good chances, which which makes me happy, because it means I'm in the right areas," he said in his club interview. "But today I had to be a bit patient. Not too many chances in the first half, but you have to stay in the right positions.

"That's what [Villa] do (breaking up the game). They're a real quality side. I think it shows how they've been getting on this season, especially last year as well. So we knew we were up against it. We weren't up against any old team, they're a proper team, so naturally, they're going to have moments where they frustrate us and kind of work their game plan better than we do ours.

"But the second half was just about kind of kicking on, staying positive, staying clear-headed and showing our quality."

It was the Wales international's seventh goal of the season in all competitions and he immediately grabbed the ball and ran back up the pitch to place it on the centre circle rather than celebrating.

"It's easy to want to get a rest and reset and go again, but that's just not how we play. To be honest, it's get the ball down and go again, and especially when we score goals," he said. "It was so early on in the first half, we've still got 40 minutes to to kick on now and once it was 1-1, we knew the game had just got started. It wasn't that we clawed it back, we knew we wanted to go and win this now."

Johnson did not stop running, admitting after the game that he was exhausted when the fourth official held up a sign showing 10 minutes of added time. He still kept bursting up the right flank with important runs though.

"I'm loving playing for this team, playing under the staff and the manager and I think as a team, we're at a good point at the minute," he said. "I think everyone's really working hard for each other, and it feels like more and more of a family, to be honest.

"We're all a year stronger into this experience with the manager, and I feel like games like today just show how far we've come on."

The fans were singing his chant during the match and when asked about it, the 23-year-old smiled after his tough times earlier this season and said: "Yeah, I am [enjoying it] to be honest. It's been a while since they've sung it, but yeah, it's nice.

"It's top when they sing and especially shooting in front of that [south] stand. Once the momentum gets up, it's a real special place to be. So massive thanks to all the fans and long may it continue hopefully."

For Solanke, he's been feeding off scraps in recent weeks with precious little service. That should not be the case for a Postecoglou striker but for one reason or another, his team-mates have just not been supplying him with chances.

That has not stopped him from working incredibly hard for them though. He presses, hassles and harries from the first whistle until they drag him off the pitch. Much of the space Spurs' other attacking players and midfielders have been getting is because of Solanke dragging defenders around with him and holding up the ball so well before releasing them.

Solanke got his reward on Sunday as the Spurs players finally decided to repay him. Destiny Udogie found him after the striker took a clever step back into space only for his deflected half-volley to be saved by Martinez.

Then Dejan Kulusevski played a perfect reverse ball into his path and, having worked back to try to win the ball back, Solanke ghosted back into the Villa box to clip a sumptuous effort over the Argentine goalkeeper and into the net. Minutes later Richarlison's low cross was just too good to pass up as he made it a double.

"We're all buzzing for Dom because it kind of goes under the radar, how hard Dom works for us," said Johnson "We're so thankful for how hard he works and the pressing he does and then on the ball, not just goals, but he can hold it up, he can dribble, he's quick, he's strong, he's powerful. He's such a good player.

"We pass around a lot but when we do go a little bit longer, it's more of a pass. It's not really a long ball and he can hold it. But then when the ball goes into the box, he's a fox in the box as well, so I really think he showed everything today and I'm buzzing for him to get two goals."

Solanke's first brace for Tottenham means he has now contributed seven goal involvements in his first 10 starts for the club with five goals and two assists. Bearing in mind the lack of service in recent weeks, that's a fruitful start from the England international and he's only going to get better. He had the crowd singing his name as many realised just how good he actually is.

"I like to to work hard for the team. We need to do whatever we can individually to help the team win. Obviously, being a striker it's nice to to get those goals to add to the performances. It was a few games without one, so I'm delighted to get two," Solanke said afterwards.

"I think these days everyone sees the the data and stuff and how hard I work. People always tell me, I'm thankful for everyone noticing, but yeah, like I said, getting the goals is always nice as well."

On the assists for his goals, Solanke added: "They were both set up perfectly. Deki's having a great season, we know that he's got the quality to do that. It was a good play from Brennan as well, to get the ball into Deki. I trusted him then to to find me, and he found me perfectly and set it up.

"And the second one from Richy, Pape won the ball back really well, which we love doing as a team. He slipped in Richy and he laid it on a plate for me. He went off injured after that and hopefully he's alright."

Postecoglou is a big fan of Solanke and swatted away the suggestion that these goals underlined his faith in the 27-year-old.

"No, it had nothing to do with that as I said during the week. I just think the enormous effort he put in on Wednesday night to help us win a game of football, not just physically but mentally and his capacity to help the team in every way he can," he said.

"To back that up today with such a massive effort again against a pretty difficult team to play against in that sense, it's just unbelievable. Yeah, the goals are great and of course as a striker I am sure he loves the fact he can score a couple of goals, but even if he didn't, again I can't speak highly enough of what he is contributing to our team at the moment. And long may it continue because with him playing that way, it just makes us a better team."

Postecoglou has built a team of skilful, hard-working runners and Solanke typifies that, but he needs some rest from time to time. That is going to become harder with yet another injury for Richarlison. The Brazilian clutched his hamstring immediately after hitting the low ball for Solanke to score his second.

It summed up Richarlison's contribution at Spurs in one moment. He makes an impact, then suffers an injury. It's a pattern that has dogged his three seasons at the club.

The 27-year-old would have been starting in midweek in Istanbul but now that job could fall to teenage striker Will Lankshear as Solanke needs to get some rest at some point.

If the Spurs boss can keep Solanke fit and fresh then he's got one hell of a focal point for this Tottenham team - the missing piece last season in the Postecoglou puzzle.

That Son reaction

The second half brought the Son Heung-min moment that got people talking. The Spurs captain was back in action following his recent absence, which came after his return against West Ham following his hamstring injury.

Son was quiet and understandably a touch rusty in the first half against Villa, not taking on his man as much as he normally would, not helped by the compact defending from the visitors which often left him with two players to get past so forced him inside.

However, he came alive in the second half with that beautiful whipped in left-footed low ball to Johnson to score Tottenham's equaliser.

After that Son went on a couple of jinking runs that suggested he was back in the groove. Then abruptly six minutes after his assist, Postecoglou made two substitutions and it was Son and Bentancur who were the players to make way.

At first the Tottenham skipper looked like he was heading off on the opposite side of the pitch but it soon became clear he did not realise he was coming off, looking surprised, pointing at himself and double-checking it was really him coming off.

When he eventually sat in his seat, the South Korean looked utterly despondent and appeared to bellow words into the air a couple of times.

Postecoglou made it clear after the game that it had always been his intention to take his captain off to ensure there was no repeat of what happened to him against West Ham.

"He was never going to play more than that today because obviously he had an injury, came back and last time it was around the 60 minute mark where he kind of got fatigued last time," said the Spurs boss. "So he was never going to play more than sort of 55/60 minutes irrespective of how the game was going.

"The great thing was that he made a pretty important contribution, before that, the great ball in for our first goal and we got our equaliser. So, you know, again, we've got more battles ahead and we're going to need him. So he was never going to play more than that."

When questioned about Son's disappointed reaction to his removal from the game, Postecoglou said with a smile: "No, no, no, I didn't see any difference in Sonny. I'd be surprised if any player likes coming off and they're feeling all right. But no, no, I didn't need to discuss it with him. And you know, like I said, for us, what's more important is the overall picture."

Hindsight proved Postecoglou's decision to be exactly the right one as Son got the assist and then others took on the job with aplomb as the 32-year-old was protected on the sideline.

Richarlison's injury only proved how important it is to ensure the captain's return is carefully managed as he's still going to play plenty of minutes in the weeks ahead.

Son's disappointment had already dissipated by the time the game finished. He could be seen sticking his tongue out playfully at the camera as the Spurs players walked down the corridors inside the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium after the big win.

The club captain is big on team ethic and even if his emotion showed in the moment, he would have soon realised that it was the right decision from Postecoglou for him, Spurs and the bigger picture.

Defenders to the rescue

If you've got problems in defence and it don't look good, who you gonna call? Not the Ghostbusters apparently, but instead Radu Dragusin and Ben Davies.

Postecoglou made it clear at the start of this season that he believed handing out Tottenham's European and Carabao Cup minutes to plenty of the squad would end up being a big factor in their success this time around because players would not be coming into games cold when he needed to rotate or replace injured stars as happened last season.

Two perfect examples of that are Dragusin and Davies. The 22-year-old Romanian was starting his fifth game of the season, which would have been more but for his sending off against Qarabag.

The young centre-back looks sharper and more settled into Premier League life. As the left-sided centre-back he helped Cristian Romero at first marshal Villa's attackers, making one important first half block from Jacob Ramsey, and then when Ben Davies came on, Dragusin switched to the right of the defence and was equally solid.

He is improving all the time with his use of the ball and understanding of what to do with it and he will continue to be exposed to passing at pace under pressure. His presence in the air is well known from his time in Serie A and will continue to help Tottenham's defensive set piece work.

Dragusin was not involved in the Villa goal, which was only Spurs' second set piece goal conceded this season in the Premier League. Last season's figures often get lumped in with this term's by pundits, when a comparison would instead show how much Tottenham have improved with their defending of them.

Villa are the league's top set piece goalscorers but their latest one came about through a touch of misfortune for Spurs. Pedro Porro did win the initial header but sent it spinning backwards into Rodrigo Bentancur. The ball bounced against the Uruguayan and Guglielmo Vicario showed his reflexes in stopping it from crossing the goal line but could only push it to Rogers to slam in from a yard.

Other than an earlier save after Amadou Onana's header had deflected towards him off the right-hand post, Vicario had very little else to do.

Postecoglou explained afterwards that he did not put extra work into Spurs' set piece efforts and he did not seem entirely happy with the jostling going on around Vicario as the corner was swung in with the goalkeeper and Brennan Johnson both being knocked into by Rogers and Pau Torres respectively.

"No [we didn't put extra time into set piece work this week] because I think then you fall into the trap of preparing differently, and I've always said that we prepare the same for every game," he said.

"There's obviously the strengths and areas where they could hurt us. Yeah look we conceded from a set piece. I know I'm on my own on this, I don't like them. To me, I think I mentioned in the TV interview, it looks like a scrum. I just don't think that's what football's about. But it's part of football these days, where you can just drop the ball in the box and people can fight over it.

"So disappointing for us to concede from that, but in general I thought we handled their set pieces really well. They are very good at set pieces. I thought we handled it really well. It was great for us to score another one again from an attacking set piece, we're scoring goals from different areas, that's important."

Spurs coach Nick Montgomery's efforts with the defensive and attacking set plays have been apparent this season and even if there's not much time to work on them between games due to the schedule, he's making an impact.

The experienced Davies again showed his worth, as he did when he came on against Manchester City in midweek for Romero.

This time around, the Welshman's block to stop Ollie Watkins racing through was key in turning over possession to Sarr to set Spurs away for Solanke's first goal which pushed the match in the hosts' favour.

The balance between Dragusin and the left-footed Davies is growing as their familiarity with each other's games improves in the cup matches.

Now the two defenders could get an extended spell together, depending on Romero's foot problem which forced him off in the second half.

Postecoglou has not had much luck when it comes to centre-backs, often losing Romero and Van de Ven at similar periods. Last season that meant Davies and Emerson Royal pairing up. This time around it means the better suited Dragusin and Davies link-up.

When asked about Romero and Richarlison's injuries, Postecoglou also took the chance to praise his defenders.

"Richy obviously felt something in the action of setting the goal up, his hamstring, so we'll see. Romero yeah, it was in that challenge again. He felt his foot was sore. I don't have any sort of further information," he said.

"Obviously, he's a pretty tough cookie. For him to come off, it must be sore, but yeah, look it's not ideal, but again it's another game where we've had to reshuffle our back line.

"Radu has played left centre-back, right centre-back, left centre-back, right centre-back, Ben Davies has had to come in at different times and Destiny midweek and the boys are handling it really well. As I said it's not ideal but hopefully both are not too serious."

After the game, Romero posted on social media: "Great performance today, now to recover and keep it up."

It did not refer to his injury but if he does miss a game or two then Postecoglou can at least trust in Dragusin and Davies to do the job whenever called upon.

Sarr, Postecoglou and the right direction

If you want to look at one of the players growing under Ange Postecoglou, you could simply glance over at Pape Matar Sarr.

You often have to remind yourself that the softly-spoken Senegal midfielder is still just 22-years-old, because he played more than 2,000 minutes of football last season in the Premier League under the Australian, who believes he's going to become something special.

Sarr's second season has been another step in his development in different ways as he's had to make the most of his game time, Postecoglou starting him in only three Premier League matches in the opening 10 rounds of the competition.

Yet Sarr has responded perfectly and when Tottenham need more energy and a box-to-box player in the centre of the park, Postecoglou has turned to the youngster. His second half introduction against West Ham changed that match and again on Sunday he was key against Villa.

Sarr was involved in both Spurs' second and third goals, his pressing creating the latter, and his all-action display pulled the visitors all over the park.

The midfielder managed three goals and three assists last season from 35 appearances and he's nearly matched that already in just 15 games with three goals and two assists. Sarr turns up in big games as well, with assists against Manchester United and West Ham and that stunning, curling strike against Manchester City in midweek.

Postecoglou took slight umbrage at football.london's suggestion that with just three Premier League starts, Sarr was growing with the challenge of fighting his way back into his Tottenham line-up.

"They're never out of my line-up, it's different challenges along the way, but he probably played as much as anyone last year, I rate him so highly," said Postecoglou. "His capacity again to work for the team but also the quality he has in breaking open oppositions with his running with the ball.

"I knew he'd be important today because they've got such a hard-working midfield with Onana, Tielemans, McGinn in there, Rogers. They don't really play with wide players, they work awfully hard in that midfield area and you've got to match that.

"You're never going to break them open unless you do that. He just put in another enormous effort. Along with Rodri and Biss when he came on, and Deki of course."

Dejan Kulusevski again showed his sparkling form this season and has given Postecoglou an important extra lock-picking option to ease the reliance on James Maddison. The Swede's reverse pass through to Solanke for the striker's first goal was inch-perfect and even VAR couldn't find a reason to disallow it.

The 24-year-old's displays this season have often impressed with pre-assists so the headline numbers haven't always made it clear to those who don't watch him in action just how good he's been in the deeper role.

However, the obvious stats are starting to pile up now with seven goal involvements - two goals and five assists - in his opening 15 games, all but one of those involvements coming in his 10 starts.

Maddison is being pushed by the competition and he was not to be overshadowed on the day, even if he was starting his second game on the trot on the bench. The 27-year-old came on for the final 19 minutes, including that 10 minutes of added time mostly coming from Martinez's excruciatingly slow taking of goal kicks.

It would come back to haunt Villa as Maddison used the added time to sweep home a glorious free-kick after Solanke had been fouled on the edge of the box. The Argentine goalkeeper could only stand and watch the ball curl into the top right corner of the net.

Maddison sprinted across the pitch to celebrate in front of his family in his West Stand box at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, making a heart with his fingers towards them.

It was a landmark goal for the midfielder, his 50th in the Premier League and his ninth direct free-kick goal in the competition and it earned a hug and chat from his head coach after the final whistle.

Postecoglou also got good performances from both Rodrigo Bentancur and Yves Bissouma, as they shared the number six load. The Uruguayan was starting to lunge into a few challenges, escaping a yellow card on a couple of occasions, which prompted the switch.

Postecoglou's substitutions all impacted the game and in the second half he had the bulk of the 61,253-strong crowd singing his name.

There's a misconception among some that the Australian's football is simple or one-dimensional. The truth is it's anything but and recent weeks have shown his ability to change the team's approach through personnel and tactical shifts without abandoning the core philosophy.

Former Spurs goalkeeper and Premier League winner Joe Hart worked with some of the biggest managers in the game before retiring in the summer, but on BBC 5 Live this weekend he spoke about his two seasons with Postecoglou at Celtic as being a time like no other in his development, despite being well into his thirties at the time.

"I'll be honest, I feel so lucky I played these last three years. My last three managers in England; David Moyes, Sean Dyche, and Jose Mourinho. All top, top managers in their own right, and they've done incredible things, but they are very much hard work, dedication, learning what you need to do and going out and performing," he said.

"Then I went and had three years at Celtic, two of them with Ange Postecoglou and one of them with Brendan Rodgers. And Ange Postecoglou blew my mind because he really opened me up.

"I actually think I'd be sat here having this conversation and not being able to understand [Enzo] Maresca and what his thought process is, if I hadn't experienced what I did in terms of that specific detail."

He explained further: "I always thought play out from the back, oh my god, does that mean that I need to do Cruyff turns, pick passes? No it doesn't. It means that I need to stand on the ball, I need to make sure that my centre-halves are either side of me, my six is showing, and then if the space is being created, I'm not playing out for the sake of playing out, I'm playing out to score.

"If that full press comes and all I see is opposition players stood next to mine, I'm giving that clarity in my mind that there's a little dinked ball into the striker's chest.

"And all these sort of things come together, it's a totally different game and a totally different thought process. Like I say, I feel truly blessed because I honestly would feel out of my depth if I'd sat in here three years ago trying to have this conversation with you."

The Postecoglou way is starting to click at Tottenham as the players begin to understand the different thought process.

It's still a work in progress. The away results in the Premier League need to improve to match the improved performances on the whole on the road this season, the Palace and second half at Brighton aside.

Some of those lost points when compared to the team's fast start to last season bely the overall improvement in performances. Much was made of Spurs' drop-off last season in displays after those initial 10 games whereas now the structure seems to be in place to make for a move even campaign with the performances and the results are starting to match them.

The youthful nature of the Australian's squad will bring inconsistencies at times but nine wins from 11 matches after a sticky start, in terms of results, suggests the options in the squad are helping manage that, even if injuries are doing their best to try to derail those choices.

Postecoglou made it clear on Sunday that it's all part of the process and that the world did not end with the defeat at Palace, nor is it a time for jubilation and an open-top bus parade after having beaten City and Villa since.

"You don't fall off cliffs and you don't climb mountains within a week. It's all part of the same process for me. We're going to have bumps along the way. It's how you address them, how you cope with them, how you rebound and learn from them," said the Australian.

"That's the key thing and, you know, we had a disappointing day last Sunday, but when you're coming in on Monday, we had two big games this week, really important games, so no point in feeling sorry for ourselves. We had to come in and get our head straight, and work back towards being the team we want to be and that's what happened, but it doesn't mean that that's the end of it now.

"We've still got to push on, we've still got to get better, we've still got to improve and and keep pushing on."

He added: "I'm totally focused on the long game here of who we want to be and the little bumps along the road hurt but you kind of know that that's part of our growth and the good performances and the good moments are there for our growth as well, because you've got to deal with both I think in the same way with your eyes sort of firmly fixed ahead on where you're heading.

"I don't spend too much time thinking about [the table], but it looks like there's a lot more congestion in terms of the field itself. Some of that I think is just the attrition rate of players at the moment, which is making it hard for teams to get into smooth water, so to speak.

"We're all having to deal with it, I guess, so that's part of it. The table is only important for me at the end of the year.

"While we're running in the race, I don't like looking either side of me. I keep saying to the players - if I was a racehorse, and I'm not, it would be one with blinkers. I'm just looking at the finish line...I think that's right, I don't know much about horse racing!"

That table Postecoglou is not looking at shows Spurs rising as the Premier League's top scorers and they are now sitting seventh, just three points off Nuno Espirito Santo's third-placed Nottingham Forest.

Arsenal and Chelsea have received plenty of praise during these early months of the campaign while Tottenham have gained little, despite them both sitting just two points and one point ahead of Postecoglou's side respectively.

This week will take Spurs to a late night kick off on Thursday at Galatasaray, where Postecoglou could make plenty of changes if he wants due to the club's strong position with three straight wins in the Europa League.

Ipswich Town visit the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium after a clear week for their own schedule, just two days after Spurs will land back in the UK, and those fit players in the squad will have to be juggled across the two games.

Postecoglou has taken some gambles and ridden the criticism to ensure that his players are all sharp and fighting for minutes across the various competitions, desperate to be involved and it's paying dividends.

He may well have been privately delighted at his captain Son's disappointed reaction to coming off on Sunday because it shows that nobody is hiding in his Tottenham team and they all want to be a part of what he is creating.

There's still plenty of work to be done at the north London club and things to be ironed out, but the direction is the clearest it has been in years as Postecoglou points the way.

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

radar Tottenham ace as undroppables lose status

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Pape Matar Sarr is having a big say in a Tottenham shirt right now. Such a key cog in Ange Postecoglou's Spurs midfield immediately after the Australian's appointment as head coach in the summer of 2023, the youngster has unfortunately lost his tag as an undroppable this term.

Named in the starting XI on the opening day of the Premier League season away at Leicester City, the 22-year-old's only other league starts in 2024/25 have come against Newcastle United and in Sunday's convincing 4-1 victory over Aston Villa. While of course Dominic Solanke will quite rightly dominate the headlines after his double in the big win, Sarr's influence on the game was huge and he deserves plenty of praise for helping Tottenham cap off a memorable week in the Premier League and Carabao Cup.

Fresh from his wonderful strike in Wednesday's evening 2-1 win over Manchester City, Sarr took his place in the Spurs midfield alongside Rodrigo Bentancur and Dejan Kulusevski for the Aston Villa showdown. It was always going to be a choice between Sarr and James Maddison to get the nod from the off, with the former preferred by Postecoglou in order to give Spurs plenty of energy in the middle against a strong Villa selection.

After all, that's exactly what the Senegal ace did a fortnight ago after his introduction at the beginning of the second half in the 4-1 win over West Ham. Bentancur was Tottenham's best midfielder in the first half against the Villans but Sarr really started to come to the fore in the second 45 minutes of the contest.

He went from strength to strength after the break as his running qualities, dynamism and ability to win the ball and get it forward helped Tottenham come out on top as they struck four second-half goals. He was to have a say in the team's second and third goals of the contest as Solanke helped himself to a double.

Firstly getting on the ball after Ben Davies had won possession to play in Johnson prior to the striker converting Kulusevski's reverse ball, Sarr was to have a bigger role in Solanke's second strike after seizing upon Pau Torres' loose pass, driving forward with it and slipping in Richarlison to square for Tottenham's No.19. The ex-Metz man really is having quite the impact for Tottenham in the final third this season even if his minutes have been restricted in the Premier League.

Scoring in Tottenham's first two Europa League ties against Qarabag and Ferencvaros and then getting his name on the scoresheet last Wednesday against Manchester City, Sarr also has assists to his name in the Manchester United and West Ham fixtures. Postecoglou was asked about his player's impact against Aston Villa when speaking in his post-match press conference and he heaped praise on the starlet.

"They're never out of my line-up, it's different challenges along the way. But he probably played as much as anyone last year, I rate him so highly," explained the 59-year-old. "His capacity again to work for the team but also the quality he has in breaking open oppositions with his running with the ball. I knew he'd be important today because they've got such a hard-working midfield with Onana, Tielemans, McGinn in there, Rogers.

"They don't really play with wide players, they work awfully hard in that midfield area and you've got to match that. You're never going to break them open unless you do that. He just put in another enormous effort. Along with Rodri and Biss when he came on, and Deki of course."

Given the incredible performances he was producing 12 months ago when an automatic pick in Postecoglou's starting XI, 2024 has been a very up and down year for the player. Unable to recapture his form after returning from the Africa Cup of Nations, Sarr was also not helped by the constant changes in midfield as Postecoglou looked for his best selection with Maddison and Yves Bissouma, who have both also lost their undroppable status this term, also struggling to rediscover their previous levels.

Despite the fact that he has not been a Tottenham regular in the Premier League this season, Sarr does appear to be finishing the year in the right way for Tottenham and that is only going to give Postecoglou a difficult decision to make in the weeks ahead. His performances have perhaps gone under the radar a little bit of late, with Kulusevski, Johnson and others coming in for regular praise due to their impact on the team.

Apart from Kulusevski, no midfielder looks to be guaranteed a Tottenham starting spot in the Premier League right now. Sarr really is making his case at present and long may it continue.

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.

Tottenham next five Premier League fixtures compared to Aston Villa and Chelsea after huge win

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Tottenham put in yet another blistering second half display to thump Premier League top-four rivals Aston Villa. For the second consecutive home game, Spurs won 4-1 with Dominic Solanke (x2), Brennan Johnson and James Maddison all on target.

The victory was the perfect way to bounce back from defeat away at Crystal Palace last weekend with Ange Postecoglou's side also clearly taking huge confidence from knocking Manchester City out of the Carabao Cup earlier this week.

As a result of the triumph, Spurs are now two points behind Villa and Arsenal who are both on 18 with the latter occupying fourth. However, Tottenham's superior goal difference could soon see them rise up in the standings if they continue winning.

With that being said, football.london has taken a look at Spurs upcoming league fixtures and compared them to the other teams pushing for a spot in the top four.

November 10 vs Ipswich Town (H) at 2pm - Premier League

Before the November international break, Spurs are back on home soil as they welcome winless Ipswich. Given their recent performances in north London and the poor defensive record of Kieran Mckenna's side, Tottenham will certainly fancy their chances to further increase their goal difference.

November 23 vs Manchester City (A) at 5.30pm - Premier League

Tottenham return from the two-week pause with perhaps the trickiest fixture on their calendar away at reigning Premier League champions Manchester City. Spurs can certainly take confidence from beating Pep Guardiola's side at the end of October and the point they secured at Etihad Stadium last season.

December 1 vs Fulham (H) at 1.30pm - Premier League

A London derby then kicks off December as Spurs welcome Fulham to the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium. Marco Silva's side have been in good form this season but the Lilywhites will certainly be favourites to beat the Cottagers for the tenth time in the last 11 years.

December 5 vs AFC Bournemouth (A) at 8.15pm - Premier League

The hectic fixture schedule that often arrives in December sees Tottenham face Bournemouth four days after taking on Fulham. The Cherries have beaten both Arsenal and Manchester City at Vitality Stadium already this season and thus a huge task awaits Spurs on the south coast.

December 8 vs Chelsea (H) at 4.30pm - Premier League

Tottenham's final clash of their next five in the league arrives against bitter rivals Chelsea. This exact clash last season was engulfed in controversy, with plenty of red cards dished out and injuries galore, and thus Spurs will be keen to put that shocking 4-1 defeat firmly behind them.

Chelsea next five Premier League games

November 10 vs Arsenal (H) at 4.30pm - Premier League

November 23 vs Leicester City (A) at 12.30pm - Premier League

December 1 vs Aston Villa (H) at 1.30pm - Premier League

December 4 vs Southampton (A) at 7.30pm - Premier League

December 8 vs Tottenham (A) at 4.30pm - Premier League

Aston Villa next five Premier League games

November 9 vs Liverpool (A) at 8pm - Premier League

November 23 vs Crystal Palace (H) at 3pm - Premier League

December 1 vs Chelsea (A) at 1.30pm - Premier League

December 4 vs Brentford (H) at 8.15pm - Premier League

December 7 vs Southampton (H) at 3pm - Premier League

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.

Son reaction to sub, Richarlison injury agony

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Tottenham ensured it was a week to remember after recording a resounding 4-1 victory over Aston Villa in the Premier League on Sunday afternoon. Coming into the game on the back of defeating Manchester City in the Carabao Cup on Wednesday evening, Ange Postecoglou made three changes to his Tottenham XI to take on Unai Emery's team.

Clear-cut chances were at a premium in the opening stages of the contest, with Rodrigo Bentancur not that far away from testing Emi Martinez with a dipping effort that landed on the roof of the net. Despite the hosts creating the better openings, Villa opened the scoring on 32 minutes courtesy of Morgan Rogers' finish from point-blank range.

Tottenham restored parity on 49 minutes with a trademark Brennan Johnson finish at the back post following such an inviting cross from the returning Son Heung-min. The hosts were very close to going ahead a couple of minutes later as Dominic Solanke forced Martinez into a low save with the ball destined to go in.

Solanke was to get his goal 15 minutes from time with a cute dinked finish over Martinez after an incredible reverse ball from Dejan Kulusevski to play him in. It was to then get even better for the summer addition as he put the game out of sight in the 79th minute after tapping home Richarlison's cross from close range.

There was still time for Tottenham to net a fourth goal of the contest as James Maddison came off the bench to score direct from a free-kick in stoppage time. Here are five things we spotted in the game at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium:

Team selection

Postecoglou always had a big call to make over his midfield three to take on Aston Villa following the team's struggles at Crystal Palace seven days ago. In the 1-0 defeat at Selhurst Park, the Eagles made life very difficult for Spurs in the middle of the park and starters Maddison and Kulusevski were both hooked just past the hour mark.

Question marks surrounded Maddison's place in the team going into the game in south east London after Pape Matar Sarr's bright cameo in his place the previous weekend against West Ham. Opting for Maddison over Sarr against Palace last Sunday, this time Postecoglou selected the Senegal international to join Kulusevski and Rodrigo Bentancur in midfield to take on Aston Villa.

It meant Maddison was named on the bench for the second game in succession after his role as an unused substitute in Wednesday's win over Manchester City in the Carabao Cup. Speaking to Sky Sports ahead of the game, Postecoglou explained his decision behind Maddison's omission from the starting XI.

"They are all the same calls, irrespective," he said. "We have got to put 11 out there, we have got a good squad. Just what we need today, there is no doubt Madders will be coming on today and I am sure there will be an impact when he does."

Previously an undroppable in Postecoglou's team, Maddison is no longer guaranteed a starting berth and that is quite simply down to the outstanding form of Kulusevski in Tottenham's midfield. The former Leicester City man was introduced in the final stages of the contest and capped off his cameo in the best way possible with a fantastic free-kick that gave Martinez no chance in the Villa goal.

After having to settle for a place on the bench once again, Maddison sent a timely reminder to everyone of just what he can do.

Cash reaction

Matty Cash was named in the Aston Villa team to take on Tottenham on Sunday afternoon. The right-back has been in the headlines in recent meetings between the teams after leaving both Matt Doherty and Bentancur facing extended spells on the sidelines.

Firstly committing a nasty challenge on Doherty in April 2022 that ended the Irishman's season, Bentancur was then on the receiving end of a Cash tackle last November that put him back in the treatment room so soon after returning from his ACL injury. Given Cash's place in Emery's Villa team, it came as no surprise to hear a number of boos from Tottenham fans every time he was in possession of the ball.

Spurs fans have clearly not forgotten nor forgiven the Poland international for the two challenges that sidelined the Tottenham duo.

Concerning trend

It probably came as no surprise to home fans that it was Aston Villa who opened the scoring in the 2pm kick-off. After all, Tottenham have this habit of conceding first at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in league fixtures.

In 14 Premier League fixtures at home in 2024, Spurs have shipped the opening goal on 12 occasions. Aston Villa, West Ham, Brentford and Arsenal have all scored first in N17 this term, with Everton the only team not to do likewise in the league.

While Spurs did come from behind to beat Aston Villa, West Ham and Brentford, their tendency to go behind is giving them an uphill challenge in matches and it is something they really need to put an end to.

Shocked Son

Missing the last three games through injury, Son made his return to the Tottenham team to face Aston Villa. He was to have an impact on proceedings four minutes after the break with a sublime cross in from the left that allowed Johnson to convert.

The whipped delivery from the Spurs captain was so precise that all Johnson had to do was get into the right area and make contact with the ball. That proved to be one of Son's last involvements as he was substituted on 55 minutes, presumably to do with his recent absence with a hamstring injury.

Son was extremely surprised to be the player to exit so early into the second half and he was picked up on camera pointing to his chest to question that it was indeed himself who was coming off. Once in the dugout, the 32-year-old could be seen chuntering to himself and then biting on the collar of his Spurs shirt.

Maybe a surprise call at the time, it proved to be the right one as Spurs ran out convincing winners and they didn't push their captain too much and risk another injury.

Fresh injury concerns

It was this time last year when the injuries started to pile up for Postecoglou's Tottenham team. Losing both Micky van de Ven and Maddison in the 4-1 defeat at home to Chelsea, the Dutchman had to watch on from the sidelines 12 months on for the visit of Aston Villa.

Losing Van de Ven in the opening stages of the Manchester City game during the week, Spurs also saw Cristian Romero come off in the second half of the Carabao Cup tie. The World Cup winner was again to make way against Aston Villa, this time on 61 minutes following a challenge on Rogers.

There was to be further bad news for Postecoglou and Spurs in the last ten minutes as Richarlison, who had only just returned from injury recently, was forced off with what appeared to be a hamstring issue. The Brazilian pulled up immediately after teeing Solanke up for his second of the afternoon and something seemed off as he leaned over the advertising boards before his teammates came over to join him.

It was his last action in the fixture as Maddison came on to replace him and help see the game out. Going on all the injuries Spurs occurred this time 12 months ago, Postecoglou will be praying for some positive news on the injury front this time around.

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.

Tottenham boss on Dominic Solanke, Son sub and injuries

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Ange Postecoglou is speaking to the media after Tottenham Hotspur's big 4-1 win against Aston Villa in the Premier League on Sunday afternoon.

The hosts came into the clash looking to follow up their 2-1 victory against Manchester City in the Carabao Cup on Wednesday evening in another tough game against Unai Emery's side at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium. Postecoglou was missing Micky van de Ven due to a hamstring strain along with Wilson Odobert.

The Spurs boss did have captain Son Heung-min back though and the Australian selected a midfield for the game of Pape Matar Sarr, following his strike against City, as well as Rodrigo Bentancur and Dejan Kulusevski, meaning a place on the bench again for James Maddison.

Villa took the lead after the half hour mark when a corner came off Pedro Porro and Bentancur before Guglielmo Vicario could only push it to Morgan Rogers to slam in from close range.

Spurs found a leveller early in the second half when Son hit a terrific low cross into the box and Brennan Johnson smashed it home on the run.

Dominic Solanke put the hosts into the lead. He finally got some decent service and tucked away a delightful chipped finish after a move that had started with a vital Ben Davies block and then Kulusevski played a reverse ball through to the £65million striker to score.

Solanke then scored again to make it 3-1 for Tottenham. Sarr won the ball back, played it into Richarlison and he picked out Solanke with a perfect low cross and the striker made no mistake. Richarlison did appear to hold his hamstring in the process though and had to go off immediately after.

Maddison put the cherry on top of the cake with a lovely, curling free-kick to make it 4-1 as Emiliano Martinez could only watch it sail inside the right-hand post.

Our Tottenham correspondent Alasdair Gold is among those putting the questions to Postecoglou following the match. Scroll down for his latest updates from the press conference at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium.

Dominic Solanke at the double as Sarr shines

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Tottenham Hotspur won 4-1 against Aston Villa in the Premier League on Sunday and here are our Spurs player ratings.

The hosts came into the clash looking to follow up their 2-1 win against Manchester City in the Carabao Cup on Wednesday evening in another tough game against Unai Emery's side at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium. Postecoglou was missing Micky van de Ven due to a hamstring strain along with Wilson Odobert.

The Tottenham boss did have captain Son Heung-min back though and the Australian selected a midfield of Pape Matar Sarr, following his goal against City, as well as Rodrigo Bentancur and Dejan Kulusevski, meaning a place on the bench again for James Maddison.

Villa took the lead after the half hour mark when a corner came off Pedro Porro and Bentancur before Guglielmo Vicario could only push it to Morgan Rogers to slam in from close range for only the second set piece goal Spurs have conceded this season.

Spurs equalised early in the second half when Son hit a great low cross into the box and Brennan Johnson slammed it home on the run.

Dominic Solanke then put the home side into the lead. He finally got some decent service and he tucked away a delightful chipped finish. The move had started with a vital Ben Davies block and then Kulusevski played a reverse ball through to the £65million striker to score.

Solanke then scored again to make it 3-1 for Tottenham. Sarr won the ball back, played it into Richarlison and he picked out Solanke with a perfect low cross and the striker made no mistake. Richarlison did appear to hold his hamstring in the process though and had to go off immediately after.

Maddison put the cherry on top of the cake with a lovely, curling free-kick to make it 4-1 as Emiliano Martinez could only watch it sail inside the right-hand post.

Here are our Tottenham player ratings from the game:

Guglielmo Vicario

Saved from Onana's header off the post but then saw his save after a couple of Spurs touches from a Villa corner fall to Rogers to slam home. Didn't have much to do after that. 7

Pedro Porro

Didn't contribute too much going forward and did send the header back towards his own goal for Villa's first half strike. Worked hard though as the game wore on with his defending down the right. 7

Cristian Romero

A little off the pace early on and picked up a yellow card for a late lunge early in the second half. Did improve as the game wore on but had to go off with a foot injury. 7

Radu Dragusin

Got a good block on Ramsey's first half shot and put in a really solid display at the back in Van de Ven's absence. 8

Destiny Udogie

Got up and down the left and set up Solanke for a chance in the second half. Looked sharp for much of the game and got into plenty of good positions. 7

Pape Matar Sarr

Got better and better as the game wore on and was crucial for Spurs' third goal as he won the ball back and slipped in Richarlison to set up Solanke. An all action performance. 9

Rodrigo Bentancur

Spurs' brightest player in the first half but was chasing the game a little in the second half with a few let offs when he could have got a yellow card or two and was replaced by Bissouma before the hour mark. 7

Dejan Kulusevski

Struggled to find a way through in the first half but was back on form in the second period and his reverse pass through to Solanke to score Spurs' second goal was delightful. 8

Brennan Johnson

Chased plenty of lost causes in the first half and got his reward with his seventh goal of the season, slamming home Son's low cross. Ran himself into the ground after that as well. Much of his performance might go under the radar but he gave everything. 8

Dominic Solanke

Worked hard as usual with precious little service in the first half. Had one deflected effort that was saved by Martinez. Then Spurs finally started giving him the ball and he chipped in a great first goal and then smashed in his second from close range. Also won the free-kick that Maddison scored from in added time. 9

Son Heung-min

After a quiet first half he lit up the start of the second half with a great low ball for Johnson to slam home. Having only just returned to training, he was taken off soon after much to his surprise and disappointment. 7

Subs

Richarlison

Grabbed a great assist for Solanke but seemed to pull his hamstring in the process and came off straight after. 7

Yves Bissouma

Came on and added plenty to Spurs' game in the second half. 8

Ben Davies

Made a vital block to set Spurs away for their second goal and defended well. 8

James Maddison

Responded in the perfect way to starting on the bench again with a delightful curling free-kick. 8

Archie Gray

Came on for Udogie in the final minutes and did little wrong. 6

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.

Ange Postecoglou explains bold Tottenham decision as James Maddison dropped vs Aston Villa

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Ange Postecoglou has explained why James Maddison was dropped from the Tottenham Hotspur starting lineup to face Aston Villa. The 27-year-old midfielder failed to impress a 1-0 defeat to Crystal Palace last weekend, denting the Lilywhites' chances of securing Champions League qualification.

Desperate to find an equaliser, Postecoglou made wholesale changes on the hour mark at Selhurst Park. The Spurs boss replaced Maddison for Richarlison, meanwhile, Mikey Moore and Dejan Kulusevski made way for Timo Werner and Pape Matar Sarr.

Tottenham couldn't salvage a point in South London and fell to 10th in the Premier League table. Speaking to reporters after the game, Postecoglou suggested that his side struggled to cope with the Eagles' physicality and mind games.

"It was a game we needed to stay composed and not sort of fall into the trap of trying to play the game ultimately Palace wanted to play," said the 59-year-old. "It turned into a game that was battle after battle, duels, stop starts, waiting around.

"We need to be a lot more clear-headed about how we deal with that rather than fall into the trap of doing what we did today. It was a big game for Palace. They were always going to be desperate to get a win and that happens.

"I just thought there was a lot of standing around today which I hate, I’ve said that before. But I guess it’s just the nature of the way the game went."

Then, on Wednesday evening, Maddison was omitted from the starting lineup as Spurs stormed past Manchester City and into the Carabao Cup quarter-final. The England international remained on the bench for the Aston Villa clash, which certainly raised a few eyebrows.

Prior to the tie, Postecoglou was asked about Maddison's absence. The Tottenham boss said: "They are all the same calls, irrespective (of who). We have got to put 11 out there, we have got a good squad. Just what we need today, there is no doubt Madders will be coming on today and I am sure there will be an impact when he does."

Latest score as Johnson nets after Rogers goal, Romero injured

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Yeah, great appointment. But it shouldn't surprise anyone, he was an outstanding manager before he got there.

He's done an outstanding job and another cautionary tale about writing people off because when he was at Arsenal, people were quick to be dismissive of him. Lots of other people's memories have faded.

When you're a manager and you see a manager going through what he did, it's firmly imprinted in your mind; just goes to show, as I said, he was an outstanding manager and for Villa, they identified somebody that could come in and really bring their football club to the levels they wanted to, and he's done that. Since he's been there they continue to get stronger and challenge and it'll be a good test for us.

Our games against them have been really good. Last year, we won at their place and played really well but I thought we played well at our place too but they got on top of us, they got ahead of us for the Champions League last year. It's great competition for us.

min returns with James Maddison on bench

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Ange Postecoglou has named his Tottenham Hotspur side to face Aston Villa in the Premier League on Sunday.

Spurs will be looking to follow up their 2-1 victory against Manchester City in the Carabao Cup in midweek in another tough game against Unai Emery's side at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium. Going into the game, Postecoglou had some injury concerns with Micky van de Ven out due to a hamstring strain along with Wilson Odobert, with Timo Werner and Cristian Romero also coming off during the match against City.

The Tottenham boss does have captain Son Heung-min back in action though and the South Korean star lines up alongside Dominic Solanke and Brennan Johnson in the attack.

In the midfield, Postecoglou has gone for a trio of Pape Matar Sarr, following his goal against City, as well as Rodrigo Bentancur and Dejan Kulusevski with the midfield that started against Pep Guardiola's men getting another chance to impress. That means a place on the bench again for James Maddison.

Radu Dragusin retains his place with Van de Ven out alongside Cristian Romero.

Here is the Tottenham team Postecoglou has selected: Vicario; Porro, Romero, Dragusin, Udogie; Sarr, Bentancur, Kulusevski; Johnson, Solanke, Son. Subs: Forster, Davies, Gray, Bissouma, Bergvall, Maddison, Werner, Moore, Richarlison.

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.

Paul Merson and Chris Sutton disagree on Tottenham prediction as Son Heung

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Paul Merson and Chris Sutton have predicted whether or not Tottenham Hotspur will defeat Aston Villa. The Lilywhites will host the Villans on Sunday afternoon (2pm) as both attempt to climb the Premier League table.

Spurs head into the clash off the back of a 2-1 win over Manchester City in the Carabao Cup last-16, while Villa crashed out of the competition after losing 2-1 to Crystal Palace. While the north Londoners may have a skip in their step, Unai Emery's side will be determined to return to winning ways.

In his latest column for Sportskeeda, Merson has backed the Villans to do just that. The Arsenal legend said: "I thought it was a really bad result for Aston Villa when they lost to Crystal Palace in the Carabao Cup.

"I know they play in the Champions League and compete well in the Premier League, but they should also be looking to win the cup. That exit would have definitely been disappointing for Villa - but I'm still going to back them to beat Tottenham.

"Villa's high line could face problems against Spurs, but I can't see them not scoring in this game. It's going to be a big blow for Tottenham in their attempt to qualify for the Champions League if they lose this game.

"Villa can open up an eight-point gap over Spurs if they win and that may well be curtains for the north Londoners' hopes about finishing fourth. I just think Villa have a bit more in them than Tottenham and fully expect them to win here. Tottenham Hotspur 1-2 Aston Villa."

Speaking to BBC Sport, meanwhile, Sutton has tipped Tottenham to snatch a point against Villa despite concerns that Son Heung-min may not be available. The former Chelsea striker said: "The away team won on both occasions when these two sides met last season, and you could make a case for Tottenham or Aston Villa coming out on top here.

"I do like the way Spurs play, but they could do with having Son Heung-min fit - as he has missed three of the past four league games - and they have a few other injuries too. Whoever is missing, though, Ange Postecoglou will not change his bullish approach.

"I admire that, and I find it amazing the way people view Spurs at the moment. They have won eight of the past 10 games in all competitions, which is pretty good I think - but there is always this underlying 'Spursy' or 'typical Spurs' label they get given whenever they slip up.

"That could happen here, of course. Spurs will dominate the ball this time, too, but I have got no doubt that Villa will score, because they carry such a threat and their front players will definitely have their moments in this game.

"So, there will definitely be plenty of goals... but maybe there won't be a winner this time. Tottenham have not had a draw since the first game of the season. I think they will get one here."