Xavi Simons resolved the last doubt about his transfer
Once again, Tottenham Hotspur were a tale of two halves, looking like barely a Premier League side in the first half against Manchester City before unleashing a barrage of excellent football in the second stanza. Spurs overcame a 2-0 deficit to draw one of the true Premier League title contenders this season 2-2, having just barely drawn Burnley in the Premier League last weekend.
While Tottenham are a long way from being able to call themselves a competent team and still have a ton of questions around Thomas Frank to answer, there is one question that has been unequivocally answered after this performance against Manchester City.
There were times this season when even a few Tottenham fans were doubting Xavi Simons, who cost 60 million euros this past summer transfer window. It took a while for Simons to get going in a Tottenham shirt, and there were plenty of pundits mocking Spurs, wondering if Simons was simply unable to translate from the expansive Dutch Eredivisie and German Bundesliga to the English Premier League.
Xavi Simons belongs
Well, Simons, in the past several weeks, has proven that he belongs at Tottenham, and it seems like ancient history when Thomas Frank unfairly snubbed the budding Dutch superstar in four straight games - which were all dreadful Tottenham performances ,by the way - including that unforgettable 4-1 blowout loss to Arsenal in the North London Derby.
Simons saved his very best performance for the Manchester City game. He was on another level, recording nine combined dribbles completed and fouls drawn with four key passes and an assist. Despite making high risk passes that created clear cut chances, he still led the team with 49 pass attempts and a solid completion percentage of around 86, adding a pair of accurate crosses and four for four long balls. He even had an accurate through pass for the worst team in the league at through passes.
In one performance, Xavi Simons proved that he has not only been an excellent, home run signing for Tottenham Hotspur and an actual bargain in comparison to what Morgan Gibbs-White and Eberechi Eze would have brought as older players at a higher cost in the same position, but he also proved that he is beyond what Spurs even asked for. This was a perfect playmaker's, tempo setter's, and progressor's performance. Simons looked as good as any Spurs player not named Harry Kane or Son Heung-min has in the last 10 years, and that should really intrigue this team going forward.