The New York Times

Tottenham’s Son Heung-min facing late fitness call before Manchester United trip

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Ange Postecoglou says Tottenham Hotspur will make a late call on the availability of captain Son Heung-min ahead of Sunday’s Premier League fixture against Manchester United.

Son was substituted after 71 minutes during Thursday’s Europa League victory over Qarabag at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium after feeling fatigue in his hamstring. He received medical attention on the pitch shortly after Dominic Solanke had scored Tottenham’s third goal, before being replaced by Timo Werner.

“Still early days from last night,” Postecoglou said on Friday. “The boys are fairly tired, the ones who put in a shift.

“Apart from Sonny, everyone’s OK. And Sonny I don’t think’s too bad. He wants to train tomorrow so we’ll see how it goes at training tomorrow and make a decision from there. We have another day up our sleeve to give him every chance.”

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Son last missed a Spurs game through injury in November 2022, when he was sidelined with a fractured eye socket.

The 32-year-old has made seven appearances in all competitions this season, providing two goals and two assists. He was the club’s top scorer last season with 17 goals in all competitions.

Son spoke to the media ahead of Thursday’s Europa League opener and said he and the club were yet to talk about his contract, with his existing deal set to expire in 2025.

On the forward’s contract, Postecoglou added: “I don’t always have the final say but certainly I like to think my input is significant on it. Look, I think it is part of a broader discussion around Sonny but the way he is performing and leading the club at the moment, I certainly want him to stick around for a while.”

When asked if Son’s workload needs to be managed going forward, Postecoglou said: “No. I would have wanted to ease his workload in this early part of the year but we lost Wilson (Odobert), Richy (Richarlison), and Dominic (Solanke). Invariably in football sometimes it is not the amount of injuries but the kind of injuries.

“He has played more than I certainly want him to. The idea of signing Dom and bringing in Wilson, extending Timo’s loan was so that we can manage his load, because he has international football as well, a little bit better. It’s something I am mindful of, it is just the circumstances so far. Sonny always wants to play. That is his attitude But we have to be sensible.

“I don’t think it has too much to do with his age because I haven’t seen that affect him. It’s more I don’t think that the workload in the modern game is sustainable. We have spoken a lot about fixture overload and I think I said last week that part of that responsibility lies with us to protect our players, while the calendar is like this, and certainly with Sonny we are going to have to be mindful of that.”

Spurs were 3-0 winners over Qarabag on Thursday despite Radu Dragusin’s early red card.

Postecoglou’s side are 10th in the Premier League after taking seven points from their opening five matches. United, meanwhile, are 11th with the same record as the north London side. They were also in Europa League action this week, drawing 1-1 at home with FC Twente.

(Warren Little/Getty Images)

Carabao Cup fourth-round draw: Brighton host Liverpool, Manchester City face Tottenham

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Liverpool have been drawn against Brighton & Hove Albion in the fourth round of the Carabao Cup after thrashing West Ham United on Wednesday evening.

West Ham took the lead after Jarell Quansah put through his own net but two goals either side of half-time from Diogo Jota put the hosts in command. Mohamed Salah scored off the bench before Cody Gakpo netted a quickfire brace of his own to complete a resounding 5-1 victory for the holders.

Newcastle United’s third-round match against AFC Wimbledon was postponed on Tuesday due to flooding and will now take place at St James’ Park on October 1. The winner of that tie will play host to Chelsea, who routed League Two leaders Barrow courtesy of a Christopher Nkunku hat-trick, Pedro Neto’s first goal for the club and a Paul Farman own goal.

Elsewhere, Manchester City — six-time winners of the competition in the past 10 years — travel to Tottenham Hotspur while Manchester United take on Leicester City.

Championship outfit Preston North End’s reward for their penalty shootout win over Fulham is a visit from Arsenal, who progressed with a 5-1 win over Bolton Wanderers.

Carabao Cup fourth-round draw in full

Ties will be played across Tuesday, October 29 and Wednesday, October 30.

Brentford vs Sheffield Wednesday

Southampton vs Stoke

Tottenham vs Man City

AFC Wimbledon or Newcastle vs Chelsea

Manchester United vs Leicester City

Brighton vs Liverpool

Preston vs Arsenal

Aston Villa vs Crystal Palace

Carabao Cup 2024-25 dates

Quarter-finals: Week starting December 16

Semi-finals: Weeks starting January 6 and February 3

Final: Sunday, March 16

(Visionhaus/Getty Images)

Do Spurs have the squad depth to compete in the Europa League and Premier League?

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Ange Postecoglou faces a new challenge with Tottenham Hotspur this season. By guiding them to a fifth-placed finish in the Premier League during his first year in charge, they earned a spot in the expanded version of the Europa League.

They will face eight different teams in its league phase between now and the end of January, with games equally split between home and away. The opening fixture is on Thursday, at home against Azerbaijani champions Qarabag.

Tottenham have made it to the quarter-finals only once in their past seven appearances in this competition, which they won in its former guise as the UEFA Cup in 1972 and 1984, and were also finalists in 1974, under Andre Villas-Boas in 2012-13. They should have a genuine chance of winning it again and fulfilling Postecoglou’s statement that he “always wins trophies” in his second year. They are one of the top-ranked teams, alongside Roma, Porto, Ajax and Manchester United.

One of the other changes with the new format is that third-placed teams from the Champions League no longer drop into the knockout stage of this competition. So if Atletico Madrid, Inter Milan or Borussia Dortmund go out of the Champions League after its league phase, they will not suddenly emerge, like an overpowered boss in a video game, to block Tottenham’s path to the trophy. In four of the past five seasons, a club that started off in the Champions League group stage has ended up contesting the Europa League final.

Postecoglou needs to strike the right balance between giving minutes to players who will not feature regularly for him in the Premier League with putting out teams capable of winning enough games to finish in the top eight of the Europa League’s revamped opening stage. If Spurs finish between ninth and 24th, they will face a two-legged tie in February to try to qualify for the last 16 that way. Any lower and they will be eliminated from Europe for the season.

Tottenham were able to pick only a 23-man squad for the league stage (academy prospects such as Will Lankshear and Mikey Moore are not included in this number but can still play in the matches) while other clubs were allowed up to 25. This is because UEFA rules stipulate each team must have eight locally-trained senior players and Spurs have fallen short of that figure in their current squad. It is why they have named four goalkeepers, including academy graduates Alfie Whiteman and Brandon Austin.

The shortage of homegrown players since the likes of Harry Kane, Harry Winks and Oliver Skipp left the club in the past year or so meant Spurs had to name that reduced squad, which led to Postecoglou leaving out Djed Spence and Sergio Reguilon. It is a particularly jarring scenario for Spence, who has played twice for them in the Premier League this season already and was instrumental in the comeback to beat Coventry City last week in the Carabao Cup.

“It was always going to be a difficult decision. With the make-up of our squad currently and the lack of club-trained players, we were always going to have to leave someone out,” Postecoglou said after the squad had been confirmed. “Djed was the unfortunate one but at the same time, Djed has already played in the Premier League. If you’d ask him at the start of the season where he sees himself, the fact he is part of our squad and will obviously play a huge part of the year as he has already, I don’t think he should take too much disappointment.

“Obviously he wants to play, but in the end it was about team balance for us. We just feel with the squad we’ve got, we’ve got some cover on the right, players who can cover on the left, and I always tend to go for more attacking players in those scenarios.”

Fraser Forster is the second-choice goalkeeper behind Guglielmo Vicario. The 36-year-old’s discomfort with playing out from the back was evident in that tie against Championship side Coventry. In the game’s opening minute, he misplaced a pass towards Lucas Bergvall on the edge of the box that nearly led to Jack Rudoni scoring. Vicario will surely be needed against stronger opposition but he cannot be expected to play twice every week until February.

There are only seven defenders in the Europa League squad and they will need to be managed carefully to ensure nobody is handed too heavy a workload. Archie Gray will provide cover for Pedro Porro at right-back while Radu Dragusin can rotate with Cristian Romero. Ben Davies could fill in for Destiny Udogie or Micky van de Ven.

Postecoglou has a dilemma in attack, with Wilson Odobert and Richarlison currently recovering from injuries. They were working in the gym on Wednesday while the rest of the squad took part in training outside. Richarlison’s absence will place a greater strain on £65million ($86.6m) club-record signing Dominic Solanke, but it might present 19-year-old fellow striker Lankshear with an opportunity.

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Lankshear impressed during this summer’s pre-season tour to Japan and South Korea and is back in first-team training following a hamstring injury. Playing competitive football in the Europa League would be the perfect opportunity for him and winger Moore, 17, to develop. Don’t forget that Kane’s first goal for the club came as an 18-year-old in a 4-0 win over Irish side Shamrock Rovers in the Europa League in December 2011.

The alternative option is to play Son Heung-min or Dejan Kulusevski up front, but they need as much rest as Solanke. Kulusevski has been Tottenham’s brightest player in the first month or so of the season operating in a central attacking midfield role and it would be a shame to move him around when he is building momentum. And Son might be too busy playing out wide twice a week, along with Brennan Johnson, because of Odobert’s hamstring injury and Timo Werner’s lack of form.

The one area of the pitch that is not a cause for concern is central midfield.

Even if Rodrigo Bentancur receives a lengthy domestic ban for his comments about Son, he will still be allowed to play in European matches. Postecoglou could select the Uruguay international in all of the Europa League fixtures, keeping Yves Bissouma fresh for the Premier League. Bergvall has shown flashes of creativity and brilliance in his cameo appearances so far in his debut season and it will be exciting to see what he can offer from the start while Pape Sarr rounds out a talented midfield.

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Postecoglou did point out before facing Qarabag that, during his first 12 months in charge, the squad has been evolved to contain more players “robust enough to play our kind of football”. That will be put to the test in the next four months when plenty of them will be playing twice a week.

The other factor that is important to consider is that this is a young squad with limited experience of playing in the European competitions. Udogie, Van de Ven and Johnson headline a group of players who have never appeared at this level before. Postecoglou, who managed previous club Celtic in all three UEFA competitions, believes facing teams with “eight different styles” will be an “interesting challenge”.

The overall message was that this tournament should be embraced, despite the gruelling schedule and travel associated with a schedule that features games in Hungary (Ferencvaros), Turkey (Galatasaray), Scotland (Rangers) and Germany (Hoffenheim).

“Whenever you can expose individuals or the group to different environments, there’s greater opportunity for growth,” Postecoglou said in his press conference on Wednesday. “Whether it’s playing an opponent you’ve never played before, or in a country or a stadium with a different kind of atmosphere. All those things present opportunities for growth and that’s what European competition enables you to do.

“I kept saying last year, if we had been in Europe we would have been able to evolve a bit quicker in terms of what we expose our players to, especially with a young group. For a lot them, it will be their first time in European competition. For us as a group, it will be the first time. The squad has changed a lot in the last 12 months. For all those reasons I see it as a fantastic opportunity to evolve as a team in a footballing sense and hopefully gets us closer to our goal.”

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Bentancur 'almost cried' when apologising for comments - Son

(Top photo: Zac Goodwin/PA Images via Getty Images)

Tottenham’s Rodrigo Bentancur ‘almost cried’ when apologising for comments – Son Heung-min

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Son Heung-min has said that Rodrigo Bentancur “almost cried” when he apologised for his comments about the Tottenham Hotspur captain.

Bentancur, 27, said South Korean international Son and his cousins “all look the same” on the television programme Por la Camiseta, which is broadcast in his native Uruguay.

Bentancur apologised to Son, 32, on social media and called it “a joke in bad taste.” Tottenham later released a statement saying that Son wanted to “draw a line under the incident.”

Earlier this month Bentancur was charged by the Football Association (FA) for an alleged aggravated breach of their rules over the remarks. If he is found guilty or does not contest the charge, he could receive a six-to-12 game ban.

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Son was asked about his relationship with Bentancur before Tottenham’s Europa League game against Qarabag on Thursday.

“The process is with the FA and that’s why I can’t say much about it, but I love Rodrigo,” Son said. “I repeat: I love him, I love him.

“We had a lot of good memories, we started playing together when he joined. He apologised straight afterwards, you know, when we had a holiday.

“I was at home and I didn’t even realise what was going on. He just sent me a long text message that you could feel was coming from his heart. Afterwards, when he came back to the training ground for pre season, he just like felt really sorry and almost like cried when he apologised publicly and also personally as well. It felt like he feels really sorry.”

Son added: “We’re all human and make mistakes, and we learn from it. But I love Rodrigo. I love him, I love him. You know, he made a mistake. But I have no problem at all. At all. We just move on as team-mates and friends and brothers, move on together. I hope.

“We just have to wait for the FA’s process. I can’t say much. But one thing I can say is that I love Rodrigo. There is nothing more to say.”

Bentancur has made five appearances in all competitions for Spurs this season and has started their last two Premier League games against Arsenal and Brentford.

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Are Spurs sending the wrong message by banning Bissouma but not Bentancur?

Son, meanwhile, also weighed in on the growing concerns about player welfare, echoing the sentiments of Manchester City’s Rodri, who recently stated that players are “close” to going on strike due to the overloaded football calendar.

Reflecting on the issue, Son said: “A lot of players came out and said the right things. It was very important for someone to say the right things. Sometimes players are the main guys to have to say something. There’s definitely a lot of games and as a football fan who loves football you want to see quality games not as many as possible.

“You don’t want to see players struggling with injuries. No one wants to see it. A lot of games, a lot of travelling. We have to look after ourselves, which sometimes it’s very hard. We’re not robots. We have to look after that and reduce the games definitely — better quality definitely should be the aim.”

Son’s comments follow a recent FIFPro report which concluded that the 2024-25 season is set to be the worst in terms of player workload.

(Ben Stansall/AFP via Getty Images)

Brennan Johnson: Feeling his Tottenham team-mates’ love – and silencing the doubters

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James Maddison lifted his arms in the air, acting as the conductor for Tottenham Hotspur’s supporters as he urged them to create more noise.

Ange Postecoglou’s side had just taken a 2-1 lead against Brentford on Saturday after they recovered from the shock of conceding inside 25 seconds. It was a significant moment as they wrestled back control of the game and took a huge step towards winning for only the second time in the league this season.

Following back-to-back defeats to Newcastle United and Arsenal, plus an unconvincing last-gasp Carabao Cup victory over Championship side Coventry City in midweek, this was the tonic everybody needed to lift their spirits, but the identity of the goalscorer at that particular moment was crucial to the feeling of goodwill which enveloped the fans.

Last week, Brennan Johnson deactivated his Instagram account due to the abuse he received after Spurs lost that north London derby at home. The 23-year-old forward then started on the bench against Coventry, before scoring the winner in second-half stoppage time. His muted celebration suggested what happened off the pitch had taken its toll.

That is why, when Johnson burst past Nathan Collins and drilled a right-footed shot past goalkeeper Mark Flekken in the 28th minute, the crowd at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium erupted.

Johnson shushed the Brentford fans, still bitter that their club made multiple offers to sign him from Nottingham Forest but failed to complete a deal, and was then surrounded by his team-mates as chants of ‘There’s only one Brennan Johnson’ rang out loudly.

The Wales international had scored in consecutive matches for the first time since he joined Spurs from Forest last August for £47.5million ($63.2m at the current exchange rate). The last time he found the net in back-to-back club games was in May 2022, when Forest were on their way to promotion from the Championship.

Maddison wanted him to enjoy the moment, which he deserved.

“He works so hard for the team and made so many runs in behind to stretch Brentford,” Maddison told The Athletic. “How many times did he come short and Pedro (Porro, Spurs’ right-back) clipped a ball for him to chase? It creates more space in the middle for me and (Dejan) Kulusevski. Unselfish stuff like that people don’t always see.

“So when he does score, and they can shout his name, I was just getting them going. That will mean a lot to him and his family here. That is back-to-back goals. He is a great kid and I love him so I was just trying to give him confidence.”

Head coach Postecoglou admitted the forward had endured a “tough period” but has not spoken to him directly to offer further support. Johnson has, unfairly, become a scapegoat for sections of the fanbase but his performances are symbolic of the long-term project Postecoglou is overseeing.

This is a young squad with vast potential, who are growing together as a group and learning to become more consistent. Mistakes are going to happen. Tottenham spent a lot of money on Johnson because he could both contribute immediately and potentially develop into an elite winger. That is still a work in progress.

Last season, Johnson scored five times from a figure for expected goals (xG) — a metric that measures the quality of chances a team creates — of 10.6. As such, he was the biggest underperformer in front of goal in the Premier League behind Everton striker Dominic Calvert-Lewin.

If he continues to work hard on the training pitch, you would expect the quality of his finishing to improve — it was certainly a crisp strike that beat Flekken.

Johnson created the fourth-most chances from open play (45) for Tottenham in the Premier League last season, behind Maddison (47), Kulusevski (66) and Son Heung-min (67) but started fewer games than all of them. He was joint-top with Son for league assists (10).

Postecoglou used Son, Richarlison and, on rare occasions, Kulusevski at centre-forward last season. Now he has £65million club-record signing Dominic Solanke to play off, do not be surprised if Johnson benefits from having a consistent presence up front and registers even more assists than that.

Johnson’s overall performance against Brentford demonstrated how much of a devastating attacker he can be.

Thomas Frank’s visitors lined up in a 3-5-2 formation, with Collins as the left centre-back and Keane Lewis-Potter as an aggressive left wing-back who pushed high up the pitch. That meant Johnson had large pockets of space to drive directly at Collins in.

Kulusevski created a good opportunity for the Welshman in the 10th minute but his shot flashed past the post. In the second half, Cristian Romero launched a counter-attack which ended with Johnson dragging another attempt wide, before lifting his shirt up over his head in frustration while Postecoglou dropped his hands to his knees.

These are the moments where Johnson needs to become more clinical, which Postecoglou acknowledged before the game, while not every opposing team will afford him as much space as Brentford did.

“With Brennan, it is just the consistency in his game, which we are constantly working on with him,” Postecoglou said on Friday. “He is always getting into good areas, it’s about decision-making at certain times in that front third but it is a difficult position to play as a young player; once he unlocks in his head the stuff he is really good at and adjusts his game to get the most out of that aspect of it, he will become a very important player.

“He works hard on that every day and sometimes people just look at goals and assists, which is the obvious measure for attacking players. He gives us a lot of other things, particularly working hard defensively. When he first came to us it wasn’t something natural to him, but he has got a lot better at that. Now it’s putting layers on his game.”

At the end of a week which has been a rollercoaster of emotions, Johnson will be hoping his latest match-winning contributions can be a springboard for an exciting second year with Spurs.

(Top photo: Johnson shushed booing Brentford fans – and his critics; Alex Pantling/Getty Images)

James Maddison hopes first Tottenham goal since March ‘shuts up a few people’

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James Maddison hopes his first goal since March “shuts up a few people” after scoring Tottenham Hotspur’s third in Saturday’s 3-1 win over Brentford.

The 27-year-old began the 2024-25 campaign with an assist in each of Tottenham’s opening two Premier League fixtures, but had been without a goal since the 4-0 victory over Aston Villa on March 10.

Maddison added the crucial third in the 85th minute of Saturday’s win, dinking the ball over Mark Flekken after being found by Son Heung-min. The goal was just his second in the Premier League since returning to action in January after over two months out with an ankle injury.

Happy with his personal form, he said he had to take any questions over the numbers he was posting “with a pinch of salt”.

“It helped us in the game because we got that little cushion,” Maddison told the PA news agency. “It kind of shuts up a few people in the background who think the goals and assists do matter more than what they probably do.

“For some games you have it where I feel like I play really well in the build-up and help the team progress but you don’t get a goal or assist to show for that.

“And then people start questioning the numbers, so sometimes you have to take the outside noise with a pinch of salt.”

Dominik Solanke also scored his first goal of the season during Saturday’s win as he levelled the scores after eight minutes, cancelling out Bryan Mbeumo’s early opener.

Solanke, who became the club’s record signing this summer following his £65million move from Bournemouth, was quickest to react after Maddison’s effort was saved by Flekken.

“Dom worked his socks off,” Ange Postecoglou said. “He was gone at the end. He is still getting back to match fitness (after his early-season ankle injury), but I know he is going to provide so much for us in that central position. All strikers love goals, so it will be a great moment for him, especially at home.”

Spurs return to action on Thursday against Qarabag FK in the Europa League.

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The Briefing: Tottenham 3 Brentford 1 - Johnson scores again but should Vicario have been punished for handball?

(Marc Atkins/Getty Images)

Tottenham 3 Brentford 1 – Johnson scores again but should Vicario have been punished for handball?

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For the second time in the space of four days, Tottenham came back from 1-0 down to win — and again Brennan Johnson was on the scoresheet.

Ange Postecoglou’s team needed added time to beat Coventry City of the Championship 2-1 in the Carabao Cup on Wednesday but it was easier at home in the Premier League on Saturday.

Bryan Mbeumo put Brentford ahead after 23 seconds but Spurs hit back through Dominic Solanke seven minutes later. That was his first goal for the club since joining from Bournemouth this summer in a deal worth £65million ($86.5m). Johnson put Tottenham in front just before the half-hour and James Maddison got the third late in the second half, securing their second win of the Premier League season.

Jay Harris runs through the key talking points…

Brennan Johnson is silencing his doubters

The last week has been a rollercoaster of emotions for Johnson. He deactivated his Instagram account after receiving abuse following Sunday’s 1-0 home defeat against Arsenal.

The 23-year-old started on the bench against Coventry in the Carabao Cup but ended up being Tottenham’s hero by scoring the winner in second-half stoppage time. His muted celebrations suggested what happened off the pitch had taken its toll.

He started on the right wing against Brentford, who had tried to sign him from previous club Nottingham Forest on multiple occasions before he moved to north London just over a year ago, so was competing with Nathan Collins and Keane Lewis-Potter. Johnson’s first involvement in the game was to foul Lewis-Potter and he was given a shove by Collins in response.

Then an interesting tactical tweak by Brentford coach Thomas Frank might have indirectly led to Johnson scoring Spurs’ second goal: during a break in play, Frank instructed Collins to push up higher from his left centre-back role. Within a couple of minutes, Son Heung-min released Johnson into space on the right wing. The Wales international drove past the backpedalling Collins and drilled a shot into the far corner.

The crowd erupted in applause and Maddison whipped his arms up, urging them to make even more noise. When play restarted, the Spurs fans started chanting “There’s only one Brennan Johnson.” It was a wholesome moment which underlined their support for him.

Johnson will be frustrated he failed to score another goal in the second half. Son set him up for another excellent opportunity but he dragged his shot wide. He pulled his shirt up over his face while Postecoglou had his hands on his knees.

There was a huge cheer from the Spurs fans when Johnson was replaced by Pape Sarr with 20 minutes remaining.

Should Vicario and Spurs have been punished for handball?

There was a bizarre moment in the 57th minute which had Brentford’s players screaming for a free kick and for the Tottenham goalkeeper Guglielmo Vicario to be punished.

Mikkel Damsgaard earned a free kick on the edge of Tottenham’s box near the left wing after being crunched by Johnson and Cristian Romero. The 24-year-old Dane’s effort was blocked but Sepp van den Berg reclaimed the ball from Destiny Udogie. Van den Berg passed it to Yehor Yarmoliuk, who pumped a cross high up in the air. It was floating towards the edge of the penalty area and Vicario tried to catch it but misjudged the flight. Vicario flapped at the ball a couple of more times and appeared to touch it with his hand outside the box.

Damsgaard and Lewis-Potter appealed for handball immediately. Brentford’s players were furious as referee John Brooks allowed play to continue before he blew for a Tottenham free kick for a foul in the centre circle. Kristoffer Ajer got a yellow card for protesting and Brooks paused play for around a minute. After the delay, he strode over to the touchline and booked Frank, who could not believe what had happened.

The Athletic has contacted refereeing body PGMOL for comment on the incident.

Brentford score inside 30 seconds for second week running… how?

In last weekend’s 2-1 defeat to Manchester City, Ajer pushed high up the pitch and Lewis-Potter headed the defender’s cross back across the box for Yoane Wissa to score a first-minute goal.

Ajer and Lewis-Potter were involved in the build-up again for Mbeumo’s stylish volleyed opener today.

Straight from the kick-off, the 6ft 6in (198cm) Ajer pushed up high on Udogie, looking to capitalise on his five-inch height advantage. Brentford goalkeeper Mark Flekken received the ball, and pumped a pass towards the Norway international centre-back. It dropped for Tottenham forward Dejan Kulusevski, but he was swarmed by Damsgaard and Yarmoliuk.

The ball was then worked out wide to Lewis-Potter, who dropped his shoulder and burst past Pedro Porro. The 23-year-old whipped a cross into the box and Mbeumo swivelled his hips before firing a shot in off the bar. Vicario had no chance of stopping it but Porro should have done better to stall Lewis-Potter, while centre-back Micky van de Ven needed to be closer to Mbeumo.

It was a nightmare start for Tottenham in a game they needed to win after successive defeats against Newcastle and Arsenal in the Premier League.

The crowd were stunned into silence by the early breakthrough but Spurs’ intense high press quickly suffocated Brentford and within seven minutes Solanke had pulled them level.

What did Ange Postecoglou say?

We will bring you this after he has spoken at the post-match press conference.

What next for Tottenham?

Thursday, September 26: Qarabag (H), Europa League, 8pm BST, 3pm ET

Sunday, September 29: Manchester United (A), Premier League, 4.30pm BST, 11.30am ET

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Could Coventry cup escape be a turning point for Ange Postecoglou’s Tottenham?

‘If Jamie Donley wants to play for Tottenham, this is what he needs to work on…’

The Debate: After Rodri’s comments, should players go on strike over workload?

(Top photo: Glyn Kirk/AFP via Getty Images)

‘If Jamie Donley wants to play for Tottenham, this is what he needs to work on…’

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Anybody who watched Jamie Donley’s performances for Tottenham Hotspur during pre-season would be forgiven for assuming he is a full-back.

With head coach Ange Postecoglou’s options limited due to injuries and players being on holiday following international duty, Donley started at left-back in domestic warm-up friendlies against Hearts and Queens Park Rangers. He then came off the bench in the 3-2 victory over Vissel Kobe on tour in Japan, overlapped Manor Solomon and set up Mikey Moore for the winning goal.

The 19-year-old prefers to play in an attacking central midfield role, and that is where he started for Leyton Orient, where he is now on a season-long loan, in their 3-1 defeat against Premier League side Brentford in the Carabao Cup on Tuesday. Donley was positioned behind a front three of Diallang Jaiyesimi, Zech Obiero and Sonny Perkins for the League One (third-tier) side.

Obiero, also 19, played with Donley in Tottenham’s academy for a few years before he joined Orient permanently in 2022.

Orient’s Spurs connection was rounded off by goalkeeper Josh Keeley, who is also with the east Londoners on loan for the rest of the season. The 21-year-old had only trained with his new team-mates once before starting against Brentford after they signed him on the final day of the transfer window just over two weeks ago.

Donley came up against Yehor Yarmoliuk and Denmark internationals Christian Norgaard and Mikkel Damsgaard. It would have been a valuable experience to face that trio, who have a combined 173 Premier League appearances and 59 senior caps. At one point, he was crunched in a tackle by Norgaard and sent crashing to the floor, but at no point did he look overawed.

He showed flashes of his quality in the game, including a fierce drive Hakon Valdimarsson tipped over the crossbar, and an intelligent reverse pass for substitute Ethan Galbraith which nearly led to a goalscoring opportunity.

The England Under-19 international, who was born in Northern Ireland and has represented that nation at youth-team level too, was often responsible for leading Orient’s press. He kept chasing down Valdimarsson when Brentford would play out from the back and was booked for a lunging challenge on Ryan Trevitt when Orient tried to trap their top-flight hosts high up the pitch.

Richie Wellens, Orient’s head coach, believes Donley’s biggest area for improvement is out of possession.

“On the ball, he has the world at his feet,” Wellens told The Athletic after the game. “He can play at the top level if he wants to.

“But you look at the top teams now, as soon as they lose that ball, they sprint back. That is something Jamie needs in his game — the reaction as soon as the ball turns over, whether it is to go and press or slide back into shape. It is something over the next six to eight months, while he is with us, we will try to develop. If he gets that, he will be a real top player.”

Wellens started his playing career with Manchester United’s academy when Sir Alex Ferguson was the first-team manager but made just one senior appearance for them — off the bench in the League Cup. He did go on to play more than 600 games across the second and third tiers of the English league pyramid for clubs including Blackpool, Leicester City, Ipswich Town and Doncaster Rovers. Now 44, he has an insight into what is required to make it at the top.

“Every time (Donley) doesn’t react (defensively), I am on him, because it’s important,” Wellens said. “I thought he was good tonight but there are still little delays. If you delay, they slide a pass, break a line and the opposition are at you. If he wants to play in Tottenham’s first team, which he has the ability to do, then it is something he needs to develop.”

Donley grew up in the Essex city of Colchester, just over an hour’s drive north east of London, and joined Tottenham’s academy when he was eight. He scored on his debut for the under-18s in November 2020 and signed his first professional contract in January 2022. He broke into the under-21s setup the following season and was rewarded in the March with a new contract running until 2027. Just before his loan to Orient, another new deal tied him to Spurs until the end of the 2028-29 season.

He has not generated the same level of excitement as Moore, 17, and 19-year-old Will Lankshear but he was an integral part of Tottenham Under-21s’ success last season as they won the Premier League 2 title. Moore became the youngest player to represent Spurs in the Premier League when he came off the bench in the 2-0 defeat to Manchester City in May and he then starred for England at the summer’s Under-17 European Championship.

Lankshear got voted Premier League 2 Player of the Season for 2023-24 after scoring 23 goals, including twice in the play-off final against Sunderland, but Donley was that side’s creative spark. He registered 12 assists in 17 league appearances — a lot of them were for Lankshear. It is a partnership everybody would love to see them replicate for Tottenham in the top flight.

Donley made his Premier League debut as a late substitute in the 3-3 draw with Manchester City last December and made two more brief substitute appearances that season, but Lankshear is still waiting for his opportunity.

Lankshear, Moore and Donley did not look out of place with Postecoglou’s first team during pre-season. Donley arguably deserves more praise for performing an unfamiliar role, something he was asked about in a press conference while the club were on tour in Japan.

“I will play wherever the manager wants me to,” Donley said. “I’m still young, so I’m learning different positions. I’m enjoying it and if he wants me to play there, I’ll play. (It is) maybe not as challenging in possession, because the way he plays with the full-backs inverted I think I’m quite comfortable in that position, but defensively it’s something that I’ve got to learn. I might need to play there in my career sometime.

“(Senior assistant coach) Matt Wells, who has been coaching the defence, has helped me. They work on defensive drills about keeping a strong line, being ready to turn and run back to our own goal. Being aggressive, showing the winger outside and making sure they can’t get any crosses in. I’ve just got to keep learning.”

Having this versatility — Donley played up front when he was younger — will be important as there is a lot of competition in Tottenham’s midfield. James Maddison, Dejan Kulusevski, Rodrigo Bentancur, Pape Sarr and Yves Bissouma are the established stars while 18-year-olds Archie Gray and Lucas Bergvall arrived this summer with big reputations.

“That’s just the way football is,” Donley said. “People are going to be buying players and it’s for me to push harder to get ahead of them — then when I get ahead of them, stay there.”

Spending this season with Orient should provide Donley with regular game time and a better challenge than he’d get with more youth-team football.

He started their first three league games this season, all of which they lost, and was an unused substitute for last Saturday’s 1-0 win against Reading. Less than 24 hours later, he was sat in the stands for Tottenham’s 1-0 home Premier League defeat against Arsenal.

Hopefully, next year, he will be on the pitch making an impact in the top flight for the team he grew up supporting.

After all, he wouldn’t be the first Tottenham academy graduate to benefit from a loan stint at Brisbane Road…

(Top photo: Ian MacNicol/Getty Images)

Could this be a turning point for Ange Postecoglou’s Tottenham?

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Imagine a world in which Djed Spence had run onto Dejan Kulusevski’s pass and shot straight at Coventry goalkeeper Ben Wilson.

Tottenham would only have had two minutes of normal time left to find an equaliser. The home crowd would have been ferocious. Spurs would have had to leave even more space for Coventry to counter-attack into. The home team had missed enough chances to kill the game after Brandon Thomas-Asante put them 1-0 up just past the hour. They could easily have made it 2-0 or more.

Imagine the mood in the away end if Spurs had lost this Carabao Cup tie. Those fans had been on edge all evening, booing at half-time, after watching yet another half with plenty of possession but no goal threat. They had booed again when coach Ange Postecoglou took off Lucas Bergvall for James Maddison, just before Coventry’s goal. If Spurs had been knocked out — while playing this poorly — they would have been apoplectic.

That anger would have been about this performance, which up until Spence’s goal was one of the worst of the Postecoglou era.

The first half had been all toothless possession — Spurs passing it about but going nowhere. The players looked awkward in the build-up, unable to move the ball forward, not even getting into the positions to possibly create chances. And then the second half was even worse: the visitors were sloppy in possession, and every turnover looked like it might lead to a Coventry goal.

Postecoglou defended the performance afterwards, saying that it was “a bit harsh” to call it “flat”. Spurs fans — especially if it had stayed 1-0 — would have said the opposite. To many eyes, last night was the worst under Postecoglou in his 14 months, and in fact the worst for years. At times it felt like the bad old days of Antonio Conte, Nuno Espirito Santo or Jose Mourinho, the players looking frozen on the ball, unwilling to take a risk or make a run. Postecoglou was meant to banish those kinds of performances to the past.

The fans’ anger would not just have been about last night then, but about the sense that Spurs have lost momentum.

You may disagree about exactly when that happened: the Chelsea game last November? The 4-0 away win against Aston Villa in March? But at some point, something was lost that has not been re-discovered. The difference in mood between now and this time last year is palpable. The fierce unity of the fanbase behind the manager has eroded. There are believers, there are sceptics, and plenty in between. Had Spurs lost this tie, it would only have got worse.

But above all, had Spurs lost, there would have been fury at Postecoglou’s selections.

Last season, in their first Carabao Cup game under him, he made nine changes for a trip to fellow Premier League side Fulham, and Spurs lost on penalties. Against Coventry of the Championship, Postecoglou made eight changes.

While some of those were necessary — giving first starts to summer signings Bergvall and Archie Gray — some were not. What new information could he hope to learn about Fraser Forster or Timo Werner or even Ben Davies? Spurs’ struggles suggested they had not started with a strong enough team to win the game. It was the big-name substitutes — Kulusevski, Maddison and Brennan Johnson — who turned the tide.

Postecoglou is not the first Tottenham manager to try to rotate his way through the cups, but this approach never ended well for his predecessors either.

Eighteen months ago, Conte picked a weakened team at Sheffield United, also a second-tier side at the time, in the FA Cup’s last 16. Spurs lost 1-0 and Conte’s standing with the fans never recovered. Four games later, he was gone. Another cup exit from a weakened team as the club continues to wait for a first major trophy since 2008 would have damaged Postecoglou’s own standing.

Imagine the scorn he would have faced in light of his comments on Sunday about winning a trophy in his second season with every club he’s managed.

“I’m happy to be judged against that standard because that’s my standard,” Postecoglou said again on Tuesday. “I have no problems with people using that as a yardstick.” But if Spurs had gone out here, people would have said that he was already down to two realistic chances of a trophy this season — the FA Cup and the Europa League. This is not how you want your prospects to be framed in mid-September. The pressure on Tottenham in those two competitions would have been immense.

Now, it does not take much of a leap to imagine any of these complaints or discussions if Spurs had gone out last night. They very nearly lost the game. They arguably deserved to lose it. From the moment Thomas-Asante scored, if not before, all of this was on everyone’s lips.

But of course in the real world, Spurs did not lose. Spence’s shot went in, then so did Johnson’s. Five minutes after being a goal down, they were 2-1 up. And the mood at the end was very different from the above: a mixture of relief, glee and amazement that Tottenham had rescued everything after playing so badly.

They are safely into the last 16 of the Carabao Cup, ties to be played October 29-30, meaning they can focus on the league and Europa League for the next few weeks. The players were warmly received by the away end and Postecoglou walked over to applaud them too. And when he later spoke of the “relentlessness” his team had shown in rescuing the result, something they had lacked so far this season, you could see what he meant.

The next question for Tottenham is which of these narratives will win out.

Is it the struggles of the first 87 minutes, the problems in possession, the obvious lack of confidence through the team? If so, and if visitors Brentford pose Spurs problems on Saturday that they cannot solve, then the grumbles of the fans that were silenced at the end here will come back.

But if they can bottle some of that character shown in the final minutes against Coventry, the magic of Kulusevski, the bravery of Spence, maybe even a reinvigorated Johnson, and take it into all four competitions, then perhaps this could be a turning point after all.

GO DEEPER

A clip from Arsenal's win over Spurs went viral. The only problem? It was faked

(Top photo: David Rogers/Getty Images)

A clip from Arsenal’s win over Tottenham went viral. The only problem? It was faked

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What do a fake goal-animation video and the ancient Greek philosopher Aristotle have in common?

More than you might think.

In the 64th minute of Arsenal’s trip to bitter local rivals Tottenham Hotspur on Sunday, Gabriel sent the pocket of away fans into delirium. His header, from another well-worked Arsenal corner routine, was the decisive moment in an otherwise tense north London derby.

The goal was greeted by mass celebrations on and offline. Amid the delight on social media, one supporter dropped a readily prepared graphic, almost immediately after the ball hit the net, which quickly went viral.

It showed Arsenal’s Premier League ‘goal’ animation, on a broadcasters’ score graphic, shooting Tottenham’s cockerel, as featured on their club badge, with a 19th-century style artillery gun – the Arsenal equivalent, with their crest’s cannon. It left the cockerel burnt, and the word ‘GOAL’ and the phrase ‘NL (North London) is red’ appeared.

It was well-timed. Such goal animations are a new thing this year. The Premier League have introduced them this season for every club.

But unsurprisingly, and sorry to spoil anyone’s fun with some Grinch-like fact-checking, this viral animation was not official.

It did, though, appear to trick many, including Arsenal great Ian Wright, who reposted it on Instagram that evening. As an Arsenal fan and ex-player, it must be hard to resist another pop at Spurs, whether genuine or not.

The animation seemingly first appeared on account @AFC_Ryyy on X and was picked up by several aggregators, chalking up thousands of interactions and views. The original post accrued 1.8 million views within 48 hours.

It made for an interesting case study of what can and can’t go viral.

In this day and age, information and misinformation, be they distorted words or images associated with sportspeople or wider news topics, are becoming more complex and persuasive. Wading through that mud of authenticity is a key part of the sphere of sports engagement online.

This piece of work in particular seemed to have the magic viral touch. So what is behind that? The Athletic sought some expert insight.

“I think about social media in the context of kind of a much larger time scale,” explains Aaron Dinin, PhD, a senior lecturing fellow of the faculty in the entrepreneurship programme at Duke University in the U.S. state of North Carolina.

“Most people think social media is some sort of new, world-changing thing that’s just happened. But the truth is it’s part of a much longer evolution of content, that’s been going on for thousands of years. You can trace a direct line from an ancient Greek epic to Mr Beast and current social media content.

“If you go back to ancient Greek rhetoric, Aristotle taught us these things called Ethos, Pathos and Logos. They are the core elements of persuasiveness. Ethos is credibility, Pathos is emotion and Logos is logic. But there was actually a fourth mode of rhetoric that Aristotle talked about that’s kind of become lost over time because there’s no good direct translation for it. The word is Kairos. Kairos means timing, but not timing in terms of how long something takes — timing in terms of when something happens.

“A huge part of success on social media is timing.”

“What’s happened is you got something that has great timing. If someone put this animation out, honestly, even a few hours later, it wouldn’t have been as effective. One of the most important things that makes something go viral on social media is relevance to the current cultural moment.

“Then it is how the algorithms take over. They judge what to share based on how people are engaging with a piece of content. So if this thing comes out and it’s got good timing, you’re going to get immediate likes, shares, reposts whatever, and that’s just going to feed the beast.”

The quality of the video also gives it an illusion of truth. When it is then picked up by more and more accounts with large followings, the authenticity aspect grows.

Separating truth from fiction on social media in this day and age can be like sifting between sugar and sand — or defending set pieces from a Tottenham perspective. Both information and visual imagery can be manipulated with increasing ease after impressive advances in artificial intelligence.

“To do something like this even five or six years ago would have taken just so much longer and more effort than it does now,” says Dinin. “This is the history of all technology. It’s something we’re really struggling with in the world right now.

“If you just zoom out a little on our historical moment, it’s only been a very short amount of time that we can easily send a moving image from one person to another. It used to be a really expensive thing to do. If you saw a video, a clip or a moving image, you would assume someone put a lot of money into it. So there’s no way that this would be cheap or inexpensive or lying to you.

“Now we’ve got this ability to send videos so easily and so quickly, the cost has gone down significantly, but our brains don’t adjust that fast. We don’t evolve that fast as a species.

“So what happens is we’re still in this kind of weird historical moment where we as humans put a lot of stock, a lot of faith, in video content. And that is very easy to trick us.”

This, of course, is much less harmful than the more serious types of fake news, although there is a copyright infringement aspect.

So what is the actual story of these new animations? Well, they were unveiled ahead of the new season by the Premier League and are tailored to each of the 20 clubs. The aim, for the Premier League, was to come up with a creative approach that fans would find authentic and entertaining.

Each team have an emblem or icon that is associated with them.

Arsenal’s one does include use of their cannon when the ball hits the opposition net, but in the official version it fires out the word ‘goal’, rather than obliterating a Spurs cockerel. Tottenham for their part, see the letter ‘o’ in ‘goal’ replaced by the football that is part of their badge. Other examples include a seagull flying across the animation when Brighton score (they are known as the Seagulls), and a fox tail swishing for a Leicester goal (Leicester are nicknamed the Foxes).

The designs were created by Premier League Productions, with the initial process to introduce them beginning back in the spring. The company worked with a design agency and went through 10 rounds of briefings and revisions before signing off on the designs at the end of July.

They are used on the Premier League’s international broadcast feeds, with the aim of offering partners around the world something innovative. They will be visible throughout the season.

To be clear, though, there are just 20 animations, and no game-tailored editions. Not yet, anyway…

(Top photo: Justin Setterfield/Getty Images)