Cartilage Free Captain

Brighton & Hove Albion vs. Tottenham Hotspur: game time, live blog, and how to watch online

Submitted by daniel on
Picture
Remote Image
Description

It’s time for Tottenham Hotspur’s final fixture before yet another international break, as the Lilywhites head to the south coast of England to take on Brighton & Hove Albion.

Ange Postecoglou’s men will be buoyed by their recent uptick in form, aided by the goalscoring exploits of one Brennan Johnson, while Brighton have slipped slightly after a bright start, where they dispatched both Everton and Manchester United before taking points from Arsenal. The Seagulls are always a tough side to beat at home, and a match against a Spurs side who have seemingly found their groove is an exciting prospect.

Let the games begin.

COYS!

Lineups

Live Blog

How to Watch

Brighton & Hove Albion vs. Tottenham Hotspur

American Express Stadium, Brighton & Hove, UK

Sunday, October 6, 2024

Time: 11:30 a.m. ET, 4:30 p.m. UK

TV: USA Network, Sky Sports Premier League (UK). Check international listings at livesoccertv.com

Streaming: nbcsports.com

Match thread rules

The match thread rules are the same as always. To any visitors coming here for the first time, welcome! We’re glad you’re here! Wipe your feet, mind the gap, and be sure to check out the other pages at this outstanding site. While you’re here, though, we have a few rules and regulations:

Absolutely no links to illegal streams. They’re bad and they get us in trouble. Violators will be warned or banned.

We have rules against “relentless negativity.” Nobody likes a Negative Nancy. Don’t knee-jerk and post outlandish or hurtful things just because you’re frustrated.

Along those lines, outright abuse of players or match officials is also not allowed. It’s fine to say “wow, that was a really bad call,” but it’s NOT okay to direct copious amounts of abuse in the direction of said official over a call you did not like.

Treat other people in the match thread the way you would want someone else to treat your grandmother. Be nice. This is a community of fans, not an un-moderated message board.

NO SPIDERS!

Finally, while we don’t have a rule against profanity, please try and keep the naughty words in check. Also, language that is sexist, racist, transphobic, or homophobic in nature will be swiftly deleted and you will be immediately banned. This is an open, supportive community.

Have fun, and COYS!

Ferencvaros 1-2 Tottenham Hotspur: Three Things We Learned

Submitted by daniel on
Picture
Remote Image
Description

Another glory, glory night in [checks notes] Budapest saw Tottenham Hotspur take a 2-1 away win over Hungarian champions Ferencvaros on Thursday evening. The match was notable in that a) Tottenham didn’t fart the game away, as they historically have done over the nearly 20 years I’ve been a fan, and b) they started the match with four teenagers in the starting XI.

So with that context, this was a solid win against a team that is, if not good, at least cromulent at home and is at least decent at the Europa League level. The win puts Spurs second in the table with two wins in two games and makes them odds-on favorites to finish in the top eight, which is right where you want to be in this new era of Swiss Format Europa League tournaments.

There’s a lot of stuff I just don’t have time to touch on — things like Timo Werner is good, actually and Pape Sarr has quietly been excellent the past few matches, and feel free to discuss those things in the comments. But here are a three things we learned from a rainy, gross match in Budapest.

Hungary for Moore

With credit to The Extra Inch who apparently thought of this pun first, goshdangit

Thursday night was the first senior start for 17-year old academy graduate Mikey Moore, who played on the right side of midfield. Most of the time when you play a teenager in any senior match, much less an away European competition match against an experienced Eastern European side, you expect them to play like... well, teenagers.

Mikey Moore didn’t do that at all. In fact, he played with a composure, almost a swagger, that belies his years. He was confident with the ball at his feet, constantly showed for the ball, and wasn’t afraid to try things, even if they didn’t always come off. His pass to Timo Werner to set up a breakaway chance (that Timo promptly Timo’d wide) showed exceptional vision, and he never stopped running, putting in a 90 minute shift and deserving every single second of that appearance.

It was more than encouraging — it felt like the beginning of something. It reminded me just a little of how I felt when Dele started breaking through into the first team. And Ange Postecoglou agreed, singing Mikey’s praises in the post-match press conference.

“I thought he was outstanding. It’s brilliant for a 17-year-old to play 90 plus minutes in a European away tie. He just handled it superbly, I kind of knew he would and I think it’ll help his growth as a footballer once you get through a sort of experience like that. I think he’ll grow and evolve and I didn’t feel like I needed to take him off. He still looked strong at the end and was still contributing.

“It’s just his ability to deal with pressure and keeping the ball in really tight areas and making really good clean decisions for a young guy. It’s not easy today, out there you can see the conditions, it always suit defenders because they can fly in with tackles and he got one in the first 30 seconds I think it was.

“He kept his feet well and he takes the responsibility of driving inside or taking his man on. He makes good decisions with the ball. He’s got so much growth still, but the good thing is he wants to learn, he wants to develop and I couldn’t be happier for him but also pretty pleased that he’s part of our football club.”

I will repeat my cautions from earlier this season when I suggested that Spurs still need to take great care with Mikey’s development. Yes, there are examples of 17-year olds breaking into Premier League squads and excelling, but they’re rare. Maybe Mikey is one of those generational talents, but it still behooves Spurs to take their time with him and allow him not only time to further develop, but also to make mistakes and learn along the way. But if Thursday night vs. Ferencvaros is any indication, Mikey is going to be a star, and quite possibly even better than that.

The (other) kids are (still) alright

Moore was the standout performer, but that also minimizes the fact that Spurs started this match with three other teens in the starting lineup — Archie Gray, Lucas Bergvall, and Will Lankshear. That’s a bold move from Ange Postecoglou, and it mostly paid off. BIG WILLY LANKS in particular was impressive — though he didn’t score, he came awfully, awfully close on a number of occasions, and did not look at all out of place. Lankshear is a big fella for his age, and he used his physicality to his advantage last season to become the PL2’s leading goal scorer with 23g. It’s a big step up from PL2 to senior football, but you could see his strength helping him against bigger, older men — he was not easily shrugged off the ball and while he had to work harder than maybe he expected, he put together a really impressive shift before being subbed off late. Based on that match, I can see situations where he could be a real asset as a late match sub in the Premier League, at least until Richarlison gets healthy.

Archie Gray also put in a composed, if a little stressful, performance WAY out of position at central defender and left back against Ferencvaros. Particularly impressive was his defensive ability — he had a few blips here and there where he got out of position defensively, but put in some solid blocks and tackles to keep Ferencvaros from capitalizing on their (relatively few) counterattacks behind Spurs’ defensive line. I have my doubts that his future is in defense, but most of the standout things he did in this match played to the skills that he’ll put more fully to use as a defensive midfielder. In the meantime, he’s getting meaningful first team minutes, if out of position, and those will serve him well going forward.

The only member of Spurs’ Teen Boy Squad who performed under expectations was Lucas Bergvall, who didn’t seem to capitalize on the amount of time he had on the ball. He looked a little flustered at times with the ball at his feet and didn’t always look on the same page as his teammates. It’s okay — he’s a young player and young players are expected to have disappointing matches from time to time. It’s not like he was poor, but we’ve seen better and more assertive performances from him in past matches. Notably, it appears he was given a stern talking to by Vicario (again) about SOMETHING in the tunnel before the second half. The dynamic between those two is maybe one we should be watching?

Rotation is key... and king

Tottenham are playing a lot more matches than they were last season, thanks to domestic cups and Europa League, which means they aren’t able to just ride their starters. That means implementing an effective rotation is key, as Ange Postecoglou doesn’t appear to be phoning in any of the above competitions.

Postecoglou also doesn’t appear to be implementing a Team A/Team B system, but is putting together a true rotation that is intended to make sure all of his players stay fresh throughout a congested calendar. Now, Big Ange certainly went bold with this particular lineup — bringing in four teenagers into the starting XI away at a seasoned European club team is a statement — but that inexperienced was bolstered by a solid back line that included Cuti Romero and Pedro Porro, and Yves Bissouma anchoring the midfield. Regular first team starters like James Maddison, Dejan Kulusevski, and Dom Solanke also got sub minutes to make sure the match didn’t get out of hand late — a good thing when Ferencvaros scored a banger of a goal to cut the Spurs lead to 2-1 late.

I like the fact that Ange isn’t setting his teams up to fail with a hierarchical A/B squad, and I also like (terrifyingly) that he’s giving the younger players a chance to get meaningful minutes in impactful matches. Ferencvaros away isn’t a gimme, and it speaks well to Postecoglou that he trusts the youngsters on the fringes of the squad with getting an important European result. It will likely mean, eventually, that some first team players like Romero and Porro are rested for Premier League matches, but if you trust your squad — and why not? — then it’s a net benefit in the long term.

TEAM NEWS: Udogie likely, Son out for Brighton vs. Tottenham

Submitted by daniel on
Picture
Remote Image
Description

Tottenham Hotspur has coped fairly admirably without Son Heung-Min for its past two matches — a 0-3 away win over Manchester United this past weekend, and a 1-2 win at Ferencvaros in the Europa League on Thursday night. They’ll need to hope that streak continues without him this weekend as well.

Ange Postecoglou confirmed via a statement on Tottenham’s website that while Destiny Udogie is likely to feature in some capacity when Spurs travel to the AmEx Stadium to face Brighton away this Sunday, it’s still too soon for Sonny, who is nursing a minor hamstring injury.

“Of the guys who stayed back... Destiny, we think will be okay. We train today and tomorrow, so he has to get through that. Sonny is unlikely, he’s pushing hard, but the turn around might be too quick for him to be available at this stage.”

Spurs have already put a lot of miles on Sonny’s legs already this season, so getting him a couple of weeks rest, heading into an international break, is likely a good thing. It’ll give him some (forced) time to recharge... although the KFA has once again called Sonny up to play for Korea during the break. We’ll have to see whether he reports or not — hopefully either he’s forced into a break or his Korea manager allows him to fully recuperate.

So what does that mean for the lineup? With Wilson Odobert and Richarlison still on the long-term injury list it probably means another start for Timo Werner on the left against Brighton. Again, that’s not a bad thing — while Timo’s getting plenty of stick for missing goal scoring opportunities, he’s #actually playing quite well in Postecoglou’s system and has been a plus-add in ball progression and chance creation. I expect we’ll likely see a lineup similar to what we got against United last weekend, with Destiny Udogie either starting or splitting time with Djed Spence at left back and Rodrigo Bentancur slotting in for Yves Bissouma in central midfield. But we’ll see, I guess.

Brighton and Hove Albion vs. Tottenham Hotspur Preview: Water finds its level

Submitted by daniel on
Picture
Remote Image
Description

The result was two emphatic wins over Brentford and Manchester United — that may be the best performances since Ange Postecoglou took over — with multiple wins in the League Cup and Europa League sprinkled in. There will be every opportunity to continue this run against a stumbling Brighton and Hove Albion on Sunday.

Brighton and Hove Albion (t-9th, 9pts) vs. Tottenham Hotspur (8th, 10pts)

Date: Sunday, October 6

Time: 11:30 am ET, 4:30 pm UK

Location: American Express Stadium, Brighton

TV: USA Network (USA), Sky Sports Main Event (UK)

After back-to-back wins to open the season, the Seagulls are without a victory in their last four league matches with three draws (including one against Arsenal) and last week’s loss to Chelsea thanks to Cole Palmer. Brighton is near the middle of the league in points, goal difference, and xGD, which is what most people expected. This winless streak will not last forever, but this may be a good time for a trip to the South Coast.

Last season was quite eventful between these two teams. The post-Christmas contest at the Amex was ugly, with the home side going up 4-0 before Spurs grabbed a couple late goals that were ultimately meaningless. In the reverse fixture, Pape Sarr equalized at 1-1 before Brennan Johnson scored a 96th-minute winner off a perfect run and cross from Heung-Min Son.

High risk

Brighton sits just behind Tottenham in terms of possession, owning the third-highest mark in the league. Fabian Hurzeler desires to control the ball and play out the back, which sounds familiar. Like Spurs, Hurzeler’s side is not immune from shooting itself in the foot with this approach though, and indeed Chelsea capitalized last weekend from high-risk defensive errors on the Brighton end of the pitch.

With Tottenham’s current form, this feels like a recipe for disaster. Postecoglou’s front line is doing a great job pressing, and I am certainly favoring the visitor’s midfield in this contest. Something has to give when these sides meet; perhaps Spurs will be content to let the home side play around with the ball and then strike quick on the counter off of forced turnovers. Call me optimistic, but with how the past few weeks have gone, I like how this match sets up.

The (not so) weak link?

Assuming the midfield trio of Rodrigo Bentancur, James Maddison, and Dejan Kulusevski is here to stay — and here to thrive — then arguably the weakest spot of Spurs’ best XI is the front three. Heung-Min Son is world-class but aging (and likely out again Sunday), and the other two positions have been a bit of a revolving door...until recently, that is. Dominic Solanke and Brennan Johnson both raised some eyebrows in regards to their transfer fees, but suddenly the plan is all coming together.

Solanke was frustratingly injured soon after signing, but he has made six starts across all competitions and scored in each of the last three of them. Johnson had five goals last season, including that Brighton winner, but already has matched that in his past five appearances. Getting contributions from these two is huge for a club without a Harry Kane-like figure. Given that the Seagulls have conceded eight goals in their past three outings, expect at least one of these two attackers to find the back of the net again on Sunday.

The Hoddle of Coffee: Tottenham Hotspur news and links for Friday, October 4

Submitted by daniel on
Picture
Remote Image
Description

good morning! And welcome to the tenth installment of a beloved hoddle series, The Orchid Tales.

For those unaware, The Orchid Tales follows your hoddler-in-chief’s journey as he cares for his orchid of almost three years now, affectionately named Planty.

I cannot seem to find the first two installments. They have been lost to eternity (Bonus points if you find them). You can read the rest here:

Part III / Part IV / Part V / Part VI / Part VII / Part VIII / Part IX

Has there really not been an update since April? That’s crazy. But what’s even crazier is that this is the 10th installment of The Orchid Tales.

It’s been an exciting few months for my orchid, which has grown a whole new leaf. This week it began growing a brand new stem, too, after its previous two fell off. I was informed by my orchid expert to not attach the newest stem to a piece of bamboo and to let the stem grow how it wants to grow.

But it’s all looking pretty good. The leaves are green, except for one which has some yellow and a slight concern. But I’m monitoring it.

Four new houseplants have entered my home since the latest installment. All small, potted plants to fit on my shelves. Two from Trader Joes and two from a specialty plant store. I cannot wait for the Trader Joes plants to outlive the more expensive ones.

Anyways, here are the newest additions:

Crown of thorns: An ominous name for a plant, although appropriate as it is pretty thorny. Apparently it’s easy to grow indoors because of its preferred temperatures and it doesn’t like to get too wet.

Ponytail palm: Probably my favourite one of the four. It looks pretty fun and wild. Since I can’t have an actual palm tree (can I?), this will do for now.

Calathea rosy: An addition from Trader Joes. It’s off to a good start with a new leaf unfolding in recent days.

Unknown: I can’t lift the plant out of the fancy pot without creating a mess right now, so I’ll leave it. But it also doesn’t need a whole lot of watering. A little uglier than the other three, but it’s got some yellow flowers.

Fitzie’s track of the day: Rock Steady, by Aretha Franklin

And now for your links:

Dan KP interviews Johan Lange

Dominic Solanke’s England call-up rewards player’s persistance

Jack P-B ($$): Future of Spurs’ attack looking bright

Ferencváros 1-2 Tottenham: Spurs prevail in rainy conditions for Europa League win

Submitted by daniel on
Picture
Remote Image
Description

Tottenham Hotspur continued its quest of being perfect in the newly formatted Europa League, grabbing a 2-1 victory over Ferencváros in Budapest on Thursday.

Wet rainy nights in Europe are in some ways endearing. It’s fun to think of how teams tactically have to navigate poor passing and sliding challenges that bring up chunks of grass to their boots.

That’s all fun when the team you support isn’t playing. For Tottenham Hotspur, the side traveled to Budapest for the first time in conditions that forced the side to take more time than usual to dominate the flow of the contest.

Four teenagers in the starting XI — Mikey Moore, Will Lankshear, Lucas Bergvall, and Archie Gray — all had moments in the game with Moore and Gray seeing out all 90 minutes for Spurs.

Enduring a rough 20 minutes of the contest with Ferencváros trying to get things rolling in front of its home supporters — with a goal by way of a cross and to the back post called offside thanks to VAR — Spurs finally found its groove.

Waking up and realizing the moment they had to strike while the home side was upset at the chances they were squandering on the other half of the pitch, Spurs delivered.

Moore rifled a pass into the box for Lankshear who couldn’t control the pass all the way through. With a defender on his back and a slight nick off the ball, Bergvall got a slight touch to the path of Pape Sarr. Seeing the defender in front of him turning his back away from the ball — seemingly losing it in the jumble in the area — Sarr took a first-time strike to the far post to put the team up 1-0 in the 23rd minute.

Despite dealing with Ferencváros moments where the Hungarian side should have put the ball into the back of the net, Spurs sealed the deal thanks to the red-hot form of Brennan Johnson.

Coming on in the 65th minute and already making himself known with a shot hitting the crossbar, Johnson capitalized on his second strike.

Moore led the movement again as he found James Maddison who turned and fed Johnson a strong ball. Taking a touch with his right foot and controlling things, Johnson fired a shot around two Ferencváros to the far post and into the net.

Ferencváros got one back on the brink of extra time on a cross and first-time strike. It was bound to happen for the Hungarian side as they had one ruled out and a few other chances.

Spurs sought out the game in the final five minutes to stay perfect in the Europa League with the 2-1 win.

Notes:

Dominic Solanke named to England squad for first time in seven years

Submitted by daniel on
Picture
Remote Image
Description

It’s taken a while, but there’s finally a Tottenham Hotspur player in the England national team squad. The Three Lions interim manager Lee Carsley named his squad for upcoming Nations League matches against Greece and Finland, and Dominic Solanke makes his return to the roster for the first time in seven years!

He deserves it too, as after a bedding in period resulting from an early season injury, Dom has been, well, big — scoring three goals in as many Tottenham matches and impressing with his work rate and pressing. A big deal for Big Dom.

Unfortunately, that’s all for current Tottenham players — still no call-up for James Maddison, unfortunately. There are a couple of former Spurs in the roster though: England captain Harry Kane, Manchester City’s Kyle Walker, and former Spurs academy graduate Noni Madueke.

Of course, this means that we have another international break coming up after this weekend’s Premier League fixture at Brighton, which sucks, but if you care about Nations League England will host Greece on October 10 and play at Finland on October 13.

Ferencvaros vs. Tottenham Hotspur: Europa League game time, live blog, and how to watch online

Submitted by daniel on
Picture
Remote Image
Description

Time for Tottenham Hotspur’s second Europa League fixture, and we go from playing a side from Azerbaijan to heading to Hungary to face Ferencvaros, who... well, they’re Hungarian. That’s about all I know. How much research do you think I put into these?

It’ll be a rotated Spurs side, with Son Heung-min and Destiny Udogie not making the trip - but only the most doomer Spurs fan would have any doubt as to the Lilywhites’ ability to coast through this fixture. Right? RIGHT?

COYS!

Lineups

Live Blog

How to Watch

Ferencvaros vs. Tottenham Hotspur

Groupama Arena, Budapest, Hungary

Thursday, October 3, 2024

Time: 12:45 p.m. ET, 5:45 p.m. UK

TV: Not televised in USA; TNT Sports 1 (UK). Check international listings at livesoccertv.com

Streaming: Paramount+

Match thread rules

The match thread rules are the same as always. To any visitors coming here for the first time, welcome! We’re glad you’re here! Wipe your feet, mind the gap, and be sure to check out the other pages at this outstanding site. While you’re here, though, we have a few rules and regulations:

Absolutely no links to illegal streams. They’re bad and they get us in trouble. Violators will be warned or banned.

We have rules against “relentless negativity.” Nobody likes a Negative Nancy. Don’t knee-jerk and post outlandish or hurtful things just because you’re frustrated.

Along those lines, outright abuse of players or match officials is also not allowed. It’s fine to say “wow, that was a really bad call,” but it’s NOT okay to direct copious amounts of abuse in the direction of said official over a call you did not like.

Treat other people in the match thread the way you would want someone else to treat your grandmother. Be nice. This is a community of fans, not an un-moderated message board.

NO SPIDERS!

Finally, while we don’t have a rule against profanity, please try and keep the naughty words in check. Also, language that is sexist, racist, transphobic, or homophobic in nature will be swiftly deleted and you will be immediately banned. This is an open, supportive community.

Have fun, and COYS!

Ferencvarosi vs. Tottenham Hotspur Preview: All gas

Submitted by daniel on
Picture
Remote Image
Description

For the first time in almost 365 days exactly, Tottenham Hotspur has won four straight matches across all competitions. Not only have back-to-back excellent performances against Brentford and Manchester United rekindled some hope domestically, but a masterful 10-man victory over Qarabag last week solidified European intrigue as well.

Spurs are betting favorites to win the Europa League, with only United within shouting range odds-wise (which says a lot). There is still a long way to go, but Ange Postecoglou must recognize his squad has a prime opportunity here. Matchweek 2 takes Tottenham to face Hungarian side Ferencvarosi for a good shot at two in two to open up the League Phase.

Ferencvarosi (t-24th, 0pts) vs. Tottenham Hotspur (t-1st, 3pts)

Date: Thursday, October 3

Time: 12:45 pm ET, 5:45 pm UK

Location: Groupama Arena, Budapest, Hungary

TV: Paramount+ (USA), TNT Sports 1 (UK)

Ferencvarosi represents one of Spurs’ Pot 2 opponents and one of two longer road trips, a fortunate draw in both regards — Opta rates this team’s quality similar to that of Qarabag, so relatively favorable. The past decade has seen Ferencvarosi participate in Europe in one way or another, with the last two seasons featuring both a Europa League Round of 16 and Conference League Round of 32 appearance.

Tottenham has not faced Ferencvarosi — or any Hungarian opponent — in continental competition. This is a chance to get back on track away from home in Europe; Spurs went 0-1-2 on the road in their 2021/22 Conference League group and 1-1-1 in the 2020/21 Europa League. To advance in the knockout round, there needs to be some road wins, especially against lower-tier competition.

Sprinkled in

Conceptually, these sort of fixtures provide a great avenue for getting some younger players significant minutes, and bank on Postecoglou going that route again. Last week saw both Archie Gray and Lucas Bergvall get the start, but while the former held his own on the (somewhat) big stage, Bergvall barely broke a sweat before being sacrificed following the Radu Dragusin red card.

These two represent the future of Tottenham Hotspur. The burden does not fall on them alone, but the club spent non-insignificant funds to bring them to London, and the Europa League is where they can paint a vision of what is to come. There will be plenty of veteran regulars in the side as well, but all eyes will be on the youngsters on Thursday.

Winning championships

Much of the focus was on Spurs’ lack of finishing during the frustrating start to the season, so naturally the gripes have turned to praise for the offense in this four-match winning streak. However, accolades must be shared with the defense as well; Tottenham has conceded just twice during this stretch and even kept a clean sheet against Qarabag despite losing a starting centerback so early.

Ferencvarosi lost its first League Phase match 1-2 at Anderlecht last week, generating just 0.8 xG off three shots. The lone score kind of seemed like an own goal to me, but regardless, only came after the home side went down to 10 men. Point being, this is not exactly an electric attacking side — the visitors could very well log another shutout, even with some rotation across the back four.

The Hoddle of Coffee: Tottenham Hotspur news and links for Thursday, October 3

Submitted by daniel on
Picture
Remote Image
Description

Now that our two-day celebration of Tom Petty has come and gone, it’s finally time to take a look at the month ahead. And, wow, it actually looks like there’s lots of football in store.

——

Tottenham Hotspur men’s squad:

I guess this is a timely Look at the Month Ahead too, considering Tottenham are back in action today against Ferencvaros. Do we love the Europa League or what? I’m still bummed we’re not going to Elfsborg.

Besides that trip, it looks like a pretty easy time travel-wise. Three matches in London, a short trip down to Brighton and a less-short trip up to Manchester for the City game.

I’m pretty excited. It’s been a good year despite a few results going by the wayside. A packed schedule can be a great way to get the momentum going for a typical Ange Postecoglou trophy season.

Tottenham Hotspur men’s schedule: at Ferencvaros (7 Oct, Europa League), at Brighton (6 Oct), West Ham (19 Oct), AZ (24 Oct, Europa League), at Palace (27 Oct), Manchester City (30 Oct)

Tottenham Hotspur women’s squad:

It’s been a good start to the season for the women’s team, with a 4-0 win against Palace and a draw against Villa. But this looks like a tough month, particularly against Chelsea. I’m very interested to see how Tottenham progress after last season, and I think this month will be a good barometer of that progress.

Tottenham Hotspur women’s schedule: at Charlton (2 Oct, WSL Cup), Liverpool (6 Oct), at Man United (13 Oct), at Chelsea (20 Oct)

Fitzie’s track of the day: Beethoven’s 5th Symphony in C Minor Op 67 - Mvmt 1 (conducted by Paavo Järvi and performed by the Deutsche Kammerphilharmonie Bremen)

And now for your links:

Dan KP: James Maddison excited by Mikey Moore

Alasdair Gold on what he noticed from Tottenham’s recent training session

Biggest takeaways from Mauricio Pochettino’s first USMNT presser