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Southampton vs. Tottenham Hotspur: game time, live blog, and how to watch online

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SO MUCH FOOTBALL! WATCH THE FOOTBALL! IT’S GONNA MOVE!!!

Another week, and it’s yet another multi-match one, as the fixtures keep on coming for Tottenham Hotspur. Southampton are this weekend’s opponents, as Spurs head south to take on the embattled Saints.

Southampton are firmly bottom of the Premier League table with only one win this season; but matches against these kinds of sides have not gone well for the Lilywhites thus far in the 24/25 campaign. Losing to the likes of Crystal Palace and Ipswich Town and with a squad running on fumes, this match could be a sucker punch for Spurs with only one fit center back and injuries plaguing the side.

With that said, we know Tottenham Hotspur has the ability to put any team to the sword, and Ange Postecoglou will be setting expectations high for this match. It’s possible we could see some new faces in new roles as well, with this fixture a potential option for rotation. As we all know, though, no match is easy in this league.

COYS!

Lineups

Live Blog

How to Watch

Southampton vs. Tottenham Hotspur

St Mary’s Stadium, Southampton, UK

Sunday, December 15, 2024

Time: 2:00 p.m. ET, 7:00 p.m. UK

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

Streaming: Peacock

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!

Southampton vs. Tottenham Hotspur Preview: Rock bottom approaches

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With one win (which now clearly seems due to City’s ineptitude more than Spurs’ success) in eight fixtures, Tottenham is in a dark place. Normally, a trip to the league’s worst side would offer a chance to get back on track, but instead this sets up to be the latest catastrophe in a season full of woes. Prove us wrong, Spurs; there is no benefit of the doubt until the results actually improve.

Southampton (20th, 5pts) vs. Tottenham Hotspur (11th, 20pts)

Date: Sunday, December 15

Time: 2:00 pm ET, 7:00 pm UK

Location: St. Mary’s Stadium, Southampton

TV: Peacock (US), TNT Sports 1 (UK)

Saints are all alone at the bottom of the table, having a lone win and two draws to their name. Last in goals scored, second-worst in goals allowed, and last in xGD, this side looks doomed for relegation. Paul Onuachu is due back after being injured the past few weeks, looking for his first goal of the campaign. 36-year-old Adam Lallana is also in contention to be back in the lineup; Lallana signed a one-year deal this summer. Either way, this is an unimpressive XI.

Spurs won the home fixture against Southampton to begin the 2022/23 season with goals by Ryan Sessegnon, Eric Dier, and Dejan Kulusevski in a 4-1 victory. The sides would not meet again until March, when the visitors went ahead 1-3 on the South Coast. However, a stoppage-time penalty by James Ward-Prowse led to a frustrating draw — and an infamous press conference rant that soon ended in Conte’s departure.

Was Conte correct?

This is not really a rhetorical question I want to dwell on, but the similarities are striking between Tottenham’s last trip to St. Mary’s and this one. Against the 20th-place side there is zero margin for error, especially when the team is in desperate need of points, as both Conte’s side was on Postecoglou’s group currently is. Anything other than a win is going to cause even more unrest from the supporters — and more banter from the rest of the football world.

Following that draw two years ago, Conte threw his own players under the bus and criticized the chairman and the club as a whole. While Postecoglou’s assessment of Timo Werner is a one-off and Cristian Romero walked back some of his remarks...yea, this story feels familiar. To avoid going through yet another reboot, Spurs need to quickly reverse course, and this Sunday has to be where it begins.

Step forward

Shocking, the squad’s struggles are not due to Fraser Forster, Ben Davies, Radu Dragusin, and Archie Gray right now. No, there is a huge problem with the attack that simply is not scoring nearly enough to keep this team afloat. Four of the past seven league fixtures have featured zero or one goals, and that includes contests against sides like Palace and Ipswich. Southampton seems to be an inferior team, but all that means is Tottenham must once again face a low block.

Spurs have the names in attack, but they are not producing right now. Dominic Solanke is not going to be a prolific goal scorer, Heung-Min Son is on a steady decline, James Maddison is inconsistent, and Brennan Johnson is cooling off; as good as Dejan Kulusevski, he only has four total goals this year. For this club to work at all, these players absolutely must get back into form. Maybe expecting all five to get hot is unrealistic, but there is enough talent here to avoid these frequent low-output contests. If not, then there is no chance this season amounts to anything.

REPORT: Tottenham considering Ashley Phillips recall

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Tottenham Hotspur’s defensive stocks are in shambles. Thanks to poor squad construction, a multitude of injuries, and exhaustion due to fixture congestion, the Spurs backline is held together by a combination of toothpicks, duct tape, and prayers in its current state.

This is why a recall of young defender Ashley Phillips from his loan at Stoke City may be on the cards:

Dan Kilpatrick at the London Evening Standard published this report yesterday, confirming the presence of a recall clause in January (which I imagine is pretty boilerplate for loan deals) and indicating that Spurs are “considering” recalling the teenage center back.

“Considering” isn’t exactly strong language from DankP, and is definitely not confirmation this is going to happen - but you can understand why the Tottenham brass may be thinking about this as an option. Spurs currently have one fit center back in Radu Dragusin, with Ben Davies, Cristian Romero, and Micky van de Ven all out with varying recovery timelines. Archie Gray, the young fullback/midfielder/wherever the hell Ange wants to play him is also an option at CB, filling in at the back in Spurs’ midweek European match at Rangers, but is arguably required to cover fullback and midfield as well with Pedro Porro and Destiny Udogie running out of steam and Rodrigo Bentancur suspended.

A young center back (who by all accounts has comported himself well across his loans with Plymouth Argyle and Stoke) with over a season of senior minutes under his belt therefore could be just the ticket to aid Spurs in this time of crisis.

But is it the right move?

Phillips wouldn’t be able to return to the club until January. That is arguably too late to make an impact: by that time, Rodrigo Bentancur will have completed his suspension, and Ben Davies and Micky van de Ven will be nearing their returns from injury with 3-week layoffs expected. Cristian Romero is predicted to be out longer, with a 6-week window mooted, but even taking a conservative view of that timeline only takes us to around the end of January, and in the (unlikely) case that all four CBs end up fit for the rest of the season Phillips will find minutes extremely hard to come by - minutes that are key at this stage of his development.

Additionally, if Phillips was recalled, he wouldn’t be able to then go back out on loan again with FIFA regulations stipulating you can only play official matches for two clubs in a single season. He actually couldn’t even be registered in Spurs’ European squad, unless there is a significant squad reshuffle - the timing of his signing from Blackburn means he does not yet qualify for List B and has to be included on List A.

For these reasons, I’d say it’s unlikely Phillips is recalled; but I don’t envy Johan Lange in making this decision. The implications could be huge, both for Tottenham Hotspur’s season and Ashley Phillip’s career.

Postecoglou clarifies Werner comments: “assessment, not criticism”

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The biggest news to come out of Scotland after Tottenham Hotspur’s 1-1 draw against Rangers in the Europa League wasn’t the point earned for both teams, or even the excitement of a big European match under the lights. It was Ange Postecoglou hooking on-loan winger Timo Werner at halftime for Dejan Kulusevski, and his subsequent comments to the press about Timo’s poor performance.

Postecoglou publicly expressed disappointment about Timo’s performance against Rangers, challenging his perceived effort in a match where he without a doubt performed poorly. The statistics showed that Werner lost possession 16 times, didn’t successfully dribble anyone in five attempts, and had a passing completion percentage of just 63% in 45 minutes. It was, by most metrics, a pretty dreadful performance and Ange let him have it, calling it “unacceptable.”

Twelve hours later, Ange was back in front of the microphone for the press conference ahead of Sunday’s trip to St. Mary’s to face bottom-of-the-table Southampton, and as expected, he was given plenty of opportunities to clarify his comments on Timo. Postecoglou did not back down from yesterday’s comments, but did clarify, calling his comments about Werner “assessment” and stating numerous times that due to Tottenham’s injury crisis he needs every one of his senior players to give 110%, and no longer has the luxury to bench players who perform poorly.

“It wasn’t criticism. It was assessment. If we played poorly, we played poorly. With Timo it wasn’t about whether he played well or not. It was a difficult game last night. I’m asking 18-year-olds to do some massive jobs and you want senior players, and he’s a senior player, he’s an international and he’s won the Champions League, there’s a level of application and performance you need to rise to, to help the team.

He didn’t reach that. I think me taking him off at half-time was a statement enough. The same way I won’t be hiding behind poor team performances, the same with and no different for the players or anyone else. It wasn’t criticism, it was just an assessment of his performance and on a really challenging night for us, which we knew going into it, it needs to be better.

“[Timo’s issue] can’t be ability. Like I said, you don’t play for Germany and big clubs [and not be good enough]. Whether it is a combination of confidence and mentality – at this moment – we don’t have the luxury of that. You are out there, playing, fit and we don’t have the luxury of not just him, but any player at this moment, because he has an opportunity to play.

“It is not like if he has a bad performance that I can just put somebody else in – I’ve got nobody else to put in. We need all that stuff to be put to the side, whether it is a lack of confidence or believe, to say [to ourselves] are you in this fight? Because we are in a fight, we’ve got a limited number of players to call upon.

“We’ve got some big games that can set up our season and we just need people to have that level of commitment and application to find our way through. As much as I am talking about Timo, I am talking about the whole group and all of us right now. The norms of football where you have a poor performance and you’re out don’t exist in our environment right now so I need players going out there and putting that to one side and fight, put in a shift, because what ever issues we have it is about putting that to one side, whatever it may be and discuss that further down the line.”

In this context, Postecoglou’s comments about Werner appear to be more than just singling out a player — he’s intending it to be a message to the entire team, and Timo is just the vessel through which Ange is making his point.

Spurs are in crisis. They haven’t won a match since the trip to the Etihad several weeks ago, Postecoglou is without three of his four senior central defenders, both of his starting CMs for this weekend (Rodrigo Bentancur and Yves Bissouma are both suspended), one senior striker, and two wide midfielders. They are playing two matches a week until the new year, and do not have the players available to adequately rotate and rest.

So you can understand why Ange would be peeved when one of his players, who hasn’t played a bunch lately, gets an opportunity and doesn’t put in the effort required for a good performance. Postecoglou went through great pains to say that this isn’t really about Timo — it’s about a crisis situation at the club, and his comments could be directed at any one of his players that don’t put in the required effort to succeed.

“[Timo has been on the bench more] but at the same time he still had the ability to come on and affect that from the bench, which he has, he did that against City and in other games this year. In Europe, a midweek game, he is there to start and make an impact. Like I said, I get there’s a lot of discussion around him but, for me, last night was not about Timo Werner – it is about the situation we are in and what is required in this time.

“Last night, it didn’t have to be Timo, it could have been someone else and there are other players who I think could have also given more to what we were trying to do last night. I just felt from him, particularly because he hasn’t played a lot, there should have been some freshness around him to make a real impact because I know he is a top player. I suspect he looks around and sees an 18 year old and other players who have played a lot and say; ‘I am going to make an impact myself’ because he is a top player and that’s what I expect.

“It’s not about bringing somebody down and blaming someone. This is not about one person, it’s what we’re in and the situation we’re in right now. We’ve got a limited amount of players, we’re really stretched but we’ve got big games that can set up our season. It’s a great challenge. I want people who are up for that challenge and when they go out there, irrespective if things go well or not, I want them relishing the opportunity to be out there. This is not a time for us to be kind of worried about people’s mindset. If you don’t understand or feel what we’re in at the moment, I’m not sure what it’s going to take.”

All that said, Timo Werner’s status as a loan player at the club is very much in the background of Ange’s comments and the issue at hand, and even though Ange is trying to make this about collective effort and not one person, there sure does seem to be an implication that Werner might not possess the mindset that Ange wants from a player in his system at this time. That could be a factor as to why he has not played as much football this season as we expected, and it raises the possibility that the club could opt to make a change when the January transfer window opens.

Could it mean that Timo’s loan might be terminated next month? We don’t know. Wilson Odobert won’t be returning for a good while yet and Mikey Moore is still recovering from a pernicious virus that has sapped his energy. It feels unlikely that Timo would go without someone else coming in, but regardless that’s not going to help Spurs at all until the window opens.

Ange also took some time to thoroughly dismiss any notion that there is something inherent in the club’s history that is preventing it from sustained success — while the word “Spursy” was not mentioned, it was definitely implied in the question, and Ange’s answer.

“I’m sick of that. That’s an excuse for me and that’s why even with Cristian Romero’s comments, I just think that’s an excuse. At the moment I’m here, I take responsibility. These players, we’re here. If we think something mythical exists in this club that prevents success then change it. What’s the point otherwise? Don’t come here. I just don’t buy into that.

“At the moment we’re in a difficult situation because of kind of where we are squad-wise and team-wise. You either embrace this challenge. If you want excuses there are a million of them. There are a millions excuses of why we cannot be successful but if that’s what your clutch is, particularly in tough moments, then what’s the point? Move on then and go somewhere else.”

Postecoglou singles out Werner for criticism in post-Rangers presser

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Ange Postecoglou is a man who isn’t shy about speaking his opinion about his football club and his players, but in the 18 months in charge of Tottenham Hotspur, he has rarely singled out one of his players for negative criticism for their performance on the pitch. He broke new ground in that respect on Thursday night in the press conference following Spurs’ 1-1 Europa League draw against Rangers in Glasgow.

Speaking to the assembled media, Big Ange did not hold back, directing pointed comments directly at German international and on-loan winger Timo Werner for a perceived lack of effort. Werner had a pretty awful match against Rangers, misplacing several passes and demonstrating poor decisionmaking; he was hooked at halftime, a rarity for Postecoglou, and replaced with Dejan Kulusevski.

“Yeah, yeah, [Timo] wasn’t playing anywhere near the level he should.

“When you’ve got 18-year-olds it’s not acceptable to me. I said that to Timo. He’s a senior international, he’s a German international. In the moment we’re in right now, it’s not like we’ve got many options. I need everyone to at least be going out there trying to give the best of themselves. His performance in the first half wasn’t acceptable.

“I don’t really know [how he took it]. It’s not really of great concern. We need everybody including him to be contributing, because we don’t have the depth to leave people out if they’re performing poorly. We need them to play their part. Especially the senior guys. When I’m asking younger guys to do massive jobs, I expect a level of performance from some of the senior guys and today wasn’t that.”

Whoof. I’m not sure I’d qualify this as throwing a player under the bus — Ange admitted he’d already spoken to Timo about it and this didn’t feel to me like some of the stuff we used to hear from Jose Mourinho or (to a lesser degree) Antonio Conte. And in truth, Timo played a very poor match in Glasgow.

But I have to say I’m not thrilled with Ange airing this in public rather than keeping it between himself and the player. Ange has had harsh words for Yves Bissouma for his off-pitch behavior, but he is generally very disciplined with his messaging and protects his players when speaking in public. Timo’s performance must have really cheesed him off, and part of me wonders whether Ange will come to regret these comments and try to walk them back a bit in the future.

But the thing is, he’s not wrong. With Spurs as wafer thin as they are right now, they absolutely cannot afford a senior member of the squad to be a passenger, and Timo was very much that on Thursday night. His comments give the impression that, if Wilson Odobert or Mikey Moore or even Richarlison were healthy, they’d be getting opportunities to play ahead of Werner right now. And it also makes me wonder whether the club, if given the opportunity to strengthen in the January transfer window, might consider terminating Werner’s loan.

In contrast, Ange spoke warmly about Archie Gray, who started at central defender alongside Radu Dragusin in a very intense European atmosphere and held his own. Lucas Bergvall also put in a bright shift, with Ange stating that the plan was to start him but he was feeling sick before kick-off.

“[Archie] is 18, it’s a big experience for him. I thought he handled himself really well. We’re asking him to do something that as an 18-year-old in his first year at this level, to play in an unfamiliar position in such big games, I thought it’s outstanding what he’s doing.

“I thought Lucas was excellent when he came on as well. He was due to start tonight but wasn’t feeling well today. He was a bit under the weather today. We had to keep him on the bench, but that’s a massive positive for us. Those two as 18-year-olds to be already contributing and experiencing these things will be of enormous benefit to us.”

A point against the team third in the table in Scotland might feel a little disappointing for a club like Spurs, but the point is an important one — it puts Spurs right at the break between a bye to the Round of 16 and the Round of 32 with arguably their two easiest matches to come — at Hoffenheim and home to Elfsborg. Spurs’ European qualification hopes are still very much in their own hands.

Rangers 1-1 Tottenham Hotspur: honors even at Ibrox in the Europa League

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It wasn’t exactly a “glory, glory” European night and it definitely wasn’t always pretty, but Tottenham Hotspur went into one of the great atmospheric cauldrons of European football and came from behind to earn a tough 1-1 draw against Rangers at Ibrox. After a scoreless first half, Hamza Igamane opened the scoring for the hosts just after the break, but Dejan Kulusevski leveled the score for Spurs late in the half and Tottenham held on for a critical point in the Europa League group stage.

Ibrox was rocking from start to finish in this match, but he first half was something of a snooze-fest if you’re a Spurs fan. In the first two minutes, Tottenham started off brightly with some nifty passing to get the ball forward quickly that ended with a miscued shot by Timo Werner. Timo had another look in the opening ten minutes, blazing another attempt narrowly over the bar.

But Spurs let Rangers establish themselves in the match fairly easily. Contrary to what we often see from them, Tottenham hardly pressed Rangers at all in the first half, and what chances they did have mostly came from at least attempting to be creative with the ball. That said, they did frequently try and use the pace of Son Heung-Min, Werner, and Brennan Johnson to get the ball forward quickly, but Spurs rarely troubled Rangers keeper Jack Butland as the wingers had difficulty beating their defenders.

Rangers, meanwhile, regularly disrupted Spurs’ defensive lines in transition, getting past Pedro Porro and Destiny Udogie into space and attempting to force Radu Dragusin and inexperienced Archie Gray into making mistakes. Rangers had nine shots in the opening 45 minutes to Spurs’ six and forcing Fraser Forster into two decent saves, including one with his foot on Vaclav Cerny. That said, the halftime xG was a paltry 0.30 — 0.34. The first half ended scoreless.

Ange Postecoglou opted to make one halftime adjustment, bringing in Dejan Kulusevski for Werner. Spurs also came out pressing a lot harder than in the first half. But it was Rangers who struck first after Rangers captain James Tavernier picked up a loose pass and lofted a lovely cross over the head of Archie Gray and to the feet of Hamza Igamane, who slotted past Forster to put the home side up 1-0.

Rangers continued to make Spurs feel uncomfortable in possession, but Spurs did most of the damage to themselves, with some absolutely woeful passing in midfield that led to a number of Rangers shot attempts and set pieces.

Postecoglou made a triple sub at 60 minutes, bringing on Lucas Bergvall, Pape Sarr, and Dominic Solanke for Johnson, Yves Bissouma, and Rodrigo Bentancur, hoping a complete midfield shift would also change Spurs’ fortunes in this match. Spurs did have more of a spark after the subs, with Maddison earning a couple of free kicks in dangerous areas and Solanke forcing a save by Butland midway through the half.

It was Kulusevski who was the real difference-maker, who put Spurs level midway through the second half. Spurs’ defense lured Rangers forward to press, which left space in behind the lines;Tottenham got the ball forward into Rangers’ half, Deki played some nice combination passing with Solanke, took a dribble, and fired low past Butland to make the score 1-1.

Rangers kept pushing for the winner. Forster made a massive reaction save on Rangers’ Cyriel Dessers, and Rangers had a ball in the net called back for offside. Solanke also had a couple of shots saved by Butland in what was a frantic end of the match. Both sides had opportunities to win, but in the end a draw felt like the fair result. The match ended 1-1, with Spurs perhaps feeling fortunate to escape Scotland with a point.

Match Reactions:

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

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The matches keep coming, the points and the footballers keep dropping.

Here’s hoping that’s not the case as Tottenham Hotspur visit Rangers in their next Europa League fixture. It’s a return to familiar pastures for Ange Postecoglou, having coached Rangers’ bitter rivals Celtic before making his move to the Premier League.

That means Ange won’t exactly receive the warmest welcome on his return to the Ibrox; but that’ll be the least of his worries as he tries to juggle an exhausted squad and create something resembling a cohesive defense consisting of a teenager, the kit man, and a guy from the pub down the road (probably).

My hopes for this match?

No more injuries. Please.

COYS!

Lineups

Live Blog

How to Watch

Rangers vs. Tottenham Hotspur

Ibrox Stadium, Glasgow, UK

Thursday, December 12, 2024

Time: 3:00 p.m. ET, 8:00 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!

Tottenham reviewing their medical department after injury crisis... again

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For the second time in less than 12 months, Tottenham Hotspur are undergoing a review of their medical staff in the wake of the club’s ongoing injury crisis. This news comes courtesy of Dan Kilpatrick writing in the Standard, and on the heels of Ange Postecoglou calling the spate of injuries the “worst ever, by a fair margin” in his career.

Spurs have already overhauled their medical department this year, with their former head of the medical department leaving and three new medical professionals and physios joining from other clubs. However, Tottenham have had numerous players break down over the course of the season already, which has led Postecoglou to call for a review of medical systems and procedures.

Tottenham’s medical department had been criticized, frequently in an uninformed way, by fans numerous times over the past several years, especially when player injuries piled up. By the same token, it’s virtually impossible to unpick what this actually means — does reviewing the medical department mean that there’s something on that end that is directly or indirectly contributing to the current injury crisis at the club? Is it the fact that Tottenham has by all accounts a wafer-thin squad that’s playing far, far too much football, leading to a vicious cycle where the remaining players are forced to play even more minutes, thus contributing to further injuries and re-injuries? Is it Postecoglou’s tactics that put strain on bodies? Is it just rotten luck? Is it something else?

I think a review of the medical staff and procedures is fair, and probably something that needs to happen in the context of the current situation. However, this is a complex issue that I think cannot be easily boiled down and pointed to any one particular issue. The optics certainly aren’t good, especially less than a week after a match in which two of Spurs’ injured players, Cuti Romero and Micky van de Ven, made surprising returns to the starting lineup only for both of them to be re-injured and substituted before the full time whistle. But it feels overly simplistic and even churlish for anyone, fans or media, to point the finger at any one thing as the cause of this crisis.

That probably won’t stop the takes from flying in the wake of this news, but I kind of hope it stops it here. No club medical department wants this to happen. I find it highly unlikely that the injury crisis at the club is due to incompetence or maliciousness. But something, or much more likely, a combination of somethings, is contributing to this spate of injuries. There isn’t anything Tottenham can do about it bar throwing academy kids into the mixer to boost numbers and planning to reinforce the squad in the January and summer windows. But maybe there’s some small insights to be gained by taking another look at the medical department and seeing what might be tweaked and adjusted to help mitigate it.

Rangers vs. Tottenham Hotspur Preview: An appeal to reprioritize

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I have never been one to elevate the Europa League and cup competitions over the Premier League, but Tottenham Hotspur seems to have little choice right now. Another dreadful league performance over the weekend has sunk Spurs further down the table, and a dramatic charge in the second half of the season feels increasingly unrealistic, even if it remains mathematically possible.

No, the best route to glory this year lies in the cups, which means elevating the Europa League to priority No. 1. On paper, Tottenham remains one of the best teams in this competition. However, taking just one point from the past two matches has left work to do in the League Phase. A win over Rangers on Thursday would go a long way toward securing a top-eight position, which must now be the team’s main focus.

Rangers (t-6th, 10pts) vs. Tottenham Hotspur (t-6th, 10pts)

Date: Thursday, December 12

Time: 3:00 pm ET, 8:00 pm UK

Location: Ibrox Stadium, Glasgow, Scotland

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

Rangers sit level with Spurs on points, boasting a 3-1-1 record. Their lone loss came against their toughest opponent so far, Lyon, and upcoming back-to-back matches against Tottenham and Manchester United will make it tough to stay near the top. Third in the Scottish Premiership, Rangers are comparable to a bottom-half Premier League side, and the British element adds an extra angle to this fixture.

The last meeting between these clubs dates back to Tottenham’s 1962/63 Cup Winners’ Cup triumphal campaign. In general, Spurs lack much history against Scottish sides, with their most recent clash being against Hearts in the 2011/12 Europa League. However, Ange Postecoglou is quite familiar with Rangers, having gone 4-1-2 against them in Old Firm Derbies during his Celtic tenure, though he won just once in four attempts at Ibrox. Surely, this is a match Postecoglou has circled on the calendar...as have the home supporters.

Making the case

There are three reasons why Spurs should go all-in on this match — and the Europa League as a whole. The first is simply math: finishing in the top eight of the League Phase would leave just seven fixtures remaining in the competition, compared to 23 domestic matches. With Cristian Romero re-injured and Brennan Johnson joining the already crowded infirmary, it seems unrealistic for Spurs to seriously compete on multiple fronts. However, there are surely enough warm bodies to attack seven more matches.

Second, Postecoglou’s side has thrived on big occasions, dominating at Old Trafford and the Etihad earlier this season, while struggling in more routine contests. While the last two Europa League performances have been underwhelming, shifting focus and resources toward this competition could re-energize (what remains of) the squad. Rangers may not be the most formidable opponent, but the electric atmosphere at Ibrox and the grandeur of European competition could inspire Tottenham to rise to the occasion.

Finally, it is unlikely Postecoglou will approach this game conservatively; there is too much at stake for him personally, especially with the current terrible vibes. I do not think his job is actually in jeopardy, but even if it is, the Europa League might be the way he can save it anyway. So while I truly do believe Tottenham must go all out to win this competition, I also expect Postecoglou to operate the same way, at least against Rangers.

Spurs must approach this match with the urgency and ambition of a team wanting to lift this trophy, because right now, the Europa League represents their best shot at achieving anything this season.

Ange: Van de Ven back on injured list, will not play vs. Rangers

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Guess it wasn’t just “tightness” after all. Speaking in a press conference ahead of Thursday’s Europa League match between Tottenham Hotspur and Rangers at Ibrox, Ange Postecoglou said that Spurs will be without both Micky van de Ven and Cristian Romero after both were substituted out in Sunday’s loss to Chelsea. Postecoglou also called the current injury crisis at the club one of the worst he’s been through in his career.

“[The injury situation is] not much better. With the weekend’s fallout, Romero and Van de Ven, we’re still getting clarity over the injuries but we’re going to be without them again. At the moment we’re still trying to get timelines on those guys so I wouldn’t put a time on it yet.

“Yeah [laughs], I have to get creative. I think Archie [Gray]’s probably the one for us at the moment that we need to try and get to fill in there. He’s done right back, left back for us. Had to play at center back a little bit this year, he did during the pre-season. With him and Radu [Dragusin], they’re the two main sort of defenders. We’ve still got five or six games to navigate, so we may have to get creative at at some point and deal with it in a different way.”

This just feels like terrible, awful, no good, very bad luck. Romero’s injury, reported yesterday by Gaston Edul to be around a six week recovery time, is kind of whatever — it’s a new injury probably unrelated to the toe injury he had just recovered from, unless you believe that proprioception can influence muscular injuries in other areas.

But Van de Ven just feels cruel. He had just come back from his second long term hamstring injury and now maybe has picked up a third. After Sunday’s loss, Ange called Micky’s situation “tightness” and diminished the impact, but this maybe implies it’s a bit more serious than what was first acknowledged. We don’t know what happened — maybe Van de Ven was rushed back too soon, or maybe it was just a dice roll that came up snake-eyes. Or maybe Ange just lies about injuries. We do know that he listens to and follows the guidance of the club physios.

Ange also spoke to the nature of the injury crisis currently happening at the club, and said the club is trying to address to minimize the impact on players as much as possible.

“I never think it’s just bad luck. Some of it. I’ve never lost a goalkeeper for this period of time. Some of the other issues that we’ve had... But some of it is recurring, particularly this year in terms of guys coming back and re-injuring. It’s something we’re looking at. We’re always trying to explore whether we can do things better. Last year was different to this year. Last year it hit us across the board. This year it’s more guys that are coming back who are affected. Knock on wood, we’ve got a core group who are playing a lot and are getting through it ok. But it is something we are trying to address.”

Speaking of Romero, Postecoglou was also asked about Cuti’s comments to Telemundo recently where he expressed support for Ange but had pointed criticism at the Spurs board, ostensibly including chairman Daniel Levy. Ange admitted that Romero’s comments were heartfelt and emotional, but that he probably made the wrong choice to air his opinions in a public forum such as that.

“He was very emotional. He hasn’t been able to help us on the pitch. I think that was his way of trying to help. We’re going through a tough time and he believes in what we’re doing. The other part [about the hierarchy], he probably went about it the wrong way. I don’t think our challenges at the moment are about one person. I haven’t and have never believed that.

“To come through this, that’ll only happen if we remain united. Cristian, he realizes that lot of what he said was good but some wasn’t the right way of dealing with it. The same way I wouldn’t criticize a player publicly.

“I just think you deal with these things internally. I just don’t think there’s any benefit for us. I know people get really salacious about punishments and stuff. They really love that sort of thing. I think I’m pretty consistent in saying I don’t just think that’s important. I think what’s more important is an understanding of how we should deal with these things and deal with them better.

“I’ve already spoken to Cristian about it and and you know, he’s apologized for the fact that the way he said it, particularly in the public sense, wasn’t the right way to go about things. He’s a human being, he got emotional and I think he just expressed what he wanted to express, probably in the wrong way.

“He does care. I think it would have been easy for him not to say anything. He does care, but there’s a way to do these things and a way to express yourself and the way he did it wasn’t the right way.”

Spurs will kick off against Rangers in Glasgow in the Europa League tomorrow under the lights at 3 pm ET / 8 pm UK. Expect a CB pairing of Radu Dragusin and Archie Gray.