Cartilage Free Captain

Ange: Romero has a new injury, Van de Ven & Johnson setbacks not significant

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There’s a lot to talk about coming out of Sunday’s 4-3 Tottenham Hotspur loss to Chelsea, but let’s stick with the injury situation for a second. Ange Postecoglou sprung a happy surprise on Spurs fans when Tottenham’s starting lineup featured the return of both Cuti Romero and Micky van de Ven. Unfortunately, neither lasted the full 90. Van de Ven was a second half sub and while his injury wasn’t disclosed it looked like he felt something in his legs. Brennan Johnson made it 53 minutes before he came off looking distressed.

But the worst injury sub was Cuti Romero, who lasted only 15 minutes before he was withdrawn for Radu Dragusin (who played quite well, it should be said). While Postecoglou caught a lot of flack from Spurs fans on social media for apparently “taking chances” with the health and recovery of his starting CBs, Ange said of the three injury subs, one was planned, one was due to illness, and the third — Cuti — was a brand new injury unrelated to the one from which he recently recovered.

“Romero is just obviously hugely disappointing. He felt something in his quad. He trained really well. He wasn’t the one I was worried about, to be honest, but, you know, it’s just like I said, the way the season’s going for us unfortunately. So we just have to wait and see.

“Brennan just didn’t feel well. He didn’t feel well at half-time, but he wanted to give it a go, but he just wasn’t feeling 100% so I had to take him off.

“And then, well, the plan was always for Micky to play 60/70 [minutes] today. Obviously, I thought Romero would be okay to play 90, but Micky, probably 60/70. So we were always going take him off. He didn’t feel anything significant. He just felt tightness, but we were always going to take him off anyway.

“Romero didn’t injure the same thing. It’s a totally different injury, but also people I’m sure are aware of our situation. It’s not like I’ve got a multitude of options there, so, you know, you’ve got to make these decisions. Both players trained and tried well, and they both wanted to help.

“So you make these decisions with all the best information. Like I said, it’s not like Romero re-injured his toe, it’s a totally different injury, which could happen at any time.”

The other talking point was the awful tackle by Chelsea’s Moises Caicedo on Pape Matar Sarr. On replay, the incident was almost certainly red card worthy (to go along with a couple of other nasty uncalled and yellow-card worthy challenges) but both the official and VAR declined to intervene. When asked about the incident, Postecoglou took the opportunity to make another subtle criticism about both VAR and the state of officiating in the Premier League.

“I think it’s kind of where we’re at with the current state of football, where people are just frozen to make big decisions. I think referees don’t want to make them because they’ll go to VAR and VAR doesn’t want to intervene, so you’re kind of left in no man’s land. There’s a couple of decisions I thought today that definitely went against us.

“I thought the linesman put his flag up bizarrely for Deki when he was through, I don’t know what for. Those are things that are out of our control. We can’t do anything about that. Hopefully the powers that be work that out.

“Yeah [the Caicedo tackle was] what I was talking about. But like I said that is where we are at. I just don’t think, I have said it before, the technology has helped our game. I don’t see how it helps because It means instead of one person being in control of a game and you accepting that it almost feels like no one is in control because everybody is scared to make a decision to overturn somebody else. Referees are scared to make decisions in case they get it wrong, VAR don’t want to intervene and I get that because you don’t want disruptions to the game. You just have to cop out.”

The loss was a particularly dispiriting one due to the fact that Spurs went up 2-0 early behind some gorgeous play, only to let Chelsea back into the match en route to giving up two silly penalties. That said, Postecoglou denied that the players are disheartened or losing faith in the project, but acknowledged that the squad is hurting, exhausted, and injured — all things that add a significant amount of challenge during a hectic and congested period.

“I don’t sense anybody is feeling sorry for themselves. It is a tough moment because there are all these tools you can possibly use as a manager when you are going through tough moments to turn things around and our limited resources from a playing perspective at the moment doesn’t allow us to do that so you have to find other ways. It’s not through a lack of effort. The players are constantly out there because we can’t rotate. They are giving everything they can. It diminishes performances as well because they probably need a rest but we can’t give them a rest.

“I think it is something we need to tackle head on and keep pushing on. There is still plenty to play for us between now and January just to make sure we keep performing. I still sense within this squad there is a real conviction in what we are doing and if we maintain that we will turn our season around and hopefully at some point we hit some smoother waters in terms of some of the things that are happening at the moment. Some of it is self inflicted and hopefully we can get some more consistency.”

Tottenham Hotspur 3-4 Chelsea: Community Player Ratings

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I hate this fixture so damn much. Between Chelsea’s Caicedo committing a red and two yellow card worthy fouls and not getting anything from Anthony Taylor, to Tottenham going up 2-0 and losing 4-2 at home thanks to two stupid penalties one of them a panenka, to Micky and Cuti both coming back and both having to be subbed right off again with injuries... it happens every damn year and I hate it.

I don’t know how you can blame Ange for this one. This was on the players. Just a shocking second half, a complete capitulation. I’ll be fine in an hour, but right now I’m just so, so mad. Give Postecoglou time, but also give him some better players, starting this January.

In the meantime — go take a break, walk around the block, pet a cat, hug your kids, have an adult beverage of your choice if you are of age. You’ll feel better.

It’s time to rate the players.

Rate the players from 1⁄2 to 5 stars. If the player doesn’t deserve a rating due to minutes played, DO NOT RANK. I will round the stars up/down to the nearest half-star for the player ratings later this week.

Tottenham Hotspur 3-4 Chelsea: Deja vu at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium

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Another year, another blow to Tottenham Hotspur against Chelsea, this time with the side dropping a 2-0 lead, losing both center backs and sputtering after a brilliant start to lose 4-3 on Sunday.

Getting the news that both Cristian Romeo and Micky van de Ven were back into the Starting XI after missing a good chunk of the recent fixtures, the team came out hot with Spurs’ high line causing poor passes out of the back from Chelsea.

Grabbing the game’s first goal five minutes in, Spurs broke by way of a slip from Marc Cucurella, and Brennan Johnson pounced on the loose ball and broke way down the right wing. Taking a few dribbles down the wing, Johnson sent in an early ball for Dominic Solanke to cut in front of Levi Cowell and flick his foot out for the opening goal. Being a Chelsea product — where he only made one senior appearance — Solanke let out a big smile.

Minutes later, after a defensive stance outside the box, Romero grimaced as he had been returning from a toe injury. Playing with his thigh seven minutes into the game, Romero lasted less than 15 minutes, but before he came off, Spurs capitalized again on a Cucurella slip.

Winning the ball deep in Chelsea’s half after the mistake, Porro fed Dejan Kulusevksi the ball inside the box. Turning towards the middle of the box and dribbling on his favored left foot, Kulusevski took a shot through the legs of Romeo Lavia to sneak a shot into the near post for the game’s second goal.

With Romero coming off and Radu Dragusin coming on, Chelsea got a one back as Jadon Sancho took on Porro and made his way into the goal’s frame to go far past the slow reactionary save attempt by Fraser Forster.

Still holding onto a 2-1 lead, Spurs had chances to extend the lead with Heung-min Son missing a curling attempt and Solanke missing a flick attempt that was squared for him inside the six yard box.

Failing to put teams away for good when the momentum is on its side, Tottenham held on for dear life in the first half as Forster had to parry several shots out with Chelsea lurking for the tying goal before the break.

In the second half, Chelsea came out and forced the Spurs to be sloppy on the ball and in passing lanes, as the first 15 minutes were all for Chelsea.

Putting in the work, Chelsea eventually had a chance to tie the match after Moisés Caicedo earned a penalty after an errant challenge attempt from Yves Bissouma gave the Blues life. Bissouma will miss the next Premier League match on the 15th at Southampton.

Cole Palmer stepped up to the ball and equalized with a calm run up and strike to force the remaining half hour to be all chaos.

Spurs had a chance in the 68th minute as Solanke tried to play a quick one-two, but his pass seemed to signal an offsides run from Destiny Udogie. Running up on the ball and letting it go as the blistering Son came on it with a Chelsea defense frozen and waiting for the whistle, Son took a few dribbles and seemed destined to regain the lead. Having Timo Werner on the far side of the post waiting, Son took the curling shot and sent it just wide of the frame — something rarely seen from the man who has been a killer on curlers his entire career.

Sensing the chance to grab the game for good as Spurs couldn’t get that lead back, Palmer took on two and sent a ball across the frame of the box for a half volley strike from Enzo Fernandez to grab the lead for Chelsea.

Down 3-2 and stumbling again against Chelsea, more bad news came as van de Ven went down on the pitch and had trainers stretching out his hamstring. Being cautious with the center back, who just returned from said injury, Ange Postecoglou made a triple change, with Archie Gray becoming Dragusin’s center back partner.

Chelsea sensed the blood and added to its leads as Palmer won a penalty from a poor foul from Pape Sarr and Panenka’d Forster for a 4-2 lead.

As fans started to exit the stadium, and six minutes were shown in added time, Spurs added a consolation goal. James Maddison hugged the touchline off a corner kick and squared a ball for Son to get the goal.

Note:

It was another frustrating watch as Spurs showed a brilliant start, trampled by failure to put the game away for good. Time and time again, the inconsistency from the squad leaves questions about what is going on. In the congested month of December, getting close to European positions is crucial.

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

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Y’all, I’m terrified. Tottenham Hotspur FC barely have a senior squad to speak of (not to mention a fit back 4), the players are clearly exhausted, and now they face a Chelsea side who have somehow managed to weather the chaos of the last couple of years and put together a functioning football team (and that’s me understating it).

Chelsea matches are hardly ever fun. They might be entertaining, but fun is a step too far unless you enjoy a side of masochism with your football. Spurs’ record against the Blues is quite poor as well, though the saving grace of this match is that it’s at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium rather than Stamford Bridge.

Let’s not revisit last season’s home fixture.

This all sounds terrible; but at this stage we all know that anything can happen with this Spurs side. Any result is a possibility here. Is this going to be the start of a magical turnaround for Ange’s men? Or is it going to be more disappointment? Only the footballing gods know.

COYS!

Lineups

Live Blog

How to Watch

Tottenham Hotspur vs. Chelsea

Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, London, UK

Sunday, December 8, 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!

Tottenham Hotspur vs. Chelsea Preview: When the going gets tough

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Tottenham Hotspur enters Sunday with a frustrating recent form of 1-3-2 across all competitions, sitting 10th in the Premier League and six behind the top four. With the lineup a far cry from full strength, there are somehow still seven matches left this month, and Chelsea (who is now second in the table) is up next on Sunday. The vibes are in the danger zone.

Despite this, Spurs have shown a knack for stepping up against strong opponents; the lone win in this six-match funk was of course at the Etihad. Whether this pattern will continue remains to be seen, but maybe Chelsea’s return to the new Lane will un-Freaky Friday the torment that began after its last visit. Probably not, but this club has defied logic all season — and besides, rationality is not an ally in this one anyway.

Tottenham Hotspur (t-10th, 20pts) vs. Chelsea (t-2nd, 28pts)

Date: Sunday, December 8

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

Location: Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, London

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

The Blues are suddenly up to (joint) second place after wins over Leicester, Villa, and Southampton. They were actually undefeated across all competitions in the month of November and currently lead the Premier League in goals scored and xG. Betting markets still prefer both Arsenal and City, but Chelsea is easily one of the four best clubs in the league at this point.

Spurs lost both derbies last season after taking four points in 2022/23. Since that infamous nine-man effort the last time these clubs met in North London, Ange Postecoglou’s side has gone just 18-6-18 in the league, which is a 54-point pace. It would be so fitting for Tottenham’s fortunes to do another 180 after a home match with Chelsea, but obviously that is just wishful thinking.

All hands on deck

The talking point is clear for this one. Though Tottenham has conceded the third-fewest goals this season, its xGA is now just 11th and is likely to keep dropping due to the change in keeper. Spurs were lucky not to suffer more against Bournemouth and now face the league’s best attack, which is coming off a five-goal outburst at Southampton on Wednesday.

Nicolas Jackson is the biggest fear after his four goals against Tottenham last season. He already has scored eight times in the league this season, one behind teammate Cole Palmer, and both players will enjoy going at this back line, even if Cristian Romero returns. Not to sound too doom-and-gloom, but Spurs will need Chelsea to have a very poor day finishing to win this one.

The brightest lights

It remains puzzling that Tottenham looked so good against City, United, and Villa while looking mediocre against...nearly everyone else. Tactically, playing an open opponent who wants to control the ball seems to fit Postecoglou’s style best, but there has to be a mental component to this as well given how drastically different this team can look match to match.

I do recognize that Tottenham lost the North London Derby at home already, but it just feels like there is some extra effort in the more high-profile fixtures. That makes sense too when considering the number of reserves forced into the lineup and the sheer fatigue of this squad. Spurs are clear underdogs on Sunday, but would anyone be surprised to see a heroic effort seemingly defying the numbers? If anything, that essentially is the hallmark of the Postecoglou tenure so far.

Spurs’ injury crisis deepens with Davies hamstring pull

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Tottenham Hotspur’s defensive injury crisis just went from bad to worse after Ben Davies was substituted in the second half of Spurs’ 1-0 loss to Bournemouth at the Vitality Stadium on Thursday. Davies joins Cuti Romero and Micky van de Ven on the trainer’s table, leaving Radu Dragusin as the only senior central defender still healthy at the club.

Spurs turned to teenager Archie Gray to deputize at left central defense for the remainder of the second half, and while he put in a decent enough (if nervy) performance, it’s hardly the kind of thing you want to see with two matches a week for the next month and a looming match against Chelsea on Sunday.

In his press conference after the match, Postecoglou confirmed that Davies pulled his hamstring against the Cherries, though he declined to state how long he might be sidelines.

“It looks like he’s done his hamstring. Him and Radu have played every game. It’s the one position we can’t rotate. He’ll obviously be out for a period of time now, we’ll just have to wait and see how long it is. It’s a consequence of having the squad we have at the moment.”

When asked about whether Spurs would address central defense in January’s transfer window, Ange stated the obvious:

“Mate, it ain’t going to help us against Chelsea on Sunday and that’s all I’m thinking about.”

Postecoglou also didn’t try to hide his disappointment with not only the result, but with Tottenham’s overall performance.

“Very disappointing. We started the game well. Started the game the way we wanted to and started controlling it but we give away a poor goal, a really poor goal. Again. That allows the opposition to, and it is a difficult place to come to anyways, sit back and play the football they want. To counter-attack and we have to open up. It is disappointing and not good enough. It is not something that is a one off. We have done that now three or four times and paid a price for it.

“Like I said, we started the game well but football is a game where you try to control it and dictate it to play the way you want to but when you give goals away like we did tonight, and we have done that consistently not just with set-pieces but just in general this year, it just gives the opportunity then for the opposition, particularly a team like Bournemouth, to play on the counter which is what they want to do. We have to open up. They can sit back. Just really disappointing it has happened again. Something for me to mull over and do something about.”

Ange can mull over it all he wants but he only has three days until Chelsea comes to North London. The good news is that yesterday Ange hinted that Cuti Romero might be back in time to play. Let’s hope so, otherwise we’re looking at Dragusin-Gray in the back line again, and either Yves Bissouma or a youth player as the failsafe if something (else) were to go wrong.

Bournemouth vs. Tottenham Hotspur: Community Player Ratings

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Sometimes, I hate having to post these articles, especially after a match like the one we just watched. Tottenham Hotspur went to Bournemouth and their cockerel laid a big egg (impressive for a male chicken), conceding a corner kick goal to 19-year old Dean Huijsen en route to a 1-0 loss at the Vitality Stadium. The result drops Spurs to tenth in the table, six points behind Manchester City in fourth, and with a high-flying Chelsea looming at the weekend.

With these kinds of articles, sometimes you just gotta eat s—t and like it. It’s time to rate the players.

Rate the players from 1⁄2 to 5 stars. If the player doesn’t deserve a rating due to minutes played, DO NOT RANK. I will round the stars up/down to the nearest half-star for the player ratings later this week.

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

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Please sir, can I have some more?

That’s pretty much what most Tottenham Hotspur fans are NOT saying right now, nor are the playing squad, with yet another multi-match week. AFC Bournemouth are up this time around, with The Cherries in touching distance of Spurs on the Premier League table.

Spurs though are within touching distance of the European places, and they’ll want to put some sort of run of performances together to consolidate and dispel the inconsistency that has plagued this side. Whether that is even possible with the football calendar the way it is remains to be seen.

Can Spurs beat Bournemouth? Absolutely. Can Spurs lose to Bournemouth? Almost definitely. Can Spurs tie against Bournemouth? Nearly certainly. Place your bets!

COYS!

Lineups

Live Blog

How to Watch

AFC Bournemouth vs. Tottenham Hotspur

Vitality Stadium, Bournemouth, UK

Thursday, December 5, 2024

Time: 3:15 p.m. ET, 8:15 p.m. UK

TV: USA Network, not televised in the 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!

Tottenham’s 25-26 away kit design was leaked, and just take my money now

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We love a good kit leak post here at Carty Free Towers. They’re fun amuse-bouche type posts that simultaneously look to the future and give us all nuggets of hope, even though they are essentially furthering an entrenched and expensive form of capitalism that seeks to mostly divest Tottenham Hotspur fans from around $100 of their hard-earned money each season. I mean, if you think about it there’s really no reason beyond pure greed that a football club needs to play matches in 3-4 completely different kits every season and offer them for sale to its supporters.

But never mind all that, because have you seen the leaked images of Tottenham’s 2025-26 away kits that just dropped on FootyHeadlines? HOLY CRAP THESE RULE.

OK so we’ve known for a while that Spurs were going to have a primarily black away kit this season, with “iron grey” highlights. We also found out that the kits were going to be “99% black”. Now we know what that means, and my god are these beautiful.

Now, some old heads around here are going to look back at past kit leak articles and express some thinky-emoji interest in the fact that I have, in the past, criticized certain home kits as the club charging £100 for “a white t-shirt,” especially when this is, well, basically a black t-shirt. But LOOK AT THIS SHIRT. I mean, just LOOK at it! I am in love. I would wear this to a black tie formal gala. Yes, it’s simple. Yes, it’s black. But it is also gorgeous.

The cool thing is that it’s also not just a black t-shirt, because there’s a subtle Iron Gray grid pattern overlaid upon it if you look at the close-up detail images, and that’s cool because not only does it add a subtle sophistication, but you can also use it to help calculate your geometry homework. They’re also slimming for, uh, gentlemen of a certain age who might be going a little bit to seed lately.

I haven’t purchased an (*cough*) official Tottenham shirt since 2017, though someone kindly gifted me this year’s home shirt (thanks, cancer). I will almost certainly purchase this one. The only question is what name to get on the back. Someone on Bluesky joked that it doesn’t matter which name you order with this kit, you will get a Romero, and you will love it. Fair enough! Just shut up and take my money because these rule.

Bournemouth vs. Tottenham Hotspur Preview: Festive frenzy

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Remembering Tottenham Hotspur’s schedule for December is easy — across three competitions, Spurs will play every Sunday and Thursday this month, starting with the draw against Fulham. With players seemingly dropping out injured in every match and prolonged recovery timelines for others, this stretch promises to be a grind.

Thursday’s trip to the South Coast exemplifies this challenge. Bournemouth is a decent yet beatable Premier League side, though Tottenham’s unpredictable form makes that distinction somewhat irrelevant. With Chelsea looming on the weekend and another Europa League fixture next week, a win on Thursday feels important. However, given personnel limitations and ongoing inconsistencies, another adventurous outing seems likely.

Bournemouth (13th, 18pts) vs. Tottenham Hotspur (t-8th, 20pts)

Date: Thursday, December 5

Time: 3:15 pm ET, 8:15 pm UK

Location: Vitality Stadium, Bournemouth

TV: USA Network (US), Amazon Prime Video (UK)

The Cherries sit just below mid-table with a goal difference of +1, a fitting spot given how they have fared the past couple seasons. However, they have had some excitement this year, claiming one of Arsenal’s two defeats in the league and taking down Manchester City (though that seems to be less impressive by the day).

Tottenham has won three of the last four meetings in this fixture, including two consecutive wins at the Vitality Stadium. Last season’s visit came in Matchweek 2, with James Maddison and Dejan Kulusevski scoring in a clean-sheet victory. The sides met again on New Year’s Eve with the home side claiming a 3-1 win in North London.

Identity mirage

Tottenham’s lack of lineup consistency under Ange Postecoglou has been glaring but not surprising. Injuries and fatigue necessitate rotations, while Postecoglou also continues to tinker with his available resources in search of solutions. The result is a WLWLWLWD streak in the league with no reprieve expected soon.

One player who Postecoglou could really use back is former Bournemouth striker Dominic Solanke, and he looks to be trending in the right direction. The Cherries are actually fifth in xGA, but have conceded multiple goals in their past three matches. Matches against Palace, Ipswich, and Fulham featured a total of four Tottenham goals, while the recent wins have seen Spurs put in three-plus. Obviously scoring more goals makes a win more likely, but it has been all or nothing in terms of attacking production, so taking advantage of the home side’s form is crucial.

Makeshift putting in a shift

The Fraser Forster-Ben Davies-Radu Dragușin trio conceded just one goal against Fulham and will likely start again on Thursday. Bournemouth, ninth in goals scored but fifth in xG, will test their cohesion, and while Forster played admirably over the weekend, relying on him to consistently deliver above-average performances feels risky.

Davies and Dragușin must contend with Bournemouth’s aggressive attackers, including Justin Kluivert, Evanilson, and Antoine Semenyo, who thrive on charging at defenses, especially at home. If Tottenham’s defense holds — which is far from guaranteed — this could open opportunities on the counter. Spurs can exploit the Cherries’ pressing and openness, but with chances likely at both ends, Thursday’s match could really go any way.