We can put Tottenham with the best teams in the world, says Pochettino

We can put Tottenham with the best teams in the world, says Pochettino

by Joseph Anthony
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Tottenham Hotspur’s Kyle Walker-Peters, manager Mauricio Pochettino and Ben Davies celebrate after the UEFA Champions League quarter final second leg against Manchester City

Mauricio Pochettino used to wince when his pressing game was compared with Jurgen Kloppโ€™s but Tottenham and Liverpool share more than just a love of the chase in their recent fight to join Europeโ€™s elite.

With star players sold and the proceeds, largely, squandered, Pochettino and Klopp were each tasked with restoring a sense of direction to clubs clearly wandering off course.

Only this year have Liverpool soared ahead, their 26-point advantage over Spurs in the Premier League testament to a team that turned last yearโ€™s Champions League run into a start not a finish. Now it is up to Tottenham to do the same.


When Pochettino was installed as head coach in the summer of 2014, to little excitement after the more illustrious Louis van Gaal chose Manchester United, he owed some gratitude to Liverpool.

Spurs had been humiliated by them 5-0 at White Hart Lane, which spelt the end for Andre Villas-Boas, and then thrashed 4-0 at Anfield, which all but ensured Tim Sherwood would not be a permament successor to the Portuguese manager.

By the time Pochettino arrived, Gareth Bale had gone, and so had his 100 million euro transfer fee, splashed on seven new signings, four of whom would be out by the end of Pochettinoโ€™s second summer.

โ€œWhen I arrived at Tottenham I knew very well the challenge would be tough,โ€ Pochettino said in January. โ€œThe club was in a different level. No one believed in us, no one believed the way we operated would bring success.โ€

Demolition and rebuild

Liverpool, a year behind, were mourning the loss of their star player too as Luis Suarez left for Spain and the 81 million euros earned was frittered away, leaving Klopp with his own clear-out job in 2015.

Fabio Borini, Sebastian Coates, Iago Aspas, Christian Benteke and Mario Balotelli were discarded by Liverpool. Paulinho, Nacer Chadli, Roberto Soldado, Etienne Capoue, Vlad Chiriches and Emmanuel Adebayor ditched by Tottenham.

After the demolition, came the rebuild. Pochettino brought in Dele Alli, Eric Dier, Toby Alderweireld and Son Heung-min. Klopp added Sadio Mane, Mohamed Salah and Georginio Wijnaldum.

Piece-by-piece, each clubโ€™s identity sharpened again and Champions League qualification became not just a target, but the norm.


Yet while Tottenham briefly threatened to win the title in 2017, finishing closest to Chelsea on 86 points, they then dropped back, ending the last two seasons 23 and 27 behind Manchester City.

โ€œWe need to make that step,โ€ Pochettino said this week. โ€œWe realise we can continue in this process, we can put Tottenham with the best teams in the world.โ€

Liverpool have pushed on. Aided by bigger budgets and free of the strains imposed on Spurs as a result of their new stadium, Klopp saw the moment after last yearโ€™s loss to Real Madrid and grabbed it.

In January 2018, they sold Philippe Coutinho for 160 million euros and used the money to strengthen a weak defence by signing Southamptonโ€™s Virgil van Dijk.

Show of faith

In the summer, they acquired an outstanding goalkeeper in Alisson Becker as well as greater strength in midfield with Fabinho and Naby Keita. In Coutinho, they sold a star but this time made it pay.

โ€œWhen I first heard he wanted to go to Barcelona, I didnโ€™t imagine we could be that good [without him],โ€ Klopp said this month. โ€œBut we did it, it was good for both sides.โ€


Even winning the Champions League might not guarantee the futures of Tottenhamโ€™s own dithering gems, with Christian Eriksen and Toby Alderweireld still to commit and on contracts that are running out.

But if either, or both, decide to go, perhaps Spurs can take encouragement from Liverpool, by addressing problem areas at full-back, in central midfield and up front.

The clubโ€™s chairman Daniel Levy will need to answer Pochettinoโ€™s repeated calls for a show of faith, one that reflects the unwavering belief Pochettino enjoys from his players.

In that sense, a Champions League final could prove cathartic too, offering Spurs the chance to shake off their nearly-men tag, and assume fully the bold, brave, uncompromising mentality of their coach.

โ€œItโ€™s not that I didnโ€™t believe him,โ€ said defender Danny Rose this week. โ€œI just didnโ€™t understand.โ€ For Tottenham, it could be a match that makes everything clearer.

AFP

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