The Clock Is Ticking! Tottenham Need To Show They Can Be Winners
17th September 2019
The tension, emotion and elation of the late drama that saw Spurs past Manchester City in the quarter-finals and Ajax in the last four will live long in the memory
- Tottenham's improbable rollercoaster run to the club's first ever Champions League final last season has masked a steady decline in results for Mauricio Pochettino's men stretching back to February
- But having ultimately fallen shot in the final against Liverpool, Pochettino remains without a trophy after five seasons in charge
- That does not diminish the impact the Argentine has had in transforming Tottenham from Europa League regulars to Champions League contenders
LONDON, United
Kingdom- Tottenham's improbable rollercoaster run to the club's first ever
Champions League final last season has masked a steady decline in results for
Mauricio Pochettino's men stretching back to February.
The tension, emotion and elation of the late drama that saw
Spurs past Manchester City in the quarter-finals and Ajax in the last four will
live long in the memory.
But having ultimately fallen shot in the final against
Liverpool, Pochettino remains without a trophy after five seasons in charge.
That does not diminish the impact the Argentine has had in
transforming Tottenham from Europa League regulars to Champions League
contenders.
Yet, it may well be that the window for this Spurs squad to
win the Champions League closed with defeat to Liverpool on June 1.
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Last season's remarkable Champions League campaign began in
the group stages when Pochettino's men seemed down and out after picking up
just one point from their opening three games against Inter Milan, Barcelona
and PSV Eindhoven.
A far kinder draw this time around sees Spurs travel to
Olympiakos on Wednesday with Bayern Munich and Red Star Belgrade to come in
Group B.
Tottenham should be confident of progress to the last 16 for
a third straight season, but their form over the past seven months means they can
take little for granted.
Prior to undoubtably their best performance of the season so
far, a 4-0 victory over Crystal Palace on Saturday, Spurs had mustered just 16
points from their last 16 Premier League games.
Pochettino has pointed to a myriad of reasons for that
slump.
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The amazing Champions League nights in Manchester and
Amsterdam drew the very last sources of energy from a stretched squad that wore
down during a 57-game season and were missing talisman Harry Kane for much of
the second half of the campaign.
Spurs were also in the midst of moving from Wembley to a
sparkling new 62,000 capacity stadium and had not signed a player in 18 months.
Most of those problems have now been addressed. Tanguy
Ndombele, Giovani lo Celso and Ryan Sessegnon have bolstered the squad,
although all three have suffered injury problems early in their Spurs careers.
Kane is back fit. The Tottenham Hotspur Stadium is beginning to feel like home.
However, Pochettino was still unhappy as the futures of
Christan Eriksen, Toby Alderweireld and Jan Vertonghen cast a cloud over their
start to the season.