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Europa League Final – Spurs 1-0 Man Utd: Four Tottenham Talking Points

It turns out that it’s not the easiest thing in the world to sit down and scribble a few hundred words when one has an ear-to-ear grin plastered across the face and is inclined to leap to one’s feet every thirty seconds and dance little jigs of joy about the place, but I’ll have a stab.

1. The Match Itself

The only thing better than winning a trophy with pure, glory glory, all-action-no-plot, unadulterated Angeball, is winning a trophy doing the exact opposite. Somehow, ending the 17 years of misery with one of the worst spectacles imaginable made it all the sweeter.

If anyone were in the market for a scrappy, nerve-riddled mess of a game, this was the place to be. Any hint of quality packed its bags and skipped out the door pretty much as soon as the opening toot sounded.

Ange set up the troops with the motto ringing in their ears “Just win the dashed thing, aesthetics be damned” – and AANP was all for it. After all, what good are second-placed finishes and semi-final exits, if we can’t ultimately enjoy moments such as Sonny lifting the glorious pot, as last night?  There is a time and a place to have the watching masses purr with satisfaction at whizzy, one-touch, irresistible football; but, crucially, there is also a time and a place not to. This was very much the latter.

From the off, our heroes made it clear that they would greet with a collective shrug of indifference any outraged squawks about the quality on show. Where previous iterations have reached a cup final and then frozen in the headlights, or gallantly attempted to outplay the opposition, or in some other way gloriously failed, last night’s vintage rolled up their sleeves, spat on their hands and set about winning the dashed thing by whatever means necessary – and with knowing nods and winks indicating that they were full cognizant of the fact that ‘whatever means necessary’ translated into the lowest-quality scrap imaginable.

If there were any hints of the thing being turned into a beauty contest, Bissouma or Romero or some other beast of a man would storm over and kick a lump out of someone before returning to their post. Players rolled on the ground, and called each other names, and racked up incalculable numbers of tackles and clearances without caring too much about their legality. Actual football was a long way down the agenda. It was the sort of stuff that would have protective parents shielding the eyes of their children.

And the whole thing worked out swimmingly. Our heroes scored a goal entirely in keeping with the quality of the evening, it involving miskicks and ricochets, various bodies stumbling in wrong directions, an inadvertent handball and ultimately the merest shaving of studs on ball. And thereafter, the drill was simply to use all means available to keep United at bay, although I rather fancy that bonus points were dished out on the basis that the uglier the intervention the better.

Oddly enough, on reflection United didn’t actually fashion anything too menacing, despite being allowed as much possession as their paws could manage. Fernandes missed the one clear chance they had, and Hojlund was rather gifted the headed opportunity that brought about the VDV clearance. That aside, however, this was an evening of countless crosses being swatted away, with all the necessary nerves one would expect, but actually without any real menace lurking.

2. The Goal

As mentioned, the goal that brought it home very evidently shared the DNA of the match that birthed it.

There is, however, a small asterisk to the above, because in the build-up to the goal, albeit slightly lost in the mists of the glory that comes with becoming European champions, our heroes did actually stumble upon possibly the only piece of top-quality football in the whole match. And just to slather an extra layer of absurdity upon it all, this moment of quality emanated from the clogs of Richarlison, an egg whose attracted his fair share of rotten fruit from this quarter.

Specifically, it was a neat diagonal pass from Mr R out on the left wing, infield and into the path of Bentancur, just outside the area. It would be rather stretching the truth to declare that this created the goal, for there followed a fair amount of admin, and ultimately it was Sarr who delivered the decisive cross, but if one were to assert that this little interplay occurred in the build-up to our goal, it would be as factually correct a statement as “I always win a trophy in my second season.”

Richarlison’s little input completed, as mentioned the ball was eventually relayed to Sarr, who wormed it into the area. This was the invitation for Brennan Johnson to join the pantheon of Cup-winning goalscorers, and rather splendidly, young Master J. was acutely aware that this invitation made no mention at all of the quality of strike required. Instead, clearly indicating himself to be a bit of a history buff, he took his cue from Grahm Roberts, Des Walker and Jonathan Woodgate, and reasoned that on these occasions one might as well write oneself into Tottenham Hotspur history with the scrappiest and least refined finish in the armoury.

Johnson initially mistimed his shot. The first outcome of this was that he looked like he  was attempting to flick the ball in the opposite direction to the goal, which was a novel way to approach the problem. However, when basking in the glory of being newly-crowned European champions, one learns to give the benefit of the doubt. Thus it seems that this initial manoeuvre was all just part of the Brennan Johnson masterplan.

Making sagacious use of the unwitting arm of Luke Shaw, and of course drawing upon a comically despairing flap from Andre Onana, who it seems is always wheeled out for these big European nights for Spurs, Johnson’s mere presence seemed to be the decisive factor. By the time everyone had rearranged their limbs and surveyed the scene, after the initial collision, events had moved on a bit, and the ball had started bobbling, a little uncertainly, towards goal.

At this point, events in the Johnson mind seemed to crystallize. His name appeared in lights ahead of him. All that was required, he seemed to reason, was to give the ball a little encouragement on its way. Accordingly, his basest instincts took over, and he took a swing at the thing.

He might have expected at this point to send the ball bursting the net from its moorings. But this being The Scrappiest (And Simultaneously Most Glorious) Game Ever, such a neat and emphatic finish was not part of the plan. Gravity at this point dragging Johnson to terra firma, his powerful swing of the leg resulted in only the most delicate brushing of the ball with the tip of his studs.

And marvellously enough, this was sufficient. Helpfully, the passage of time had not diminished Onana’s memory of how to play his part in these things, and six years on from being caught in a Lucas Moura whirlwind, he found himself staggering off in the wrong direction, and unable to do any more than swing a few despairing arms, to no avail.

Appropriately enough, Johnson then made a bit of a mess of the knee-slide too, and the whole thing became a part of Tottenham folklore. Not that I drank it in with too much clarity at the time, lost as I was in a sea of lilywhite limbs, but that all added to the fun of the thing.

3. The Goal-Line Clearance

The record books will proclaim Johnson as the winning goalscorer, but I suspect I capture a fairly popular sentiment when I cross the fingers and hope that Micky Van de Ven’s goal-saving contribution is revered in years to come as Tony Parks’ 1984 endeavours are today.

Not to dampen celebrations with anything too pedantic, but if we get into the weeds of that particular episode then one can only raise an eyebrow at the little interjection from Vicario. Famously bonkers, Vicario had already given notice of his intention to approach this match in the manner of an irate frog locked inside a box, and accordingly did not miss an opportunity to sprinkle his night’s work with a little hyperactivity.

Having only just attached fingertips to a cross for which he had set out in the first half, shortly past the hour mark there seemed little threat in the offing when United lobbed a pass straight up the centre of the pitch and down his throat. In textbook style Vicario leapt into the air and adopted a welcoming pose with his arms. If he had already begun congratulating himself at this point for extinguishing yet another United attack without any harm accruing, one would have understood.

At this point, however, matters went pretty seriously off-kilter. Vicario picked this moment to completely lose sense of spatial awareness. What ought to have been a basic game of ‘Catch’, the stuff of thrills for a three year-old, turned into a situation of considerable alarm and urgency.

In short, Vicario missed the ball with his hands, and allowed it instead to bounce off his face.

Well, even one of those thrilled three year-olds could have advised that this was the wrong approach. And not just that, but when a football bounces off a face, it becomes mightily difficult to predict where the devil it will go next. If a football lands within gloved hands, a degree of certainty can reign regarding its whereabouts; but bounce off the human face, and all bets are off.

As it happened, the dashed thing looped kindly for Hojlund, and he did not mess around, looping it straight back whence it came, and looking for all the world like he had nabbed the equaliser.

At this point, however, Micky Van de Ven burst onto the scene, to deliver both a presence of mind for which I will be eternally grateful, but also, astonishingly, a litheness of frame of which I had simply not thought the young bean capable.

Dealing with these things in order, and that presence of mind did much to make us champions of Europe. I am ashamed to confess that when Hojlund’s header looped goalwards, I froze. No action or alacrity from AANP, I simply gawped in horror, and may have clutched at the arm of my Spurs-supporting chum Mark, but not much more.

Master VDV, however, is evidently possessed of tougher mental fibre. No sooner had the danger started to accrue than his cogs had begun whirring, and a decision was swiftly made. Get back to the goal-line, and use every available to means to rescue the situation, seemed to be the summary of his analysis.

And this was where that aforementioned litheness came into play, because it was one thing opting to clear the danger, but quite another putting the plan into effect. A critical challenge was the fact that VDV is famously made of biscuits. Prod him and he snaps. Stretch him, and he again snaps. In fact, do anything to him, or have him do anything, and there’s a fair chance that he will fall apart at the seams.

When it became clear, therefore, that the only saving action was for VDV to contort himself into some extraordinary amalgamation of splayed limbs, I’d have dismissed the chances of success as negligible. A circus acrobat would struggle to raise his foot above his head, one might conclude, let alone one of Nature’s most brittly constructed footballers.

And yet, there he leapt, and contorted, in glorious technicolour, one leg above his head, another behind his back, and all performed while a good three feet up in the atmosphere. It was a sensational moment, and one every bit as deserving of its place in Tottenham history as Johnson’s goal.

4. Tottenham Have Won A Trophy!

Not that this game was decided by VDV, Johnson and no others. By the time the credits rolled and everyone began jumping and hugging, one couldn’t lob a brick onto the pitch without hitting an absolute hero clad in lilywhite.

Romero managed the commendable feat of combining a defensive performance of supreme discipline with aggression channelled in precisely the appropriate fashion – viz. into the face of Harry Maguire at every opportunity.

Sarr, about whose deployment at the tip of the midfield three AANP had had considerable doubts, drew upon every last bubble of oxygen in tearing about the pitch for the cause.

Bissouma and Bentancur provided exactly the screen that the back-four required, while Richarlison not only provided an attacking outlet, particularly in the first half, but also emerged as one of the few amongst our number who effected a clean tackle on that pesky Amad – a lad whose nuisance value considerably diminished in the second half as Udogie gradually got the measure of him.

So it’s the shiniest gold stars all round for the players. For the manager, debate on his future can be had another day – last night he nailed his tactics, delivered on his promise and brought a European trophy back to N17.

AANP has spent every waking hour since full-time milking this occasion until it bleeds, and why not? Input from media types and those who support other teams is, of course, all part of life’s rich tapestry, but by golly it is nevertheless satisfying to ram a European trophy down those throats.

The whole business of just getting the job done and actually finding a way to win a trophy had become quite the issue. Legions of psychologists and whatnot would have scratched their heads and shrugged their shoulders, as one Tottenham team after another found ways to bungle the operation. The current vintage, however, ride off into the sunset with a shiny pot. As such they deserve all the plaudits that come their way – and one hopes that it serves as a prompt to further silverware, some time sooner than 17 years hence.   

Tottenham Hotspur, Europa League winners – absolutely marvellous stuff!

AANP’s book ‘All Action No Plot: Postecoglou’s First Season’, is out now for just £7.99 from Amazon (ebook from £6.99– while Spurs’ Cult Heroes, covering our previous European triumphs, is also still available

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22 replies on “Europa League Final – Spurs 1-0 Man Utd: Four Tottenham Talking Points”

So the end justifies the means, ‘Angeball’ can be abandoned notwithstanding Postecoglou’s ‘it’s who were are, mate’ bravado of last season, and all’s well with Spurs, about to finish their worst league season in pushing 50 years.
I think I was as pleased that the appalling display of anti-football had ended as that we’d actually won, but let’s enjoy the moment, and put off facing the reality of another season (or two) under Postecoglou until the whole thing starts again in August.
Two points from eight games saw off our last trophy winner – how many will ‘Big Ange’ get before the axe falls, I wonder?

A further thought, however unwelcome. Postecoglou’s biggest fans invariably greeted his arrival and early success as the antidote to the supposed negative football played under Mourinho and Conte, and now those same people are proclaiming that Postecoglou is vindicated, that he’s shown he has a Plan B, even when that plan involves what we saw last night.
I think the expression is ‘what’s sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander’, but not when the fowl concerned are Conte and Postecoglou, apparently.

A magnificent summary my old friend, you have surpassed yourself here and may I say raised the bar several inches! Well done!! NO MORE “SPURSY”!! No more…. “Ahhhh but you NEVER win anything”

Aa always, a marvellous summary. Who knew that richarlison could see and execute a pass without claiming he had been assaulted in the face? Is it too soon to scour the nurseries of Haringey to find a 3 year old who can drop a ball better than Vicario? I feel a total hypocrite for relishing tortured victory over the “tottenham way”. Then I remind myself I was 16 when we last won something shiny in Europe and..who cares about quality, look in the not so dusty trophy cabinet.

Well said AANP. Who cares about anything, we are H-A-P-P-Y. The game itself reminded me of Eintracht away, defending a dodgy 1-0 lead. I thank VDV so much because there was no way I could have survived another half hour. The extra 7 were purgatory enough! Anyway, Mrs S. is out tonight so I’m going to watch the whole thing again. Maybe it’ll be a better game this time round. COYS

We deserve this.

Any other opinions can be had after the final league game.

Now, we celebrate.

Very entertaining summary AANP. ?
Ange has delivered what was asked of him, what he said he would, and what so many of his predecessor’s have failed to do. He’s also joined a very short list of Spurs managers to deliver a European trophy.
Last night was fantastic, regardless of the quality of the match, one of the truly great nights of being an old Spurs fan, even better for waiting so long and suffering so many heartbreaks since the last one. I’m truly puzzled that some people seem reluctant to recognise the achievement because they already had their opinion of the manager carved in stone.
Regardless, Ange now has a firm place in Spurs history whatever happens next.
PS: Bentancur has been quietly brilliant recently.

Outstanding report AANP for a terrible game (with a brilliant outcome). It seems churlish to mention individual names because nobody played badly, and at the same time nobody was spectacularly good (VdV clearance excepted). Having said that I will contradict myself by supporting the thoughts of another re Bentancur’s quiet brilliance and will add to that Bissouma’s exceedingly solid contribution came as a great relief. He didn’t put a foot wrong… whereas under normal circumstances he frequently puts both feet wrong, with dire consequences. We were a Dutch Shin Width away from disaster, but it’s the result that matters most as you have so eloquently described. Thanks for the laughs AANP, and for putting our collective fan thoughts into prose. One more bulletin on Sunday and you can hang up the quill for the summer.

Beautiful encapsulation of the match as always AANP. Today I don’t want to care who the manager will be next season, right now Ange delivered on his promise and we’ve all questioned his ability here. However, he won this final without Ange-ball so how does he propose moving us forward next season – does he even know?

Lovely write up AANP. I was at The Lane in ‘84 as a 21 year old and watched last night with my 27 year old son who could not remember a Spurs cup victory. Well done Ange and team for doing what no other Spurs manager managed for over 40 years. Onwards and upwards.

Thanks as always AANP, this season in particular must have been very difficult and depressing finding positive talking points, but your commentary remains at the highest level.
In spite of my ambivalence prior to the game I managed to shed a few tears when Sonny lifted the trophy. Although this was tempered briefly by seeing Werner in particular, in our kit and collecting a medal which potentially devalues it.
The game itself wasn’t at anything above mediocre Sunday League, but should we have expected anything else from teams who haven’t won many games lately, languish in the nether regions of the EPL, can’t afford to lose and are therefore desperate to win? Fortunately our team showed more desperation. But to be fair it is not easy to recall a cup final that Spurs have played in that has been a masterpiece – 1963 Cup-winners cup is an exception. I attended the 1972 home leg of UEFA cup final against Wolves and it was drab. Likewise the only other Cup Final I’ve attended, 1981 1st game, was nothing to write home about. In Spurs and Postecoglou defence, without a creative midfielder like Madders, Deki or Bergvall, was there any other option?
The goal – probably an OG according to Clive Allen & co-commentator on the website was exactly as described – a very unusual tactic from BJ to back-heel the ball away from goal into the on-rushing Luke Shaw – the ball was going in and BJ tried to put his name on the goal. I really don’t want him to be a hero.
Richarlison also picked up praise for his contribution to the goal and elsewhere for his overall 60 minutes but although he made himself a nuisance he also made a hash of any number of opportunities. I noted AANP referred to him as an attacking outlet rather than an attacking threat which I thought telling.
I have remained supportive of Vicario throughout some dodgy performances but he has now shot his bolt with me. He earned his medal with his save from Shaws headers near the final whistle but otherwise the frog-in-the-box comment is well deserved and hopefully in the pre-season our goalkeepers (Vicario, Kinsky, Austin & hopefully Keeley) will all start from the same row on the grid.
I also think that this game showed that Solanke can’t be a Lone Ranger up front – he needs someone to play alongside him. How many times did he flick on a long ball into space that could have been occupied by a supporting striker or hold the ball up for support that didn’t arrive?
Thank goodness we have a trophy and can get to the real business of building a team that can compete in the top 4 of the EPL year in year out and win a trophy so often that it is never again a talking point.

A pleasure to read an honest appraisal of a dire game and a flawed Spurs team, which nevertheless got over the line when so many of its predecessors failed.
My contributions here and elsewhere even strike ME as relentlessly negative, but it’s a reaction to the sheer mindlessness of so many Spurs fans that drives me to it.
We were always the cavalier exponents of attacking football, but not in the childish, one-dimensional form of ‘Angeball’, and yet so many Spurs fans seemed desperate to embrace it, even though it was easily countered by practically every team we played, after that ten-game honeymoon, hence our current PL position.
We sneered at the emphasis on defence that brought Arsenal so much success from Mee’s ’71 team onwards, and Graham, Mourinho and Conte were all regarded as unwelcome backsliders from ‘The Spurs Way’ by a great many fans (usually those who are Postecoglou’s greatest admirers), and yet it’s ‘Ange In’ from almost every one, following the most negative, bus-parking performance seen in a European final since Steau Bucharest beat Terry Venables’s Barcelona in 1986.
Football doesn’t have to be all-out attack or backs to the wall defence, but those two extremes seem to comprise the whole of Postecoglou’s strategic arsenal, and until he shows far more flexibility than he’s so far managed, I’ll be stcking with ‘Ange Out’!

Spurs had the 2nd best defence when our starting back 4 were all healthy. Everything went haywire when this was not the case.

Danso had to be paratuted in.

We had 2nd highest goals for before injuries.

Don’t you just love propositions that are backed by stats.

I wonder how many injuries we’ll get during the victory parade today, a few torn hamstrings climbing the stairs on the bus I suspect 😉

Seeing the footage of Bissouma’s triumphant return with his pants practically round his ankles, I reckon torn hamstrings are less likely in his case than a broken neck (or a broken watch, assuming his insurance company coughed-up for the previous one, of course).

I’m not sure about you guys but watching the parade is something I can’t believe I’d ever see again in my lifetime. A few tears tonight. COYS!

Ditto (without the tears!) – I stupidly thought it would be an embarrassment, but it was a glorious coming together of the Spurs faithful – I might even accept Postecoglou keeping his job (at least until the Brighton result!).

Brighton is pivotal as we could embarrass ManU even more if we win and they lose – it’s a double whammy and we’re free to revert to Ange-ball with no risk attached:-)

Spurs goal started with
an interception by? : Sarr
Who drove forward with the ball? : Sarr
Who hung onto the ball long enough to bring others into play? : Sarr
Who played the critical role of a composed conductor of interchanges with several Spud players?: Sarr.
Who whipped in a superb ball? :Sarr

The gifted orrators may now write those facts in more flowery language. Thank you.

(Just love being factually grounded 1st)

That goal was actually another aspect of Angeball. I.saw it first against Brentford ie..give opponent the ball so that you can take it off him in his own third- hoof it up to him again and again till one of them makes a mistake under pressure…..that Australian knows his football)

I re-watched Ange’s speech today and he made the schoolboy error of congratulating just a few players by name and missing some very important others. Admittedly Sarr has been a bit up and down like the rest of the team this season but he is a truly gifted player and very understated (maybe that’s a quality rather than a fault).

Credit to Ange who understands Sarr’s qualities and within Ange’s 1st month at Spurs promptly put him in the perking order ahead of Winks and Skipp

(Ange has said he has the time all day for Sarr…

That’s the time I setup and realised that Spurs is finally in the right hands- Ange is “un-superficial”)

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