Lads, it’s Tottenham. Roy Keane’s criticism of the club touched a nerve because for so many years, it has been accurate. Nice and tidy, but do they have the steel to win?
Mauricio Pochettino’s current crop are bucking a few stereotypes and they ought to have won this ferocious north London derby. They were the better team for 75 minutes and they had plenty of chances to build upon the lead that Harry Kane’s sixth goal in four matches had granted them.
This was a performance of conviction, with plenty of fine individual displays, not least from Mousa Dembélé and Dele Alli in midfield. But just when only a second away win over Arsenal in 22 years was calling them, they were undone, and it was a moment that surely would have seen Keane rolling his eyes.
When Arsène Wenger introduced Kieran Gibbs for Joel Campbell on the flank, nobody saw the left-back as the potential saviour. But Gibbs got on the end of Mesut Özil’s cross to jab a volley at goal. Hugo Lloris should have done better. The goalkeeper had to do better. But in the same way that he conceded the late equaliser at Monaco in the Europa League , he could not keep the ball out and it wriggled home.
