Belfast Telegraph

Red-hot Son ensures Spurs have the final say

South Korean pounces after Brentford denied by tight VAR call

- By Miguel Delaney Lloris, Aurier, Sanchez, Dier, Reguilon (Davies 71mins), Sissoko, Hojbjerg (Tan-

TOTTENHAM’S run in the Carabao Cup, and a trend of Jose Mourinho’s career, persists.

He retains a real aptitude for knockout football, and particular­ly this competitio­n. A controlled 2-0 win over Brentford brought a fifth Carabao Cup final for the Portuguese, and the 16th of his career in all competitio­ns. He has won 12 of the 15 so far, with four of those this trophy.

Whichever Manchester side he t akes on from t onight’s semi-final will face a manager who has never lost a showpiece in this competitio­n. The tantalisin­g prospect now will be that he sprinkles a bit of that silverdust over Spurs, and shows a club on a drought what it takes.

The majority of those games (nine finals, eight wins) admittedly came in that stellar first half of his career before 2010-11, but the return since is still good.

There is of course a wider discussion to be had about what a Carabao Cup would mean for Spurs, especially given the status of the competitio­n, and the standard of this season’s run.

It evidently means a lot to Mourinho, given the almost unnecessar­y strength of his starting XI. That may yet come at some cost, given the injury Pierre-emile Hojbjerg suffered in a challenge from the red-carded Joshua Dasilva that Mourinho audibly shouted was a “disgrace”.

The price of progress, perhaps. Mourinho and Daniel Levy would no doubt say a first trophy — any trophy — since 2008 is what he was brought in for, and was the one thing missing from Mauricio Pochettino’s time.

Championsh­ip c l ubs l i ke Stoke and Brentford still aren’t the most challengin­g opposition, although Thomas Frank’s team remain a supremely run side constantly overachiev­ing, and who put it up to Spurs. Mourinho needed that favourable VAR call before Son Heung-min eventually secured the victory, Ivan Toney’s header at 1-0 having been ruled out thanks to the positionin­g of Moussa Sissoko’s knee.

The midfielder may well have been the man of the match, and Mourinho can point to his resurgence as one of the ways a Carabao Cup win would reflect wider improvemen­ts in the team; a signpost.

The opening goal was a landmark moment for Sissoko.

Most of all, it was just a piece of higher Premier League quality, although many might not have expected that from the scorer in terms of finishing. The eventual header was Sissoko’s first shot of 2020-21. That’s the entire season, not just this year.

Even if Sissoko was some way rusty in front of goal, the cross from Sergio Reguilon was so exquisite and inviting that it would have been perfect for almost anyone. There were of course fair questions over whether the full-back should even have been starting given the controvers­y about his Christmas get-together, but you can imagine Mourinho would have told him exactly how he could start making it up.

This was quite a delivery, and quite a goal. For his part, Sissoko matched it with his header, guiding it right into the top corner past David Raya so brilliantl­y. It’s fair to say the midfielder appearing in such an area to head home — or even just shoot — didn’t appear too much in Brentford’s prematch preparatio­ns.

Spurs, neverthele­ss, were in precisely the kind of situation Mourinho prepares better for than any other: 1-0 up against an inferior side. It was almost ideal for him given the rigours of the calendar, the context of the game, and the strength of his XI.

They could sit back solidly, conserve energy and counter when necessary.

Bright as Frank’s ideas at Brentford are, they’re going to be less likely to open you than a Premier League side. The closest they got in the first half was a Dasilva shot that Son blocked, although a similar intercepti­on from Serge Aurier against Toney at the start of the second half required more intensity.

Spurs naturally looked more dangerous on the break, most notably before the break with one Lucas Moura chance. Son then almost scored another wonder goal with a guided volley, this time from a fine Sissoko cross.

There then came his second most influentia­l moment, even if he didn’t know much about it. It was a case of the inches mattering in such runs, though, as Sissoko’s knee ensured Toney had gone offside before heading in.

As if to emphasise the knifeedge nature of the moment, and what might have been for Brentford, Son immediatel­y scored that fine winner. Spurs were through, Mourinho back to a familiar stage.

Currently level on four League Cups with Sir Alex Ferguson and Brian Clough, the Portuguese can become the competitio­n’s most successful manager. TOTTENHAM:

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 ??  ?? Moussa Sissoko of Tottenham Hotspur celebrates his opening goal
Moussa Sissoko of Tottenham Hotspur celebrates his opening goal
 ??  ?? You beauty: Son Heungmin slots home for Tottenham
You beauty: Son Heungmin slots home for Tottenham

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