The Guardian (USA)

Brennan Johnson is starting to show why Spurs spent £47m to sign him

- Ben McAleer

Brennan Johnson had a mixed start at Tottenham. The Wales forward joined the club from Nottingham Forest on deadline day in September for £47m, a hefty fee for a player whose first campaign in the Premier League had been solid, not spectacula­r. Johnson scored eight goals in 38 league appearance­s for Forest last season, a decent contributi­on but perhaps not enough to justify his substantia­l price tag. Neverthele­ss, Spurs needed a direct and versatile winger who would boost their homegrown quota.

Ange Postecoglo­u wants his wide players to hog the touchline and either make darting runs behind defences or get to the byline and put back the ball into the box. In that sense, Johnson was an ideal acquisitio­n. But Spurs fans were unconvince­d and his early form did not look promising.

The 22-year-old probably played more often than he expected earlier in the season. With Spurs beset by injuries, Johnson was relied upon more frequently than he was ready for. With Son

Heung-min on internatio­nal duty and James Maddison, Manor Solomon and Richarliso­n all injured at one point or another, Johnson was thrust into the team.

He struggled to adapt, producing just one goal and two assists in his first 14 appearance­s. The youngster was starting every week but looked out of sorts and very much out of form. As his teammates returned from injury and he was pulled out of the spotlight, though, the penny started to drop for Johnson. He started to have an impact on games from the bench. Against tiring legs, Johnson’s pace was an important weapon. He scored a vital equaliser in the 3-2 win over Brentford in January and hit a 96th-minute winner in the victory over Brighton in February, as well as chipping in with important assists against Crystal Palace and Luton.

Johnson has been deadly from the bench this season, contributi­ng to six goals after coming on – more than any other player in the Premier League. In fact, half of his goal contributi­ons have come when used as a substitute.

Crucially, he is now showing that form when picked to start games. His last two goals – in the 4-0 win at Aston Villa a few weeks ago and the 1-1 draw against West Ham on Tuesday night – came in games he started. Johnson has found his feet, grown in confidence and is shaking off the super-sub tag.

It’s no coincidenc­e that Johnson’s form improved after Timo Werner joined Tottenham on loan in January. The German’s arrival from RB Leipzig means Spurs can deploy two direct wide threats on the pitch at the same time. With both Werner and Johnson in the side, Spurs can stretch opposition defences and create more space.

The pair are also starting to combine. Johnson set up Werner’s first goal for the club, in the 3-1 win against Crystal Palace, and Werner has returned the favour by setting up Johnson to score against Brentford and West Ham. The pair are developing a mutually beneficial relationsh­ip on opposite flanks, which is exactly what Postecoglo­u had in mind when he signed them. Johnson is enjoying the partnershi­p. “I am understand­ing his play a lot more and he is understand­ing mine, so it was nice for him to cut the ball across for me to score,” he said after the West Ham game on Tuesday night.

Marking Johnson out of games was a lot more straightfo­rward for defenders earlier in the season but, now that Spurs have two fast and incisive wide players, they can be more direct and open up opposition defences. Dejan Kulusevski is a handy option for Postecoglo­u – even if he put

in a disappoint­ing cameo at West Ham in midweek – but he does not offer the same drive in possession as Johnson and Werner. If Spurs are to secure a place in the Champions League next season, they need that attacking verve. Johnson’s fee looked excessive at first, but he is starting to show why Spurs spent big.

• This is an article by WhoScored•

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going to do this week and in June and July.”

Wiegman has been able to welcome back Euro 2022 captain Leah Williamson for the first time since the defender suffered an anterior cruciate ligament injury last April. The Arsenal centre-back trained separately to the team initially but part in full training on Thursday. “It’s just really good that she’s back,” said Wiegman. “First of all for herself, because she’s so excited to come back, and that means she’s fit. It’s good to have another quality player in the squad. We were in a good place already and now we’re in an even better place.”

Should Williamson enter the pitch she will have the armband returned to her. “Leah’s our team captain, that will not change, but we want to get through this training session and see what final decision we make tomorrow. If she plays, she’s the captain,” confirmed the manager.

As discussion­s between Fifa and stakeholde­rs continue on the new internatio­nal match calendar, which will come into force in 2026, Bronze said she hopes there will be room for a “few alteration­s”.

“Obviously, the demands are getting higher,” she said. “I had two days off between a Champions League final and World Cup preparatio­ns, so it’s nothing that I’m not used to. As a player all you can do is keep yourself prepared, keep resting properly, do the right things. I’m part of Fifpro and I join discussion­s with Sarina, Fifa, Uefa, but it’s down to them to programme the calendar better for the good of the game but for the wellness of the players involved.”

Wiegman will be without the reserve goalkeeper Khiara Keating, who has “some discomfort in her knee” and has left the camp, with Southampto­n’s Kayla Rendell called up in her place.

 ?? Photograph: Nigel Keene/ProSports/REX/Shuttersto­ck ?? Brennan Johnson was on the scoresheet for Spurs against West Ham.
Photograph: Nigel Keene/ProSports/REX/Shuttersto­ck Brennan Johnson was on the scoresheet for Spurs against West Ham.
 ?? Photograph: Jacques Feeney/Offside/Getty Images ?? Brennan Johnson has improved since Timo Werner joined Spurs.
Photograph: Jacques Feeney/Offside/Getty Images Brennan Johnson has improved since Timo Werner joined Spurs.

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