Cape Times

Spurs face daunting trip to Anfield

Tottenham ‘can’t get carried away’ with midweek win

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PREMIER League leaders Liverpool meet Tottenham Hotspur on Sunday for the first time since a sultry June night in Madrid ended with Jurgen Klopp’s side crowned champions of Europe.

Since then the trajectori­es of the two clubs have been diametrica­lly opposed. Liverpool have set a relentless pace at the top of the Premier League and Mauricio Pochettino’s Tottenham have stalled. After nine games Liverpool lead the table by six points from Manchester City, while Tottenham are already 13 points adrift in seventh spot after only three league wins all season – their worst start since Pochettino’s debut season in 2014-15.

City can halve the gap to Liverpool when they host Aston Villa tomorrow, while the weekend’s programme gets underway tonight with third-placed Leicester City at Southampto­n.

Fourth-placed Chelsea are at Burnley in tomorrow’s late kickoff while Manchester United, in 14th place, will hope a trip to struggling Norwich City on Sunday can spark a climb up the table after failing to win any of their last four league games.

All sorts of theories have been presented as to why Tottenham have fallen away, including a Champions League hangover, a frustratin­g transfer window and even Pochettino becoming stale after working wonders to keep the north London club in the top four, four seasons in a row.

Pochettino could at least afford a smile again on Tuesday when his side thrashed Red Star Belgrade 5-0 to kickstart their Champions League campaign. Harry Kane and Son Heung-min both scored twice in a performanc­e that hinted that Tottenham might be ready to emerge from their slump.

The Reds at Anfield represent a far tougher propositio­n though, especially considerin­g that Pochettino’s record against them in all competitio­ns since becoming Tottenham manager reads seven defeats, four draws and only one victory.

Despite the head-to-head record, Tottenham under Pochettino finished above Liverpool in the Premier League four seasons in a row until Klopp’s side ended as runners-up last season to City, 26 points above Spurs.

There is little to suggest that chasm will close any time soon, although Klopp will be wary of a Tottenham side who perhaps should have won at Anfield last season. Moussa Sissoko wasted a glorious late chance before a 90th-minute own goal by Toby Alderweire­ld handed Liverpool a 2-1 victory.

Tottenham will also be buoyed by their record Champions League victory on Tuesday.

“We can’t get too carried away with it. We have to stay focused and take the positives (of the result) and take them into the Premier League,” Kane said. “We have got a very tough game on Sunday, so I hope we can take momentum into that.”

Liverpool’s 17-match winning run in the league came to an end in a 1-1 draw at United last weekend but the size of Tottenham’s task was underlined as Klopp’s men crushed Genk 4-1 away in the Champions League on Wednesday.

Klopp immediatel­y turned thoughts to Tottenham.

“It’s a refreshed Tottenham,” he said. “Of course the second they meet us they’re back on track!

“But we’re a different team to Red Star Belgrade, just like Tottenham are different to Genk.” | his

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