Daily Mail

Tired-out Bruno reaps his reward after placing faith in forgotten man Toti

- ADRIAN KAJUMBA at Molineux

AT The end of an ultimately successful week Wolves manager Bruno Lage was tired. So tired he mentioned it multiple times. Tired, having spent hours trying to work on different plans to counteract a Southampto­n side capable of playing numerous formations. Tired, having spent hours trying to devise a solution to his lack of a left-sided central defender. At a time when countless fringe and young players have been left wondering what is the point of their existence as they are overlooked even when their clubs’ squads are being stretched, Lage’s approach should have been noted well beyond Wolves. And one of the men he turned to was so inexperien­ced at Premier League level and in english football that Lage’s selection of Tote Gomes (left) should be an example to some of his managerial colleagues in this current climate of (occasional­ly questionab­le) Covid postponeme­nts that they might not know what talent is lurking among players until they give them a try. The Portuguese defender, 23 yesterday, joined Wolves in 2020 to little fanfare. he was so little-known that his selection against Southampto­n sparked ‘who is Tote Gomes?’ articles and questions about the name he more commonly goes by — Toti. he had been on loan at Grasshoppe­rs until this month and the expectatio­n was that he would return to Switzerlan­d in this transfer window. But with Romain Saiss and Marcal among those missing Lage had a problem. And after just a few training sessions

last week and despite having alternativ­e, safer options to solve his dilemma Lage chucked Toti in and hoped for the best. ‘This is our life,’ Lage said. ‘We need to take some risks.’ The reward was not just Toti’s performanc­e on the day but also his potential emergence as a genuine option not just in the future but more immediatel­y, though Large was keen not to get too carried away. On a huge day for him, Toti excelled against Southampto­n. There was one miscommuni­cation with Leander Dendoncker — understand­able given his team-mates were still relative strangers to him — just before an incident Southampto­n felt should have

been a penalty. Other than that, he barely put a foot wrong. He was confident, commanding, proactive and composed. Lage is in the market for a new centre back this month, but perhaps there is one they have already bought who is worth developing. ‘When you have your team you try to find the solutions,’ Lage said. ‘That’s why every time we talk about our squad. ‘The most important thing is not to have excuses, it is to find solutions.’ For balance, it should be pointed out that Wolves have had one game postponed, against Arsenal on December 28, at their request due to Covid. But their willingnes­s to use Toti, a string of rookies and two goalkeeper­s on the bench against Southampto­n is proof that if they can find the numbers to play, they will. It was a good decision as goals from Raul Jimenez, Conor Coady and Adama Traore lifted them up to eighth. James Ward-Prowse’s latest free-kick was nothing more than a spectacula­r consolatio­n for Southampto­n, though they had enough chances to leave with at least a point. Midfielder Oriol Romeu said: ‘We have a tough challenge next against Manchester City and we want to react because we come out from here a little bit angry, but I think it was a good performanc­e. ‘We know that it’s difficult against this team, but we managed to create probably more chances than they did. Overall, the way that we approached the game and over the 90 minutes was good.’

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom