Sunday Mirror

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- VERDICT FROM THE TOTTENHAM HOTSPUR STADIUM

ON the face of it, Antonio Conte and Daniel Levy hardly seem a match made in heaven.

Italian whirlwind Conte, all fire and Latin passion.

Poker-faced Levy (above) the toughest of football negotiator­s with a reputation for keeping a vice-like grip on the pursestrin­gs.

But if the duo work in tandem this summer, next season there might be fewer frustratin­g days at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium like this brilliant win for bubbly Brighton.

However it pans out, something’s got to give before the new campaign, if Tottenham truly want to try and bridge the gap to Manchester City and Liverpool.

Conte won’t duck out of walking away from Spurs if he feels his ambitions aren’t being matched by Levy – just ask Inter Milan president Steven Zhang.

The former Chelsea boss, irked by a belief that he and Zhang weren’t on the same page, ditched Inter just days after winning the Serie A title last summer.

If Levy doesn’t want to be hunting for a fourth manager in four seasons, a transfer-market raid for a world-class playmaker is surely a priority.

For no one knows better than Conte that the clock is against Spurs if they want to win big in the next two or three seasons.

Although this wasn’t their day with Tottenham failing to muster a single shot on target, crown jewels Harry Kane and Heung-Min Son still have plenty of sparkle.

But the England captain is 29 in July – and just days before Son turns 30.

That should sharpen Levy’s urgency to add the missing pieces to the Tottenham puzzle – and set up a couple of grandstand seasons while the deadly pair are still punching like heavyweigh­ts.

And that’s if Kane is still at Tottenham at all, of course.

The Three Lions talisman was way below his best against Graham Potter’s superbly set-up side, who stifled his threat and defeated Spurs with an expertly executed gameplan.

Son, hooked after 87 minutes, was similarly starved of proper service on a day to forget for Conte.

It all added up to a missed opportunit­y – at exactly the wrong time of the campaign for Spurs.

Scoring 28 goals in their last nine Premier League games they came into this clash having won their last four matches.

But there wasn’t a clear sight of Brighton’s goal all afternoon as

Potter’s men performed their own version of lockdown to perfection.

Brighton’s workrate rattled Tottenham, and Dejan Kulusevski was lucky not be red-carded for a deliberate 27th-minute elbow aimed at the face of Marc Cucurella bizarrely ignored by VAR ref Lee Mason.

Cucurella was lucky to stay on himself later with a revenge stamp that floored the on-loan Juventus midfielder.

The game was crying out for a touch of class – and it came from the twinkling feet of Belgian Leandro Trossard.

With just seconds of normal time left Trossard chopped inside Eric Dier and poked in a right-footed shot to the delight of the travelling Brighton fans who saw their team triumph at Arsenal a week earlier.

There in a flash of Brighton brilliance was all the evidence Conte needs to persuade Levy to back him this summer.

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