The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Spotlight on Spurs’ star man

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Harry Kane won his fitness race to go straight back into Tottenham’s starting line-up against Liverpool.

The England captain, who missed Spurs’ previous nine games due to ankle ligament damage, replaced semi-final hat-trick hero Lucas Moura.

Courier Sport takes a closer look at Kane’s performanc­e in his side’s 2-0 defeat. Early impact Kane was a peripheral figure for the whole of the first half. Out-muscled in a couple of early duels by Liverpool defender Virgil van Dijk, he struggled to work himself into the game as Tottenham offered little threat in the final third. His best moment in the opening 45 minutes was a clearing header from a Liverpool corner. He was more involved in the second period and tidy in possession, but that was never in threatenin­g positions. Attacking threat Kane was comfortabl­y dealt with by both Van Dijk and central defensive partner Joel Matip, but in fairness he lacked support from Dele Alli, Christian Eriksen and Son Heung-min. When Tottenham enjoyed their better moments in the second half he was neat enough with the ball at his feet. A tumble in the box after going down under Matip’s challenge late in the game did not move Slovak referee Damir Skomina. Overall

In a disappoint­ing final in which neither side replicated the form they had shown in their respective semi-finals, Kane failed to have a single effort on goal until firing straight at Liverpool goalkeeper Alisson in the closing stages.

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