The Daily Telegraph - Sport

Nice one, Son! Spurs striker’s winner stuns the champions

Tottenham 1 — 0 Man City

- By Jason Burt CHIEF FOOTBALL CORRESPOND­ENT at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium

No more “the Harry Kane team”? Pep Guardiola once infamously labelled Tottenham Hotspur just that and as Kane remains desperate to join him at Manchester City, this was a glimpse of what might be achieved without the star striker.

The line from Tottenham remains that they steadfastl­y do not want to sell but Kane was, as expected, not even in the squad as Nuno Espirito Santo achieved a defiant, memorable victory in his first game as head coach. Match-winner Son Heungmin took the applause as he was last to leave the pitch, with the broadest of smiles and patting his heart as he did so.

Son’s goal settled the game and how delicious that will feel for Spurs, given that he committed his own future to the club by signing a new four-year deal this summer. Nuno played Son as his central striker with the outstandin­g Lucas Moura on the right and, behind him, Japhet Tanganga an uncompromi­sing defender. The 22-year-old academy product earned renditions of “he’s one of our own”, which used to be reserved for Kane.

Instead there was another song for him. An angry, defiant chorus.

“Are you watching Harry Kane?” belted out the jubilant Spurs fans, and it grew more spiky as they realised they were actually about to beat City. Guardiola’s team became only the third to win the Premier League and then lose their opening fixture the following campaign. It was the first time Guardiola had lost an opening game since 2008.

Finally Spurs came out fighting. Finally they counter-attacked. After months of feeling under siege, they emphatical­ly hit back.

Defeating City is a result to savour at any time, but especially under these trying circumstan­ces and especially, finally, in front of a full stadium when the atmosphere could so easily have turned against them with a poor performanc­e. The acoustics were astonishin­g, as was the enveloping sense of defiance in what was a richly deserved win. There was no fortune about it. Nuno had them fired up.

For Guardiola, there were more questions than answers, not least whether City can prise away Kane. But also how does he get the best out of £100million signing Jack Grealish, who too often played almost the same role as Raheem Sterling – drifting out to the left – until the latter was replaced with 20 minutes to go. There was also a worrying injury to Ilkay Gundogan, who appeared to damage a shoulder.

“Harry Kane, he wants to be blue,” sang the City fans – but they were left feeling that colour as their team barely achieved a meaningful effort on goal.

Guardiola admitted they were not “clinical”, although he continues to protest (publicly at least) that he does not desperatel­y need a centreforw­ard. But, if not Kane, City have to find someone else quickly.

The goal summed up Spurs’ superb endeavour. They broke from their own penalty area, with Moura hooking the ball over his shoulder to Steven Bergwijn, who ran from deep before finding Son. Nathan Ake erred by backing off and Ederson was distracted by Ruben Dias’s awkward attempts to block Son’s shot as the forward cut in on his left foot and angled the ball into the

corner of the net from the edge of the area. It was poor defending, but it was no more than Spurs deserved.

Whatever happens this season it appears Nuno will have Spurs more organised, more aggressive and more purposeful. That was summed up in a magnificen­t second-half performanc­e, with Davinson Sanchez hunting down substitute Kevin De Bruyne and Oliver Skipp, another academy graduate back from his loan at Norwich City, harrying and scurrying around the pitch.

Once they conceded City had time. But they never really looked like turning the game around and it was Spurs who went closest when Moura again ran with the ball, riding challenges until he was chopped down. Referee Anthony Taylor played the advantage and the ball fell to Bergwijn, who struck the sidenettin­g with only Ederson to beat.

And to think Nuno did this with none of the summer signings on the pitch until Cristian Romero came on in the 90th minute, without Kane, and with scepticism as to whether he is the right man for the job (given that he was way down Spurs’ list of potential managers).

City were also weakened, but in the opening exchanges looked like they would blow Spurs away. There was Gundogan’s free-kick deflected narrowly over, a Fernandinh­o header just wide as Hugo Lloris flapped at a cross, and a shot from Joao Cancelo just wide.

On the touchline, Nuno stamped a foot in frustratio­n. As well he might. Spurs could not even gain a foothold. Thousands of flags had been distribute­d before kick-off and it seemed Spurs were raising a white one as the game unfolded.

But how that changed. Yes, City had the best chance before Spurs scored, with Riyad Mahrez slipping and miscuing from just seven yards out when he was unmarked, but Spurs had settled by then. Moura’s volley was turned behind by Gundogan on the goal-line and Son’s shot deflected a foot wide.

Once they scored, once there was lift-off, Spurs had even more of a cause to fight for, and there was never a moment when they looked like letting go. Maybe there is a future for them without Kane.

 ??  ?? Picture perfect: Son Heung-min celebrates his winner as the Spurs players refused to be distracted by the absence of Harry Kane (right)
Picture perfect: Son Heung-min celebrates his winner as the Spurs players refused to be distracted by the absence of Harry Kane (right)
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 ??  ?? Match-winner: Son Heung-min finds the City net after evading defender Nathan Ake
Match-winner: Son Heung-min finds the City net after evading defender Nathan Ake

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