Inspiring from Angehttps://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/articles/c51n5nz05pro
It would be great to get it done this weekend. Because we need 1000% focus next Thursday on turning around the game in Greece.
It’s pretty much out of our hands to get it done this weekend…if we beat Brighton then Liverpool still need to do the business against Spurs. Even if both Villa and Spurs draw then that equates to 3pts off the “magic number” of 6, so would just need 1x Villa win or 1x Spurs defeat out of the remaining games to push the CL spot over the line.
If through whatever combo of results we can get 4th by close of play Sunday and get Emi back I think we will get through in Athens.
It really is starting to look like an absolutely terrible end to the season for Spurs. They’ve collapsed entirely in recent weeks, and it’s going wrong all over the pitch. Having gone 39 games without failing to score in a Premier League game, they have now been effortlessly shut out in three of their last four away games by Fulham, Newcastle and Chelsea. These are not teams with conspicuously good defences. All have shipped 50-something goals this season. All have, somehow, conceded more goals than Spurs.And yet all have been able to shut Spurs down with indecent ease in quick succession. It’s now just a single goal and a single point on the road for Postecoglou’s side in four game since so spectacularly dismantling Aston Villa in March.Back then, it really did look like advantage Spurs in the race for fourth. The Sky commentators were even tonight still pretending that Spurs had Champions League ambitions and would need a win to boost said ambitions here. Adorable, really. No Spurs fan is still looking up at Villa after their recent efforts; they are all looking down at Newcastle, Manchester United and now also Chelsea with a rising and familiar feeling of nausea.None of the three teams below them should be giving it up just yet, not on this and other recent evidence.If you wanted an example of Spurs’ current confusion and uncertainty, you didn’t have to look far. They could be seen all over the pitch, from the ramshackle attempts at defending set-pieces to the desperate lack of imagination in the final third against Chelsea’s own rejigged and makeshift defence.But the clearest one of all was the sight of a team that has worn white shorts all season deciding to chuck on some blue ones to play against a team in blue. Such a profoundly nonserious football club that even wearing their traditional colours becomes an act of unfathomable idiocy.