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So Tottenham Hotspur have not entirely forgotten how to play football after all. Three days after Liverpool’s siege of north London, which saw Spurs resort to an uncharacteristically dour approach that drew the first serious criticism of José Mourinho’s reign, his side survived a late Middlesbrough onslaught to reach the fourth round of the FA Cup. Southampton at St Mary’s now await.
That a much-changed Middlesbrough made it so easy for Spurs, conceding two criminally slack goals before substitute George Saville pulled one back at the death, should not overshadow just important this result is for Mourinho. Spurs, who were without a win in four, are already out of the League Cup and surely have even less chance of winning the Champions League than last year. The FA Cup, then, is the club’s only realistic hope of the kind of success he has so brazenly promised.
Given Tottenham’s recent troubles, Jonathan Woodgate’s Middlesbrough would have hoped to have lasted longer than two minutes before conceding. Instead, hapless back-up goalkeeper Tomás Mejías gifted Giovani Lo Celso his opening goal, with another moment of defensive slackness affording Érik Lamela the opportunity to double Tottenham’s lead a few minutes later. So impressive at the Riverside, Middlesbrough did pull one back at the death, only to run out of time chasing an unlikely equaliser that would have forced thirty minutes of extra time.
Until Saville’s late strike, this had been one of the most routine performances of the so far erratic Mourinho era. And there was plenty to encourage Mourinho after such a difficult few weeks. Lo Celso and Lamela — deployed alongside one another in attack for the first time — impressed with their one-touch combinations. 20-year-old defender Japhet Tanganga was again outstanding. And, on the other flank, Ryan Sessegnon looked increasingly confident at left back, even going close to scoring with a decidedly Gareth Bale-esque drive and daisy cutter across the face of goal.
But, this being Tottenham, there was plenty to frustrate, too. The team’s lack of a focal point without the injured Harry Kane will surely need addressing in this month’s window, while Davinson Sánchez, so resolute against Liverpool, endured an evening to forget. The Colombian spent more time on his arse than his feet and offered Middlesbrough a route back into the game when he failed to clear a long punt forward. In nipped Saville, who took advantage of the retreating Tanganga and slotted past Paulo Gazzaniga’s half-hearted dive.
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1/11 Paulo Gazzaniga - 7
Showed a calm head under pressure. Delivered when called upon (obviously excluding the late goal...) Made a good save off a Middlesbrough free-kick in the 54th minute. Spurs would have been trouble without his efforts.
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2/11 Japhet Tanganga - 7
Another mature performance from the youngster. Largely solid at the back and even came close to scoring with a fizzed effort across goal. Threatening going forward down the flank, but could have perhaps done better for Middlesbrough's goal. Still, plenty of positives to take from this.
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3/11 Davinson Sanchez - 5
Misplaced pass early on almost saw Tottenham concede what would have been a very sloppy goal. Occasionally struggled with Middlesbrough’s front line, too. Not his finest performance in a Spurs shirt.
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4/11 Jan Vertonghen - 6
Marshalled the backline well and asserted him against Middlesbrough’s front line. Mopped up the mistakes of those around him.
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5/11 Ryan Sessegnon - 7
Threatened with a chance on 25 minutes after some brilliant interplay and a surging run into the box. Intelligent in his decision-making. Bright display from the youngster.
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6/11 Eric Dier - 6
The most Eric Dier imaginable. As you were.
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7/11 Harry Winks - 7
Up to his usual tricks, twisting and turning in the centre of the park, providing that initial spark to get Spurs’ attacks moving. Bit clumsy here and there, but a solid night.
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8/11 Giovani Lo Celso - 7
Scored Tottenham’s opener with a composed finish from close range. Lively for much of the match. Offered Tottenham plenty in the final third through his positioning and darting runs.
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9/11 Christian Eriksen - 6
Very routine performance from the Dane. Nothing out of the ordinary.
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10/11 Erik Lamela - 7
Showed great talent to weave his way past Middlesbrough’s defence before calmly slotting home Spurs’ second. Quiet at times after that.
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11/11 Lucas Moura - 7
The little pulsing heartbeat to Tottenham’s attack. Frequently cut through Middlesbrough with his mazy runs and tricky feet. Came close to scoring on occasion, too. Put in a good shift in all.
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1/11 Paulo Gazzaniga - 7
Showed a calm head under pressure. Delivered when called upon (obviously excluding the late goal...) Made a good save off a Middlesbrough free-kick in the 54th minute. Spurs would have been trouble without his efforts.
Getty Images
2/11 Japhet Tanganga - 7
Another mature performance from the youngster. Largely solid at the back and even came close to scoring with a fizzed effort across goal. Threatening going forward down the flank, but could have perhaps done better for Middlesbrough's goal. Still, plenty of positives to take from this.
Tottenham Hotspur FC via Getty I
3/11 Davinson Sanchez - 5
Misplaced pass early on almost saw Tottenham concede what would have been a very sloppy goal. Occasionally struggled with Middlesbrough’s front line, too. Not his finest performance in a Spurs shirt.
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4/11 Jan Vertonghen - 6
Marshalled the backline well and asserted him against Middlesbrough’s front line. Mopped up the mistakes of those around him.
Getty Images
5/11 Ryan Sessegnon - 7
Threatened with a chance on 25 minutes after some brilliant interplay and a surging run into the box. Intelligent in his decision-making. Bright display from the youngster.
Getty Images
6/11 Eric Dier - 6
The most Eric Dier imaginable. As you were.
Getty Images
7/11 Harry Winks - 7
Up to his usual tricks, twisting and turning in the centre of the park, providing that initial spark to get Spurs’ attacks moving. Bit clumsy here and there, but a solid night.
Getty Images
8/11 Giovani Lo Celso - 7
Scored Tottenham’s opener with a composed finish from close range. Lively for much of the match. Offered Tottenham plenty in the final third through his positioning and darting runs.
Tottenham Hotspur FC via Getty I
9/11 Christian Eriksen - 6
Very routine performance from the Dane. Nothing out of the ordinary.
Tottenham Hotspur FC via Getty I
10/11 Erik Lamela - 7
Showed great talent to weave his way past Middlesbrough’s defence before calmly slotting home Spurs’ second. Quiet at times after that.
Getty Images
11/11 Lucas Moura - 7
The little pulsing heartbeat to Tottenham’s attack. Frequently cut through Middlesbrough with his mazy runs and tricky feet. Came close to scoring on occasion, too. Put in a good shift in all.
Tottenham Hotspur FC via Getty I
With Sánchez in so much trouble, it was then fortunate for Spurs that Middlesbrough had earlier been in such a charitable mood. The game was just two minutes old when back-up goalkeeper Mejías decided to deal with an admittedly overhit backpass by attempting to control the ball, rather than lumping it clear. It was the wrong decision. With Lucas Moura closing in on him like a homing missile Mejías panicked, his slack pass going straight to the feet of Lo Celso, who elegantly cut inside and rolled a confident finish into the corner of the goal. Remarkably, Mejías began his career at Real Madrid. He played for them once. On this evidence, it was an appearance too many.
Any hope Middlesbrough could claw their way back into this match like Spurs managed at the Riverside suffered a mortal blow a few minutes later. Again, the Championship outfit only had themselves to blame. Captain Jonny Howson failed to deal with an awkwardly bouncing ball, presenting Lamela with the chance to pinch the ball and scurry down the pitch. He sidestepped around Paddy McNair, shimmied beyond Dael Fry and clipped a neat finish across the face of Mejías, who at least on this ocassion was blameless.
There were numerous chances for Tottenham to score a third. Lucas Moura’s low drive tickled the outside of the post. Christian Eriksen saw a low free-kick saved. And Sessegnon even missed an open goal. But Middlesbrough somehow survived and even threatened to stun Spurs when Saville pulled one back.
Rudy Gestede then had a half chance to grab the equaliser but directed his last-gasp header over the bar. Spurs had done enough, scraping past their Championship opposition and into the fourth round.