The Prospects: Tynan Thompson, Tottenham Hotspur
The Athletic returns after the winter recess to look again at some of the emerging academy talent that may have a chance at appearing in a senior first team match near you.
Sometimes our scouting missions bear little fruit, but just before Christmas, a look at an exciting young winger at Tottenham Hotspur proved bountiful, certainly in terms of goals.
Tynan Thompson is a winger being spoken about in highly positive terms, and he certainly demonstrated why in a UEFA Youth League victory against Slavia Prague last month.
The player
Name: Tynan Thompson
Club: Tottenham Hotspur
Date of birth: April 17, 2008 (17)
Position: Winger
The back story
Born in Croydon, south London, Thompson began his footballing education with Lambeth Tigers before joining Tottenham’s under-12s.
An exciting, right-footed winger who plays off the left, Thompson has made steady progress through the ranks over the last five years to become one of the more exciting prospects emerging from Spurs’ academy.
He signed his first professional contract last summer and has been on the first-team bench twice (the Carabao Cup victory against Doncaster Rovers in September and the Champions League defeat at Paris Saint-Germain in November) but has yet to be handed his senior debut.
For the youth teams, he has come to prominence this season, with 11 goals in 16 appearances across Premier League 2, the EFL Trophy, the FA Youth Cup and the UEFA Youth League.
His club displays have attracted international attention, leading to five caps for England’s combined under-17s/18s side.
He has been especially impressive in the Youth League, an under-19 competition that mirrors the senior Champions League, scoring seven goals in six appearances and just four starts, including three in the game The Athletic watched.
What we saw
It is not often a player scores a hat-trick and is overshadowed, but it was Luca Williams-Barnett, previously profiled in The Athletic’s Prospects series, who got the headlines against Slavia Prague last month.
Williams-Barnett, playing as the No 10, scored five times in the 9-1 victory at Tottenham’s Hotspur Way training ground in Enfield, but Thompson also produced an impressive display that promises much for the future.
Already taller than 6ft (over 183cm), he looks physically powerful, despite his tender years, but his stature is accompanied by incredibly quick feet.
He was afforded plenty of space as Tottenham played most of the game at pace on the transition, and picked off the Slavia defence repeatedly when attacking fluidly, and he was always eager to pick up the ball, turn and attack the defenders.
His physical presence also made him effective defensively at set pieces and even though the game was rather one-sided, he didn’t shirk his out-of-possession duties, supporting left-back Harry Byrne.
He also pressed effectively from the front. He didn’t overcommit or dive in, but decelerated to his man, blocked off angles and forced play into Tottenham’s traps.
But it was in attack that Thompson truly shone. Although right-footed, he looked to manipulate the ball with his left to make himself less predictable when taking on players and wasn’t afraid to go on his left on the outside of defenders, as his finish for Tottenham’s first goal demonstrated.
As Tottenham broke forward down the right, he held back on the left in open space and when Callum Olusesi picked him out, he performed a right-footed stepover before picking out the opposite bottom corner with his left.
It was also clear he liked to come off the touchline when he could and often popped up into central areas to support main striker Leo Black, who was operating like a false nine to make space for such movement, especially for Williams-Barnett.
It was from such movement inside that Thompson picked up his second, using his pace to outsprint a lax Prague defence and reach a long ball from goalkeeper Dylan Thompson before coolly finishing with his right foot.
His hat-trick goal in the second half again demonstrated his finishing prowess as he was played in by Black into the left channel and opened up his body to slide a right-foot finish past the ‘keeper.
Though Williams-Barnett was the standout performer, Thompson was a close second.
It would be interesting to see how he performs against a less open, more entrenched defence and whether his decision-making and sharp passing could help Tottenham open them up. Premier League defences rarely leave you such space to run into.
There was some variety in the finishes he produced and he seemed keen to get into goalscoring areas off the flank and be involved, which shows an appetite for the game.
As always, there will be areas for improvement that determine his future as he matures, but Thompson is one of the encouraging crop of youngsters coming through at Tottenham that may stand a chance, based on this display and others in recent months.