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Nottingham Forest need not despair. I sat with the Tottenham fans at Anfield and Richarlison's goal should fool no one - it was a joyless pit of frustration and naked fury at how hollow Igor Tudor and

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Forest need not despair. Spurs fans at Anfield were angry and joyless - Daily Mail
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It was a goal which sent Nottingham Forest fans back into that fog of anxiety which has hovered all season: a narrative-shifting late Richarlison strike, 100 miles west at Anfield, prompting conclusions that Tottenham Hotspur had responded to Igor Tudor’s demands for some ‘fight’. That in some sense they had equalised because of him.

From my position in the Spurs end on Sunday afternoon, the reality was very different.

That late equaliser did send the travelling Spurs fans into delirium, crashing down into the rail seat barriers with renditions of ‘We are Tottenham’. But no one should be fooled.

An afternoon in that away end laid bare what the scandalous mismanagement of Tottenham Hotspur has created: a joyless pit of frustration and anger, descending into naked fury at times.

It didn’t start out that way on Sunday afternoon. On the concourse beforehand, there was the pre-match optimism and songs familiar to those who travel with almost any team.

North Londonders, Scandinavians, Americans, some in retro jerseys, some looking the height of fashion, some with children, some on the ales early and leathered by kick-off: all shared in the fragile belief. But the sentiment was skin deep, and the mood soon became oppressive and heavy.

‘Here we go,’ said someone behind me as Florian Wirtz sent Cody Gakpo in on goal in front of the massed ranks of the Kop at the other end of the pitch.

After his spectacular miss – setting the pattern of Liverpool’s afternoon – the strains of ‘Are you Tottenham in disguise?’ briefly sounded.

When a fanbase has become broken, setbacks confirm expectation and no one can see a way ahead. As Liverpool assumed an easy dominance, the noise level dropped. Then came Dominik Szoboszlai’s goal – from a free-kick which the wider Spurs fanbase felt should not have been awarded – and the desolate, stone-cold silence that followed its bleak inevitability.

Perhaps it would have helped if someone in the team’s ranks conveyed a basic impression of wanting to lead. There was, to all intents and purposes, no one demanding anything of anyone else.

From the sidelines, Tudor was doing a lot of gesticulating and shouting but, perhaps unsurprisingly given the way he has publicly castigated his players and humiliated goalkeeper Antonin Kinsky, the Spurs players did not pay him the remotest notice.

Briefly, the strains of ‘Is this a library?’ struck up – because Anfield is also presently struggling for joy. But any thought that the travelling Tottenham band might descend here intent on demonstrating the cussedness and fight that the squad are struggling for was dispelled.

Empty seats suggested that the away allocation was either not sold out, or that those who had forked out had not bothered travelling after the catastrophe in Spain last week, which leaves Tudor’s players facing a 5-2 Champions League deficit as they host Atletico Madrid in the second leg on Wednesday.

A few Spurs fans in the row before me focused on taking images of Mohamed Salah as he warmed up among Liverpool's substitutes. Some among the away contingent asked each other who Tottenham’s substitutes were. Hardly surprising, given the club were relying on such names as James Wilson and James Rowswell and Callum Olusesi.

A more familiar presence among the substitutes, Xavi Simons, was the one staring intently at the play as he went through his own warm-up on the sidelines.

The mood of deep gloom was made evident by the disinclination of some to return to the stand for the start of the second half. The shouts of ‘Tudor out’ had already been issued by then. Spurs have still been asking around about candidates to replace him.

Simons is one of the players you would have imagined Tudor might look to make more use of, given how he drove the team to recover a 2-2 draw against Manchester City last month and was man-of-the-match against Borussia Dortmund and Eintracht Frankfurt in back-to-back Champions League games.

Club captain Cristian Romero has not exactly proved the man for this crisis with his public criticism of the club's hierarchy. Instead, Tudor seems to have viewed keeping both the Dutchman and Randal Kolo Muani on the sidelines as a measure of his own strength.

The team’s resolve seemed stiffened and the travelling supporters were briefly lifted, too, though that optimism was punctured when Salah arrived and looked a treacherous presence as Liverpool attacked in front of us. The away end was blanketed in resignation – another defeat accepted – when Richarlison sent it into raptures.

Tudor opted not to join those players taking acclaim before supporters fuelled with some desperately needed positivity after a comeback which told them that this squad – depleted, with 13 players unavailable – just might have some fight in it.

The StatsPerform match data demonstrated how Simons had contributed – despite, rather than because of, Tudor.

From the time of his introduction to the action, he made more successful passes in the final third and more dribbles than any other player and was second only to Pape Matar Sarr for progressive ball-carries.

As the players drifted away, the chants of ‘We are staying up’ sounded from a few fans. It is a refrain which has belonged down the ages to those who know and accept that other clubs are superior to their own and yet who are damned if they will go down with a whimper.

Tottenham have not known such adversity in the contemporary era, as Forest, West Ham and Leeds United, who also belong to this relegation battle, all have. The question for the defining next few months is whether this fanbase can dispense with their despair and, for the present at least, embrace the fight they find themselves in. Forest will be hoping not.

The collision of the two teams at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium on Sunday looks monumental.

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The worrying flaws that continue to plague Liverpool, why nervy Reds can't stop conceding late at Anfield - and how much Arne Slot is to blame after another damaging setback against Spurs, writes LEWI

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Why nervy Liverpool can't stop conceding late at Anfield - Daily Mail
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On Oscar’s evening, here was a film we have all seen far too many times before. A boring script with a predictable ending and letdown performances from the star protagonists.

A team who sleepwalked to dropped points for the umpteenth time this season, a bunch of players and head coach who seem lost for ideas on how to stop the inevitable happening again.

No, not the much-berated, ridiculed Tottenham Hotspur and their equally-mocked interim head coach Igor Tudor, but Arne Slot’s Liverpool, the Premier League champions.

Both teams got exactly what they deserved. Spurs won their first point under Tudor in what was hardly a polished performance but at least one in which they showed some organisation, guts and fighting spirit, while Liverpool were left berating the same old story.

‘I don't know what happened, I have nothing to say,’ said Dominik Szoboszlai, the goal-scorer who was let down again for Liverpool. ‘In the last minute, again, I don't know how many times this season already. We have to wake up.

‘I feel flat. We have to wake up because if we carry on like this, we should be happy with the Conference League. I don't know why this is happening, I honestly don't know.’

That is the problem. Nobody seems to be able to arrest the slump.

Not Slot, not reigning player of the season Mohamed Salah (a substitute for the first hour), not the best defender in Premier League history Virgil van Dijk. Not any of these big-money players.

It is rinse and repeat: get into a commanding position, fluff several big chances and then capitulate late on. More than 20 times this season, Liverpool have conceded after the 75th minute.

When the clock ticks past that point, the anxiety inside Anfield rises several notches almost as if to say everyone knows what is going to happen, just cut to the chase and get on with it. This stadium has not been a fortress at all this season, more a melting pot of nerves.

How much of the blame should lie at Slot’s feet?

Certainly a high proportion, as is the world of football management. Tudor, for example, was not solely responsible for Antonin Kinsky’s mess-ups in Madrid or his team-mates’ slips midweek but he takes the brunt.

The boos at full-time were louder than they have been at any point of this season as fans have grown sick and tired of the wastefulness at one end and vulnerability at the other. Who can blame them?

They work hard in the week to follow their football team on the weekend. Of course no fan is entitled to seeing their team get results but Liverpool are boring to watch and have been all season. Even when they win, they often do not play as well as we all know they can.

There are a couple of minor positives we must note: the point here actually saw them leapfrog Chelsea, who lost to Newcastle on Saturday, into the top five which will almost guarantee Champions League football.

But do they deserve that? You could say the same about Liam Rosenior’s Chelsea, to be honest, but neither could grumble if they were left to Thursday nights in one of UEFA’s B-grade competitions next year.

It is also worth saying that Rio Ngumoha, the 17-year-old winger who made his first start in the Premier League here, did more than enough to show he deserves more minutes.

Liverpool are going careful with his body to not ask too much, too soon physically – but he is a supreme talent.

The rest of the attackers were poor, though. Cody Gakpo was unlucky not to make it 2-0 when Guglielmo Vicario tipped a shot on to the post but other than that, the Italian goalkeeper had a relatively quiet second half. Substitutes Salah and Hugo Ekitike were wasteful.

Florian Wirtz, likewise, was largely anonymous and Jeremie Frimpong, starting on Salah’s right wing, was ineffective. Are the above sub-par performances Slot’s fault? Maybe not entirely, but it feels that whoever he plays cannot win games for Liverpool right now.

This is not a new issue either, the Reds have been poor all season. You could say it has been six months but the problem, in truth, goes back further.

Every week, Slot bemoans how his team underperforms against their expected goals (xG) tally but after a certain amount of time, there must be a deeper-lying trouble that is bugging Slot.

The biggest one is the vulnerability his team shows every week. From half-time onwards, the ending was easy to envisage. How many times have a team equalised or scored a winner against them that prompted the reaction ‘that has been coming’?

The champions retreated and Spurs, a team devoid of confidence and staring down the barrel of a shocking relegation, started to fancy their chances.

They are not the first team to do that here this season and judging on the evidence of Slot’s inability to fix the issues, they will not be the last.

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Igor Tudor endures awkward exchange with Sky Sports reporter Patrick Davidson following Tottenham's 1-1 draw with Liverpool - as under-fire boss insists he NEVER feared getting the sack

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Igor Tudor endures awkward exchange with Sky Sports reporter Patrick Davidson following Tottenham's 1-1 draw with Liverpool - as under-fire boss insists he NEVER feared getting the sack - Daily Mail
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Igor Tudor insists he never feared getting sacked as Tottenham Hotspur boss during a tense interview with Sky Sports' Patrick Davidson after his side's gutsy draw at Anfield.

Richarlison scored a 90th-minute and deserved equaliser to cancel out Dominik Szoboszlai’s first-half free-kick as Tudor described the feeling as ‘like fresh air’ after ending Spurs’s six-match losing streak.

Asked how the valuable point feels, Tudor said: ‘Nice! (Like) some fresh air, good things for the confidence of the players, everyone around the club and especially the fans. Good team spirit, seeing the circumstances the team was in today, coming to Anfield with 12 (absent) players.

‘So this is something big. We stayed in the game, we believed, I felt that we could score the goal, the players also felt it, so, OK, it's nice.

‘It's a long way to our goal, which is to stay in the Premier League. There are still a lot of games to play, but today was important to show what they showed, regardless of the result. When you are honest, you need to be honest, give everything, then football will give you back.’

The Croatian boss, who was ridiculed midweek for a 5-2 loss at Atletico Madrid, added: ‘I have been coaching 15 years, I never was thinking one second about my future, one second even, I never think about my future or my past, I always think about training tomorrow, how to help.

‘I don't read nothing, don't watch nothing, the future is just imagination, future don't exist, it's a constant thing, of today, of tomorrow, training, so you are just losing energy thinking what will happen, don't give you nothing, never, this job in football, in life, nothing, just focus on now.

‘Here, that's the key, for the players even, you can get away from the fever in this way, what is thinking, what will happen, bring you in a state of mind, which is not, give you nothing, so stay now, be focused, what you can change, that's what every coach is doing.’

The interview ended on a sour note as Davidson grilled Tudor about comments he made during Friday's pre-match press conference, in which he bizarrely claimed the club may need a new manager to give the fans 'hope'.

'That is not a question for me,' he said, denying he made the statement Davidson put to him.

'I am the coach, you need to ask me about the players, how we play. It is a question that doesn't have sense, but you always insist. I am obliged to come to these press conferences otherwise I would stay at home. Always the same questions.

'Are we finished or not?' he said, before leaving the interview.

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Liverpool vs Tottenham - Premier League RECAP: All the reaction as Reds are BOOED off after Richarlison's late strike gives Igor Tudor a glimmer of hope in make-or-break game

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Liverpool vs Tottenham - Premier League LIVE: All the reaction as Reds are BOOED off after Richarlison's... - Daily Mail
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You know that we love posting the highlights here, and now that time has come.

I'm sure the Liverpool fans are long gone, so I don't have to tell them to scroll past this video.

But Spurs fans, watch away. Enjoy.

It wasn't all bad for Liverpool today. Yes, mostly, but not all.

The one positive was the performance of Rio Ngumoha - boy, was he brilliant this evening.

After seeing Max Dowman make history yesterday, the 17-year-old showed us that this country has two rising stars in the Premier League.

After a slow-ish start, Ngumoha became Liverpool's key outlet. He took on Pedro Porro over and over again, and just kept on beating him, time after time.

In fact, Ngumoha became the first player to attempt seven or more dribbles in a Premier League game and complete them all since Matheus Cunha for Wolves against Aston Villa in May 2023.

I get he is young, but I struggled to see why Arne Slot took him off. The youngster was by far and away Liverpool's biggest threat until the 60th minute. Once he came off, the chances dried up.

The lad has a bright future.

Well, maybe we spoke too soon on Igor Tudor.

The man isn't going anywhere just yet, especially after guiding Tottenham to a massive point at Anfield.

Many of us thought he should have been long gone before today's game, that Liverpool would rip apart his system and put the final nail in his coffin.

But no, Tudor switched things up, and finally got a positive result on the board.

Now, we can't get carried away; it's just one point. However, it's the first sign that maybe Tudor can get Spurs out of the mess they are in.

A massive result for him and Tottenham's survival hopes.

It's damning stat, after damning stat for Liverpool tonight.

The Reds have dropped seven points from winning positions at Anfield in the Premier League this season, their most since the 2016-17 campaign (also 7).

Anfield was a fortress last season, and of course before under Jurgen Klopp, but it's not like that these days.

I think today was one of the flattest atmospheres I have heard at the ground in all my years covering Liverpool.

The place has lost its sparkle.

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Liverpool 1-1 Tottenham: Igor Tudor shows there IS life left in his Spurs tenure but soft, meek Reds roll over again with shambolic late equaliser that edges Arne Slot closer to Anfield exit, writes I

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Liverpool 1-1 Tottenham: Igor Tudor shows there IS life left in his Spurs tenure but soft, meek Reds roll over again with shambolic late equaliser that edges Arne Slot closer to Anfield exit, writes IAN LADYMAN - Daily Mail
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They came to bury Igor Tudor. Metaphorically speaking, they had already dug the hole. But somehow, against enormous odds, the giant Croatian left the field at Anfield to a standing ovation from the supporters in the away end. There is some life left in Tudor’s spell as Tottenham interim manager yet, life in his team’s season perhaps.

As for Liverpool manager Arne Slot, well who really knows? His team of champions – how odd it feels to say that now – are soft and meek and shockingly easy to play against. The door to the Champions League places swings wide open for Liverpool but somehow Slot’s failing team sit outside the weakest top four in recent Premier League history. There are no excuses.

Ahead after 18 minutes through a Dominic Szoboszlai free-kick that Spurs goalkeeper Guglielmo Vicario really should have saved, Liverpool had the opportunity to sweep aside a team so weakened by injury and suspension that they couldn’t even fill their substitutes’ bench. Spurs came to Merseyside as the laughing stock of the Premier League, a team that knew only to lose.

But Liverpool couldn’t beat them. Not this Liverpool. They enjoyed possession and some territory and looked ready to go for the kill when Mo Salah – omitted at the start in deference to teenager Rio Ngumoha – was sent on with half an hour left. But as time wore on, so the feeling grew that there was something in this game for Tottenham.

Richarlison – starting his first league game since early January and booed throughout as a former Everton player – had been a nuisance throughout the game. Three times Liverpool goalkeeper Alisson Becker had saved from him.

But when Liverpool’s bumbling back four presented him with an opportunity in the 90th minute, his moment arrived. What a dreadful goal it was from a Liverpool point of view. What a shambles.

A long ball from the back needed heading away but Andrew Robertson decided not to do it. Instead he tried to bully Randal Kolo Muani and lost. Muani then got rid of Virgil van Dijk and when he set up Richarlison in front of the Kop, he couldn’t really miss.

At the end, Tudor took the applause of the Spurs fans modestly. He will know that this result – this single point – only takes Tottenham so far.

Once the Champions League second leg against Atletico Madrid is out of the way on Wednesday – Spurs are 5-2 down from the first leg – then the rest of the season truly begins. Tottenham host Nottingham Forest next weekend and are currently only a point ahead of them at the wrong end of the table. That will be a completely different kind of game, one that Spurs will have to win and as such the pressures will be different and will certainly be greater.

Can they cope with that? I wouldn't be so sure.

But if they don’t quite have a platform now from which to launch, at least they have some firm ground to stand on. It's something at least.

As for Liverpool, the decision to drop Salah had been coming. The Egyptian’s modest form that led to his exclusion from the team before Christmas had not hugely improved since his return from the African Cup of Nations and Slot would arguably have made this call sooner had it not been for the risks attached.

For much of the first half, Slot’s team were flat. They were better in the second half but not definitively so. By the end they were a team simply waiting to be embarrassed. Again.

They led through Szoboszlai’s free-kick and Cody Gakpo struck the base of a post. But much of what we saw was recognisably predictable as Tottenham at last managed to look organised and disciplined for the first time under their interim manager.

With thirteen players missing through injuries or suspension, Spurs were short on the bench. There was, though, none of the chaos and confusion that has characterised Tudor’s short time at the club and that they trailed at half-time was due largely to a mistake from a goalkeeper who has rarely been consistently good enough.

Szoboszlai takes good free-kicks. We know this. But this one – in the 18th minute – had none of the power or swerve of those fizzed in at the Kop End against Arsenal and Manchester City this season. This was a good one – up and over the Tottenham wall from 22 yards – but it was also a yard inside the post and at a very good height. Vicario got one hand to it but could only paw the ball into the goal. Tottenham and Tudor needed better than that and as a result trailed relatively early once again.

Before that they had threatened twice themselves through a Dominic Solanke raid down the left and then a stinging shot from the Brazilian Souza that his compatriot Alisson Becker touched over the crossbar. Indeed Spurs had probably just had their best 18 minutes under Tudor when Liverpool’s goal arrived. Bad timing, you could say.

Liverpool – with Jeremie Frimpong on one flank and young Ngumoha on the other – were briefly elevated to a plane of greater productivity. Ryan Gravenberch turned Pape Matar Sarr far too easily in centre field and drove a shot over from 25 yards before Florian Wirtz found Ngumoha in space and Pedro Porro was required to block the low shot.

Vicario did very well, meanwhile, to touch a low Gakpo drive on to his right hand post ten minutes before half-time. That transpired to be a huge save.

For a time, Liverpool looked ready to take some kind of proper control. But then, twice at the end of the half, an old foe threatened to hurt them as Richarlison came close with two headers. One travelled wide and the other – unmarked from a corner – brought a plunging two-handed save from Alisson.

Not fully fit after hamstring trouble, Alisson required Virgil van Dijk to take his goal kicks for him. But he proved his enduring worth once again ten minutes into the second half, diving to his right to deny Richarlison again after the Brazilian had held off Van Dijk to shoot from twelve yards.

It had become a more open game by this point. Ngumoha had shot across goal and wide after a Frimpong cross found him at the far post and, soon after that Alisson save, the 17-year-old winger was fed by Szoboszlai, beat a defender in the penalty area and delivered a low cross that had to be cleared. That, in essence, was why the young forward was in the team here. Liverpool have simply lacked that kind of incisive directness too often this season.

Ngumoha’s afternoon ended shortly after as Salah was sent along with Hugo Ekitike. Energy and tempo was immediately injected into Liverpool’s football, even if composure in the final third was still largely lacking.

Salah looked motivated and hungry. He immediately rolled Djed Spence and set up Ekitike who shot wildly over. Later he seized on a mistake by Radu Dragusin and Vicario saved his low shot with his heel, even if the referee awarded a goal kick.

Liverpool were more dangerous than they had been earlier but also carried an air of vulnerability. This was reflected in an edginess around Anfield.

Richarlison had already tested Alisson again with a shot from the edge of the penalty area and Liverpool did look a little ragged whenever Tottenham managed to occupy space between the midfield and the home back four.

Predictably, Spurs threatened late on. There was nothing to lose now and their supporters also sensed it. When the goal came, nobody was surprised. Liverpool have made a habit of this kind of thing this season and the longer we go on, the more likely it seems to roll Slot out of the door.

Liverpool’s Dutch coach saw his team clinch last season’s title by steamrolling Tottenham 5-1 last April. Here he was booed from the field.

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Jamie Carragher hits out at 'awful' and 'shocking' Guglielmo Vicario after timid attempt to save Dominik Szoboszlai's free-kick - as he insists 'Tottenham have got huge problems in goal'

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Jamie Carragher hits out at 'awful' and 'shocking' Guglielmo Vicario after timid attempt to save Dominik Szoboszlai's free-kick - as he insists 'Tottenham have got huge problems in goal' - Daily Mail
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Guglielmo Vicario has come under-fire once again from criticism from Jamie Carragher after failing to save Dominik Szoboszlai's free-kick in the first half of Tottenham's visit to Liverpool.

Szoboszlai fired Liverpool ahead on 18 minutes with a right-footed curling effort in front of The Kop at Anfield.

However, replays showed Vicario got a good hand to the ball but was unable to prevent it from going into the back of his net, something Carragher couldn't comprehend.

'He [Szoboszlai] is a free-kick specialist, but I tell you what Tottenham don't have a goalkeeping specialist,' he said during Sunday's co-commentary on Sky Sports.

'It's not far off the middle of the goal you have got to save that - wow. That's awful, absolutely shocking from the goalkeeper.

'The reason why the other fella [Antonin Kinsky] played in midweek is because he's not good enough, that's what it was. He then ends up coming on in the game which has been well-documented, but Tottenham have got huge problems in goal.'

Vicario's form at Tottenham is a microcosm of the club's issues as they stare at potential relegation this season.

He was dropped from Champions League last-16 first leg at Atletico Madrid in midweek but was substituted on after just 17 minutes as Antonin Kinsky endured a nightmare start to the match with Spurs 3-0 down.

Carragher's criticism of Vicario on Sunday though comes just three months after he singled him out following a 3-0 defeat at Nottingham Forest.

Callum Hudson-Odoi scored twice and Ibrahim Sangare also netted, but Tottenham's wounds were partly self-inflicted when they gave Forest the lead after 28 minutes.

After Cristian Romero had passed the ball back to Vicario, the Italian dallied, before he played a risky pass to Archie Gray on the edge of Spurs' penalty area.

Sangare tackled Gray though, and unselfishly squared for Hudson-Odoi to tap home in what was a defensive disaster for the visitors.

As Forest's players celebrated, Vicario was seen throwing his arms up in the air towards Gray, who looked devastated at his mistake.

And, speaking on Sky Sports' Extra Time show, Carragher was not impressed with Vicario in multiple ways.

'It's not just a keeper playing out,' he began. 'It's a keeper on his weak foot. Typical Vicario, he is always blaming someone else.

'Every time I see a goal go in, he throws his arms at someone else. He seems to do it a lot, and he did it again today.

'We can talk about young Archie Gray in midfield, but I'm putting this on the goalkeeper.

'Archie Gray could do a lot better, of course, he could, but what the lad does initially is he is trying to help someone who doesn't actually need help.

'The goalkeeper doesn't actually need any help because the ball should go out wide to his player. I don't know what the problem is. There is no real pressure on it.'

Expanding further, Carragher continued: 'But what Vicario does instead of passing with his right foot to [Micky] Van de Ven on his left foot, he then takes the ball on his left foot and tries to play a little dinky pass here.

'The point I am trying to make about being on your weak foot as a goalkeeper is, there is a reason you're in goal for one - you are probably not going to be amazing with your feet - but on your weak foot you are trying to be intricate and trying to pass it to a certain player's foot.

'Archie Gray can play with both feet, but he is predominantly right-footed - (and) he plays it to his left foot.

'Could his [Gray's] control be slightly better? Of course it could, but for me that is on the goalkeeper. It's a horrible ball to deal with. Credit for the pressing, you think of Sean Dyche, you think of Nottingham Forest getting after the opposition players, and they do really well.

'But talking about the left foot pass. It's not a great pass, it's bobbled in because it's on his weak foot, so that bobbling bouncing pass into Gray, on his weak foot as well - yes, control should be a little bit tighter - but even if his control was right, Sangare would still be on top of him.

'I'm laying all the blame on the goalkeeper, I am.'

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Odds-on favourites Liverpool host 15/2 outsiders Tottenham in a 'Big Six' showdown today - as both look to overturn poor runs of form

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Odds-on favourites Liverpool host 15/2 outsiders Tottenham today - Daily Mail
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Reigning champions Liverpool's inconsistency continued last time out, as Arne Slot's side were upset 1–0 by Turkish underdogs Galatasaray in the first leg of their Champions League Round of 16 clash.

However, they are tipped to win at home in a league clash today as they take on a Tottenham Hotspur side in even worse form than them.

At the time of writing, the Reds are a short 2/7 to be victorious on home soil, while their north London opponents are 15/2 underdogs.

For those anticipating a draw, that outcome is priced at 5/1 according to Sky Bet.

Liverpool reigned supreme in the reverse fixture, with the Merseyside club claiming a 2–1 victory at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium.

Elsewhere, in addition to the above market, there are multiple Popular RequestABets on offer with Sky Bet that can be found below.

Popular RequestABets

Tottenham to win, Tottenham most corners and Liverpool most cards

Tottenham to score 3+ goals and Tottenham 6+ corners

Richarlison to score, Tottenham to win and BTTS

Tottenham to score 2+ goals and Tottenham 5+ corners

Ekitike to score, Liverpool to win and BTTS

BTTS and each team 4+ corners

Liverpool to win, Liverpool most corners and Tottenham most cards

Liverpool to score 3+ goals and Liverpool 6+ corners

Tottenham to score 1+ goals and Tottenham 4+ corners

Liverpool to score 2+ goals and Liverpool 5+ corners

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'If there's one difference now, it's that we knew what it meant for Tottenham to go down': We are the last Spurs team to be relegated - this is the story of our 'hell on earth', what caused it and why

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We're the last Spurs team to go down - we fear for the current side - Daily Mail
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The last remnants of a talent cycle collided with managerial upheaval, the search for a new direction, suspect recruitment calls, a crippling fixture schedule.

Injuries took hold and a fragile defence leaked goals. A terrible run of results invited a crisis of confidence and Tottenham Hotspur sank into trouble, creating, in the words of one player, ‘a dressing room malaise’.

All of which sounds eerily like this miserable Spurs campaign in a nutshell, but this is the relegation season of 1976-77, as retold to Daily Mail Sport by those who were there.

It was an era of flowing locks and sideburns. When stars went by nicknames like ‘Meathook’ and showboated on muddy pitches to a soundtrack of disco and punk as London decked its streets with Silver Jubilee bunting.

For the start of a story that ended in tears at Maine Road, it might be best to rewind to September 1974, when legendary boss Bill Nicholson, disillusioned with the game he loved, stepped down.

Nicholson's replacement was Terry Neill from Hull City, and Spurs flirted with relegation and only escaped by a point by beating Leeds in the final game of the 1974-75 season.

They improved to finish ninth a year later before Neill was lured away by Arsenal - the club that gave him his senior debut as a player, and 275 appearances in all - and his coach Keith Burkinshaw was promoted after a poll among all the Spurs squad.

It was drawn up on a sheet of paper with a line down the middle with everyone asked to sign ‘for’ or ‘against’ the idea.

Burkinshaw too can count himself a Spurs legend, having led the club to win the FA Cup twice and the 1984 UEFA Cup, but his rookie season was anything but plain sailing.

Gerry Armstrong recalls the injuries above all else and attributes them to an incredible post-season tour in April 1976, when the team circled the globe to play nine games.

This was a great era of expansion for football. Spurs flew straight after the final league game to play three days later in Canada against Toronto Metros-Croatia, who had Eusebio up front. From Toronto they flew to Fiji via California and Hawaii, then played twice in New Zealand and five times in Australia. Nine games in total in 26 days, and then home via India and Italy.

'The Fiji team was full of rugby players,' recalls former Northern Ireland centre forward Armstrong. 'New Zealand and the Aussies were very competitive, very physical. Very few rules. But we won all the games.

'It was a great tour. Great for camaraderie and going to places you might never get to. We went to watch Jaws at the cinema in Australia, and nobody would go in the sea after that. Great for us younger players. I was rooming with Glenn Hoddle and we got a chance to show what we could do. But everybody was shattered by the end and the injuries came straight after.'

Several players went on international duty before a short break and the return for pre-season training and another tour in West Germany. 'We didn’t start the season well and never picked up,' says Armstrong.

Spurs, everyone agreed, were too good to go down, but clearly in a decline, something midfielder John Pratt traces back to Neill - who impressed as a young boss at Hull and with Northern Ireland, and once installed at White Hart Lane began dismantling Nicholson’s team only to quit inside two years - answering a call from Highbury.

'Terry was great for me but I’m not sure he was great for the club,' says Pratt, a veteran of 415 appearances in 15 years at Spurs. 'People called him a traitor but if I was managing another team, whoever it was, I’d have left them for Tottenham the same as he left us for Arsenal.

'Terry got rid of all the senior players. He thought Martin Peters had gone as a midfielder, so he sold him to Norwich. Martin went there and played at the back for another five years and he was their Player of the Year for the first two. Sometimes there’s no substitute for experience.'

England World Cup winner Peters left Spurs in 1975, as did Mike England, for Seattle Sounders, and Joe Kinnear and Phil Beal, who both joined Brighton. Cyril Knowles retired a year later. Martin Chivers moved to Servette in Switzerland after the world tour.

'Time wears on,' says Terry Naylor, who spent 11 years at Spurs from 1969, affectionately known as ‘Meathook’ as he worked as a porter at Smithfield market before turning pro. 'The hard part was replacing them.'

'We lost 5-0 at Derby when (former Spurs captain) Dave Mackay was in their team and afterwards John Pratt says to Dave, "How come you left Spurs then, Dave?" and he says, "Because I weren’t good enough for them anymore".

'That says it all, really. Dave Mackay was still a man mountain for most people. If you want to be at the top, you need the cream. That was the team I went into. Full of world-class players. What they could do with a ball and the way they saw and played the game was beautiful. You become part of that machine, and you become better with better players.'

Spurs had been in Division One since 1950, crowned champions for the first time in 1951. Nicholson was appointed in 1958 and led them to eight major trophies in 16 years.

In 1961, they were the first team in the 20th century to win the League and FA Cup Double. They won the FA Cup again a year later and the European Cup Winners’ Cup a year after that, the first English team to win a trophy in Europe. They added another FA Cup in 1967, two League Cups and the UEFA Cup in 1972.

'We were spoiled,' says Naylor. 'And looking back, we signed players who just weren’t the quality of those going out, but you don’t know that until you’ve put them to the test.

'I’m not going to have a pop at anyone. I felt sorry for those coming in. How do you replace those people? You can’t blame them. They gave their all. Probably like the boys now.'

Steve Perryman, Ralph Coates and Pat Jennings were surviving stalwarts of more successful times, and exciting young players were emerging, including Hoddle and Armstrong.

Neill’s signings included John Duncan from Dundee, Don McAllister from Bolton and Willie Young from Aberdeen. In the summer of '76, Burkinshaw signed, among others, Ian Moores from Stoke, John Gorman from Carlisle and Peter Taylor from Crystal Palace.

Taylor’s debut was a 4-2 defeat at West Bromwich Albion. His second was an 8-2 shellacking at Derby, where Mackay was manager. 'Keith went round the whole changing room after the game with what we didn’t do well,' recalls Taylor. 'We probably let everyone down.'

Another inquest followed on Monday. They won 1-0 at Birmingham next time out, but the trend was set. They leaked three at Everton and five at West Ham.

Alfie Conn was the last player signed by Nicholson. He came from Rangers, a flamboyant midfielder with distinctive long hair and shirt untucked, and soon became a darling of the fans. Not least for his sizzling display against Leeds when Spurs had to win to avoid relegation in April 1975.

In White Hart Lane folklore, it will always be the day Conn sat down on the ball during the game.

'Leeds were a top team, and going to play the European Cup final,' says Naylor. 'We needed to win to stay up. We know they’re in the final and they know we know they’re in the final.

'So, we’re going along nicely and we’re 3-1 up when Alfie sat on the ball. Billy Bremner came marching over to me and says, "Hey Terry, he tries anything like that again, and we start playing". I went, "Aye all right, Billy". Next thing, Peter Lorimer hit this ball into the top corner from what must’ve been 40 yards. I went straight to Alfie and said, "Turn it in, will you".

'Cyril Knowles scored, we won 4-2 and stayed up but we could see then things were going a bit wonky.'

Conn recounts the relegation campaign in his autobiography The Alfie Conn Story: What’s It All About, published in 2024. He left Spurs in March 1977 to join Celtic, making him the first to play on both sides of Glasgow’s Old Firm divide since the Second World War.

He adored his time in London but his recollections of the doomed campaign include ‘backbiting’ and player power, with an example from pre-season in West Germany when Burkinshaw called a meeting but was overruled by players, who wanted to go out drinking.

Conn accepts his share of the blame, but thought Burkinshaw 'simply wasn’t strong enough' and added: 'Going through our crisis, it was hell on earth as you could see what potentially might fix it, but the malaise was too ingrained in our dressing room for anything to really make a difference.'

Second-tier Cardiff City dumped Spurs out of the FA Cup and third-tier Wrexham won at White Hart Lane in the League Cup. The Cardiff defeat in January sparked another inquest.

'What did that sort out?' wrote Conn. 'We spent nearly an hour and a half discussing why I hadn’t challenged for three balls in the air. The following day there was another meeting. I wasn’t there, because I had been dropped for the game against Queens Park Rangers, but again I was the target – this time over throw-ins. That’s when I knew my time was up.'

Two months later he was playing for the reserves against Hereford United, when he was substituted and told there was someone to see him. Celtic boss Jock Stein was waiting to tell Conn he had agreed a transfer fee and booked him a haircut.

Division One had 22 teams and the foot of the table became congested. 'We still believed,' says Armstong. 'Still thinking we could turn it around with one good performance.'

But five games without a win starting with defeat at Arsenal on Easter Monday were damaging because rivals had games in hand.

'Going down wasn’t a pleasant thought,' says Pratt. 'It was a cross to bear. If there’s one difference between then and now, it’s that we were in no doubt what it meant to be relegated as Tottenham Hotspur.

'It is a big club with a fantastic history. I was always proud to pull that shirt on. I wasn’t the best Tottenham player ever, but they all knew I was trying.'

A 5-0 hammering at Manchester City in the penultimate game left Spurs praying for a miracle that did not materialise.

Pratt winces as he recalls giving the ball away to City’s Willie Donachie. Naylor recalls four or five days of introspection. 'Looking at where we went wrong,' he says. 'We had a marvellous Tottenham crowd behind us.'

Armstrong’s abiding memories of Maine Road are of tears in the dressing room. 'The pressure built up and then a beating like that when we needed a result...' says Armstrong. 'That was devastating.'

Spurs finished bottom, relegated with Stoke and Sunderland. West Ham escaped by beating Manchester United 4-2 on the Monday after the season should have ended.

Coventry and Bristol City escaped three days later in very controversial fashion, playing out a draw in a game where a delayed kick-off meant they knew a point was enough because Sunderland had lost the same night. Animosity still lingers on Wearside.

Spurs spent one season in Division Two, and it remains their only season away from the top flight in the last 76 years.

Burkinshaw found his feet as a manager in the second tier, built a team and after promotion signed Argentina World Cup stars Ossie Ardiles and Ricky Villa to launch another successful era of four trophies in 10 years.

'Relegation gave them an almighty kick up the backside,' says Taylor. 'We all felt responsible. Thankfully, there was enough love and determination inside the club from people who wanted to get the club straight back up.

'That’s why we had a very good season the season after. That’s what worries me if the same thing happens. I worry about the people there not doing that.'

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Time up for Igor Tudor? Spurs 'actively working on replacements' for under-fire interim boss as club consider ANOTHER change amid relegation threat

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Time up for Igor Tudor? Spurs 'actively working on replacements' for under-fire interim boss as club consider ANOTHER change amid relegation threat - Daily Mail
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Tottenham are actively on the lookout for new managers to replace Igor Tudor in case they choose to sack him after the weekend, according to a report.

Tudor's reign has been a disaster so far, with the interim coach losing all four of his games in charge since replacing Thomas Frank as Spurs continue to plummet towards the relegation zone.

They take on Liverpool at Anfield on Sunday, and could find themselves in the bottom three if results fail to go their way this weekend.

According to the Athletic, the club are on the hunt for potential replacements in case they do choose to make a change. It's unclear whether the club would look to appoint another interim or a longer-term option.

Croat Tudor, 47, has come under criticism for his man-management of his players following his side's 5-2 Champions League defeat by Atletico Madrid.

Having opted to start Antonin Kinsky in goal over Guglielmo Vicario, he swapped the two after just 17 minutes after Kinsky had made two errors. As the goalkeeper left the field and headed down the tunnel, Tudor ignored him as players rushed to show concern.

Despite the predictions of many, he remains in a job and will take charge of this weekend's game.

The Spurs squad has been decimated by injury in recent weeks, with the likes of Micky van de Ven, Cristian Romero and Joao Palhinha all ruled out of the weekend's game.

The lengthy injury list also includes the likes of Wilson Odobert, James Maddison, Lucas Bergvall and Destiny Udogie.

Tudor himself was quizzed on his position on Friday, claiming he 'laughs' at the idea a different coach could do better.

That is despite Spurs being in free-fall under his leadership with many questioning his man management following his actions - or lack of - during the Champions League humbling.

'People think a new coach will come in and things will change and the problems will resolve,' Tudor told Sky Sports on Friday. 'It makes me laugh.

'When people want a new coach, it's a new hope. People always want new hope that things will change but the reality is totally different. The reality is not that.

'In this world where everyone has an opinion, you can never win. But as coaches we have to focus on what we can change. We need to stay calm and believe in ourselves.'

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Paul Merson names the only reason Igor Tudor hasn't been sacked as Spurs boss and why he will be 'shocked' if he remains in charge for 'cup final' against Nottingham Forest

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Paul Merson names the only reason Igor Tudor hasn't been sacked as Spurs boss and why he will be 'shocked' if he remains in charge for 'cup final' against Nottingham Forest - Daily Mail
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Paul Merson has insisted that Igor Tudor is only still Tottenham manager because no one wants to walk into a fixture against Liverpool.

Tudor is under immense pressure as interim boss, having lost all four games in charge and coming under criticism for his man-management of his players following his side's 5-2 Champions League defeat by Atletico Madrid.

Having opted to start Antonin Kinsky in goal over Guglielmo Vicario, he swapped the two after just 15 minutes after Kinsky had made two errors. As the goalkeeper left the field and headed down the tunnel, Tudor ignored him as players rushed to show concern.

Despite the prediction of many, he remains in a job and will take charge of this weekend's game against Liverpool, which could result in Spurs officially slipping into the bottom three.

But there's only one reason why he will oversee that game, according to Merson: because no one else wants to.

'I am and I'm not,' Merson said on Sky Sports when asked if he was surprised that Tudor is still in charge. 'I am because of the results and I'm not because it's Liverpool away.

'I don't know what manager would want to come in for that game. There are timings - I think they will wait until this game is over and it gives them another week then before the big game.'

It was then put to Merson that any incoming manager could have seen Sunday's game at Anfield - but the former Arsenal man rubbished that idea.

'No,' he replied bluntly. 'Who did we see it with, Ange (Postecoglou)? At Forest? he took it at Arsenal, they got ripped to shreds and it was the start of going down. It's not a free hit at all, you come in and get beat three or four and it's, "what has he done?".

'I think they will wait and I'll be shocked if he's manager next week against Nottingham Forest.'

Tudor himself was quizzed on his position prior to the match against Liverpool, claiming he 'laughs' at the idea a different coach could do better.

That's despite Spurs being in free-fall under his leadership with many questioning his man management following his actions - or lack of - during the Champions League humbling.

'People think a new coach will come in and things will change and the problems will resolve,' Tudor told Sky Sports on Friday. 'It makes me laugh.

'When people want a new coach, it's a new hope. People always want new hope that things will change but the reality is totally different. The reality is not that.

'In this world where everyone has an opinion, you can never win. But as coaches we have to focus on what we can change. We need to stay calm and believe in ourselves.'

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