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Tottenham star avoids surgery but will need a mask when he return to Premier League action

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Tottenham star avoids surgery but will need a mask when he return to Premier League action - Daily Mail
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Tottenham have been told Randal Kolo Muani does not require surgery on his broken jaw.

Kolo Muani was checked over by a specialist on Monday to assess the damage from a collision with Harry Maguire during the first half of Saturday’s 2-2 draw against Manchester United in the Premier League.

He was replaced just before half time and later withdrawn from the France squad.

It is another blow for Spurs boss Thomas Frank and for the 26-year-old striker who has endured a disjointed start to his season on loan from Paris Saint-Germain and yet more positive than it could have been.

After making his debut as a substitute in the Champions League against Villarreal, Kolo Muani missed five games after picking up a dead leg in training.

He returned to make his first start for his new club at Everton and impressed with an assist for Wilson Odobert against Copenhagen last week, but is now facing another fight for fitness with big games on the horizon.

Tottenham’s next fixture is the derby at Arsenal on the first game back after the international break before they travel to PSG in the Champions League.

Kolo Muani is available to play against his parent club according to the terms of his loan agreement, but it leaves Frank with limited room for manoeuvre if he is ruled out by this latest injury.

A protective mask will be needed to get him playing again sooner rather than later.

Spurs have injuries stacking up. Centre forward and record signing Dominic Solanke has not started a game all season.

Solanke was troubled by an ankle problem throughout pre-season, tried to solve it with rest and rehabilitation before having an ankle operation at the start of October.

Mathys Tel, who replaced Kolo Muani on against United on Saturday, is not named in the Champions League squad.

Spurs had to leave him out because they did not have the space because they have not maximised their homegrown quotas.

They will be hoping none of their key personnel, such as Micky van de Ven, pick up knocks when on international duty this month.

Van de Ven is enjoying a fine season for the north London outfit - including scoring a stunning goal in the Champions League - and recently attended the launch party of Call Of Duty: Black Ops 7 in London's Toshin Matcha Bar.

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Man United super-fan Usain Bolt names the main problems with Ruben Amorim's team - and pleads for Rio Ferdinand to help!

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Man United super-fan Usain Bolt names the main problems with Ruben Amorim's team - and pleads for Rio Ferdinand to help! - Daily Mail
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Usain Bolt pleaded with Rio Ferdinand to 'go to the team and say something' after Manchester United drew at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium on Saturday.

The eight-time Olympic champion watched on as Ruben Amorim's men scraped a point against Spurs despite leading until the 84th minute.

Bryan Mbeumo put the Red Devils ahead with a first-half header before Thomas Frank's side scored two in a five minute blitz at the death to leave the visitors staring down the barrel of a defeat. Matthijs de Ligt nevertheless spared his manager's woes with a last-minute header to make it 2-2.

However Bolt, an avid United supporter, struggled to hide his frustrations in a voice note read out on the latest episode of Rio Ferdinand's podcast.

The Jamaican icon complained: 'I just watched the United game, one of our biggest problems is when we invite pressure onto ourselves. They're always running back, all we do is invite pressure.

'Please (Rio), I'm begging you man. Get to the team and say something. You are one of the greatest defenders Man United ever had, please bro, it's stressing me out.

'I know you have nothing to do with this but tell the guys to pass the ball quicker. Oh my god bro. They don't know how to defend one-on-one. Shaw is the only one that seems like he understands. All they know is system, lineup and play well.

'They don't know how to step up, push the defender and then go back into your line. I push up (as a defender) and the midfield slots in. Please Rio, get to somebody.'

Yet Ferdinand was less scathing in his analysis of his former club's second consecutive draw, urging fans to 'temper their expectations'.

After a dire start to Amorim's second campaign at the helm, United have weathered the storm in recent weeks and now sit seventh in the table and one point off a Champions League spot.

'There were times against Spurs where it (United's defence) wasn't working as a cohesive unit,' Ferdinand admitted, 'but it's going to happen!

'We're still in this rebuilding phase and I think that's why we've got to manage the expectations of fans. I've seen some people going off on one, going crazy saying, "the manager ruined it with his substitutions."

'But if he didn't make any subs and we still got the same result, everyone would be going, "why didn't he change it?" He's damned if he does, damned if he doesn't sometimes.

'Arne Slot won the league last year, went to City this year and got it totally wrong. It does happen.'

United were ultimately left a man down for the final 10 minutes in north London after Benjamin Sesko was forced off following a challenge by Micky Van de Ven. Amorim had already used his five substitutes having introduced Manuel Ugarte, Patrick Dorgu, Mason Mount, Leny Yoro and the Slovenian.

The Portuguese later admitted that he was forced into changing Harry Maguire and the in-form Casemiro because both players picked up knocks.

Despite seeing his side reduced to 10 men, Amorim was adamant that United could have 'done better' and taken the three points back to Manchester.

'We have a lot of problems,' he said after the game. 'We are just in the beginning. I know that sometimes the results show to people that we are improving. We are improving but we have a lot to do.

'If you look at the rest of the game (other than when Spurs scored their two goals) we were comfortable but I think we should do better, be more aggressive, feeling the environment in the stadium that the three points were there, the space was there and I think we felt too comfortable during the game.

'We need to expect that in one play, anything can happen and change the mood of the stadium - and today was that. So I think we controlled it well, the game, but we need to do better because the game was there to take.'

The Old Trafford club are back in action after the international break with a home clash against Everton.

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The progress and pitfalls of Tottenham's tactics: Why Thomas Frank's safety-first approach is testing fans' patience, the key issue hurting Spurs' attack - and the changes that worked against Man Unit

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Progress and pitfalls of Tottenham's tactics - RIATH AL-SAMARRAI - Daily Mail
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It presumably wasn’t lost on any of the locals that Tottenham highlighted their greatest shortcoming by rolling out Glenn Hoddle for an interview at half-time of the 2-2 draw with Manchester United. What they would give for a fraction of his creativity among the current crop.

There ought to be a limit to the criticism that follows such a result against an in-form side and especially any wider inquisitions when the league table, in isolation, makes for vastly improved reading on last season.

And yet the manner in which it has been compiled does lend itself to questioning about where Tottenham truly stand under Thomas Frank.

Once again, as we have often seen so far this campaign, the style of play on Saturday failed to stir any pulses. Nor did it secure that rarest of rewards – a home win. As with the defeat against Chelsea, there were times when patience at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium appeared to be awfully thin among elements of the Spurs support.

Here, Daily Mail Sport runs over what went wrong and what went right…

Pondering the ponderous

If the low point of the season was the 0.1 expected-goals statistic against Chelsea, then a performance that generated two actual goals ought to be a signifier of progress. But once again, Tottenham’s forward movement against United was almost robotic.

At best, we would call it slow and predictable. With regards to the latter, opposition now know that all roads will lead to the wings and prepare accordingly. In the case of this match, Frank’s plan was clear – get the ball out to Brennan Johnson on the right or Richarlison on the opposite flank. Johnson, in particular, had some initial success against Patrick Dorgu but frequently then found himself swallowed up by Luke Shaw as United acclimatised to the threat. What did that leave? Not enough.

The lack of variety in Tottenham’s attacks was frustrating, especially through the middle, where United can look vulnerable. Indeed, Frank badly misses the versatility and ingenuity of James Maddison and Dejan Kulusevski, which says nothing for the absence of Dominic Solanke as an effective striker.

There could be a positive wrapped in that point – if Tottenham have reached the higher places in the table without them, then how will things look upon their return?

But that also risks disguising some glaring issues. For one, the temporary absence of Mohammed Kudus appeared to suck air from the balloon on Saturday. At times, there has been an overreliance on his creativity.

It is equally true that Frank remains unsure of his best combinations – against United, he tried Richarlison and Randal Kolo Muani together for the first time and it didn’t work. Kolo Muani was hooked at half-time and Richarlison botched a free header prior to his latest goal for that brief 2-1 lead.

For the time being, far too much onus under Frank has been placed on set-pieces and hopeful crosses into the box. The orchestration of quick, dynamic moves? The routing of traffic through central areas? Not so much. Three touches in the United area in the entirety of the first half was a stat every bit as damning as that XG tally against Chelsea.

Thin grounds for defence

Naturally, there has been an upturn in this area since Ange Postecoglou moved on. And no doubt Micky van de Ven’s hamstrings will thank the new manager for a deeper defensive line, but the rear-guard unit was a weak point on Saturday.

It will certainly disappoint Frank that against a limited United side, Spurs conceded twice from uncontested headers in their area. That they were United’s only two shots on goal told a story, though it should also be stressed that Ruben Amorim’s team deserved at least a point. If anything, it was United’s complacency at 1-0 up hurt them most, as Amorim later indicated.

Within discussions about the goals conceded, a question might also be asked about why Johnson was tasked with marking Matthijs de Ligt. It had appeared a mismatch earlier in the game and was highlighted more glaringly with the equaliser in stoppage time.

The mood factor

This might merely be the Tottenham condition, whereby an accumulation of decent numbers is never quite enough. To dare is to do, etc. But there is a palpable frustration around aspects of Frank’s approach.

The booing against Chelsea was replicated on Saturday when Frank moved to substitute Xavi Simons in the second half at a point when Spurs were drifting hopelessly towards a fourth home defeat in six.

That is a troubling scenario and quite possibly unfair given the timeframe and the scale of adjustment needed from Postecoglou’s brand of football.

Cause for optimism

The same substitution that was booed was one that helped turn the match – Mathys Tel got the goal for 1-1 – and Frank’s other in-game alterations also proved decisive. Wilson Odobert and Destiny Udogie were central to the fight back and amassed one assist apiece, and more subtly redressed the balance of the game.

As a pairing on the left, they were a substantial upgrade on the starting collaboration between Djed Spence and Richarlison, before the latter moved to a central position.

Frank warrants credit for making those changes and ought to have enough in the bank from his Brentford years for a bit of faith in his wider tactical work.

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Tottenham 2-2 Man United ANALYSIS: The glaring issue Ruben Amorim's 'tired' squad must fix - and what the club must address soon amid Casemiro's classy run of form

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Tottenham 2-2 Man United ANALYSIS: The issue Amorim's squad must fix - Daily Mail
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Matthijs de Ligt's header deep into injury-time salvaged a draw for Manchester United at Tottenham and extended their unbeaten run to five games.

Bryan Mbeumo put Ruben Amorim's side in front, but goals from Mathys Tel and Richarlison looked to have handed Spurs a fifth straight win over United before De Ligt struck in the 96th minute.

Daily Mail Sport looks at the key issues for United from a rollercoaster game at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium...

Sesko woe

Amorim admitted on the eve of this game that Benjamin Sesko was struggling to live up to expectations and handle the criticism from pundits and ex-United players, and it went from bad to worse for the big Slovenian.

Dropped to the bench so Matheus Cunha could play through the middle with Mbeumo and Amad Diallo in the No.10 positions in Amorim's 3-4-2-1 system, Sesko came on for Noussair Mazraoui as part of a reshuffle in the 58th minute but lasted just half an hour before limping off with a knee injury that left United with 10 men for a dramatic finale.

During his time on the pitch, United's £73.7million summer signing wasted the two chances that came his way and looked short on confidence again. Asked if that was the case, Amorim said: 'That is not the biggest concern now. That happened in the same way that he was not scoring and then he scored two goals in the next two games (against Brentford and Sunderland) so that happens, especially with a striker.

'I'm more concerned with an injury because it's in the knee and I don't know. We need Ben to be a better team.'

United will hope Sesko's injury isn't too serious, but it's clear he hasn't settled as well at the club as other summer signings Mbeumo, Cunha and goalkeeper Senne Lammens.

Double trouble

For the second week in a row, United led away from home and seemed to be in control of the game, but then conceded twice and had to rely on a late equaliser to salvage a point. In fact, they became the first Premier League team since Manchester City in 2012 to draw in game in these circumstances in consecutive matches.

At Forest last weekend, United let in two goals shortly after half-time before Amad Diallo equalised in the 81st minute. On this occasion, they were ahead until the 84th minute before Spurs turned the game on its head and needed De Ligt's late goal to save them from defeat.

It will be a concern for Amorim and even more so because De Ligt admitted afterwards that United were 'tired' in the second half.

Surely, the silver lining of losing to Tottenham in last season's Europa League final and being out of Europe this season was that United would be fresher for Premier League games. While they had a free week, Spurs were in Champions League action against Copenhagen on Tuesday evening.

Asked about his team dipping in the second half again, Amorim said: 'Today was different. We had a different energy. I felt more control from the team today than against Nottingham.

'If you want to compare both games, against Nottingham the energy wasn't there. Today we dropped a little bit second half because we were comfortable in the game.

'But we should do better; be more aggressive and feel the environment in the stadium. We controlled the game well but we need to do better because the game was there to take.'

Flying Bryan

Mbeumo underlined his growing importance to United with another goal and another strong performance despite having to switch to the left wing.

The Cameroon international moved across to allow Diallo to stay on the right after the Ivorian struggled on the left at Liverpool last month. But Mbeumo was still a real handful for Pedro Porro, who was eventually take off midway through the second half, and headed United in front with his sixth goal since a £71m summer move from Brentford.

Amorim also lent on Mbeumo's experience so the 26-year-old could keep an eye on Patrick Dorgu on his return to the starting line-up for the first time in five games. That made more sense than having a younger partnership of Dorgu and Diallo on the same wing.

Diallo played in front of Noussair Mazraoui on the right until he replaced Mazraoui at wing-back in the 58th minute when Sesko came on for the Moroccan, and Mbeumo and Cunha switched to their more natural positions on the right and left respectively.

United will miss Mbeumo – who was voted the Premier League's player of the month for October this week – Diallo and Mazraoui when they go to the Africa Cup of Nations next month.

Classy Casemiro

When Amorim was asked about Casemiro's contract situation this week, he attempted to kick the issue down the road. 'I'm really happy with Casemiro,' said the United boss. 'But let's focus on this season and then we'll see the next season.'

The problem is that the Brazilian will be out of contract in the summer unless United activate a 12-month extension, and can talk to foreign clubs from January 1, so the issue needs addressing before the end of the year.

It's clear that Casemiro's £375,000-a-week wages are a problem for United, and it might be better to agree a new deal on lower terms or let him leave as a free agent in the summer.

Either way, his value to this team was demonstrated again in his absence when Tottenham scored twice after he went off in the 72nd minute. It was a similar story against Brighton two weeks ago when United's opponents struck twice once he left the pitch, having set up the first goal for Cunha and scored the second himself.

United miss Casemiro's steadying influence and knowhow in midfield. They might not think it's enough to pay him the thick end of £20m-a-year at the age of nearly 34 when a central midfielder will be top of the agenda in the summer, but he leaves a big gap.

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Tottenham 2-2 Man United RATINGS: Which star has lost the faith of his own fans? Who is worth his weight in gold? And which TWO players scored a dismal 3/10?

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Tottenham 2-2 Man United RATINGS: Who has lost faith of his own fans? - Daily Mail
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Matthijs de Ligt salvaged a point to extend Manchester United's unbeaten run to five games in a ding-dong of a clash at Tottenham Hotspur.

Ruben Amorim's side were in cruise control for 45 minutes but, much like they did at Nottingham Forest a week ago, faded in the second as Spurs came from behind to lead 2-1 thanks to goals from Mathys Tel and Richarlison.

United’s never-say-die spirit shone through once more. Just as Amad Diallo rescued a point a week ago, this time it was De Ligt - left unmarked at the back post from a corner - who came to the rescue.

Daily Mail Sport's NATHAN SALT was on hand at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium to rate both sets of players...

TOTTENHAM HOTSPUR (4-2-3-1)

Guglielmo Vicario - 4.5

Hard to be overly critical about the first goal he conceded - the second is much more suspect - but his distribution often put his team on the back foot, the opposite of what he should be doing. The groans every time his long ball went awry (only 2/13 were accurate to a Spurs player) told a story of a fan-base that has lost confidence in their goalkeeper.

Pedro Porro - 5

Got caught napping when Mbeumo went in behind him to head in the opening goal. Often so adventurous, Porro found himself caught in two minds whether to stick or twist due to the complex nature of trying to contain Mbeumo. Put in some good deliveries but nowhere near enough.

Cristian Romero - 6

Undoubtedly a good player but he makes too many rash decisions. Was fortunate not to pay a heavier price when Benjamin Sesko got in behind him after a brilliant through ball by Mason Mount. Booked.

Micky van de Ven - 6.5

Made a crucial last man tackle in the second half that allowed Tottenham to hang in there long enough to steal the lead. Wasn't at his imperious best like he has been so often this season but his dominance elevated as the game wore on.

Djed Spence - 6

Failed to create a chance or produce an accurate cross in 90-plus minutes of football. Deserves credit for limiting United down that side for most of the game but the United opener did come down his side, which he will need to legislate for when analysis kicks in.

Pape Matar Sarr - 7

Completed the most passes of any player on the pitch in a frantic occasion here in North London. He was central to ensuring Spurs had greater control in the midfield after a disjointed first half where they looked miles off it.

Joao Palhinha - 6

Had one of Spurs' best chances when he stung the palms of Senne Lammens in the early onslaught to start the second half. Saw a lot of the ball but didn't manage to create a single chance in the 79 minutes he got on the pitch. Even as a defensive midfielder, that's just not good enough.

Brennan Johnson - 5

Did slide the ball into the back of the net around the hour mark but was comfortably offside. He was giving Patrick Dorgu fits in the early stages but a bit like his team-mates, he eventually ran out of steam and ideas. Booked for a penalty box tussle with Matthijs de Ligt, who would punish him in the closing seconds when he evaded him to score the equaliser at 2-2. Replays showed Johnson was totally lost keeping tabs on De Ligt and it was costly.

Xavi Simons - 5.5

Started with purpose and was always trying to look forward with his passing and his runs. Tottenham went big on Simons in the summer and on the other side Manchester United showed just why Premier League proven was the way to go. Simons' lack of end product encapsulated that, even if fans booed the decision to substitute him.

Richarlison - 7

Looked like he would be left to rue a chance just 15 minutes in when he missed a free header eight yards out 15 minutes in. Got to make amends in the most spectacular of fashions when he headed in what he thought was the winner in stoppage time. Booked for taking his shirt off - but he didn't care one bit!

Randall Kolo Muani - 3

Started through the middle, had an Expected Goals of 0.01 by the time he went off. Got 45 minutes as the most central attacker in Tottenham's 4-2-3-1 system and mustered just one touch in the United box. Completely and utterly anonymous.

MANAGER: Thomas Frank - 6

His substitutions made much more of an impact that his counterpart's did. Deserves credit for helping inspire his team back into the game… but fundamentally something isn't right here at home. If he can't get to the bottom of it soon, this problem will run and run.

SUBS

Wilson Odobert (for Randall Kolo Muani, 46) - 6.5

Destiny Udogie (for Pedro Porro, 67) - 6

Rodrigo Bentancur (for Joao Palhinha, 79) - 5

Mathys Tel (for Xavi Simons, 79) - 7.5

Kevin Danso (for Cristian Romero, 88)

MANCHESTER UNITED (3-4-2-1)

Senne Lammens - 7

Gave a real fright to the travelling fans, as well as his manager, just 40 seconds in when he miscalculated a back pass as it ran under his foot. What followed was a series of super saves, the first to deny Cristian Romero, and the second to keep Joao Palhinha's acrobatic effort out. Will be disappointed with Richarlison's goal at 2-1 but the blame lay elsewhere.

Matthijs de Ligt - 7.5

He was really aggressive, particularly in his press, and was the most dominant player on the pitch at set pieces. Looked like he was to be the villain of the piece when he allowed Mathys Tel to spin him in the box to equalise six minutes from time. His gritted teeth in the immediate aftermath showed he knew he'd cost his side. But what a way to make amends, heading in with seconds left. A goal his performance, bar one error, deserved.

Harry Maguire - 7

Brought into the side as part of a reshuffle back to the approach that United took away to Liverpool at Anfield. Nullified Randall Kolo Muani to completely anonymity before he was hooked in the first half, then made Richarlison look very ordinary indeed. Pulled up with what looked like a hamstring injury 20 minutes from full time and limped off.

Luke Shaw - 7

With every passing week he's making his lack of an England recall all the more peculiar. Manchester United are reaping the rewards of a fit Shaw, one who has bags of experience and broad shoulders to deal with the pressure when the going gets tough. One of the most underrated Premier League players this season in my view.

Noussair Mazraoui - 6.5

While the Moroccan doesn't offer a great deal going forward as right wing-back, he's experienced, rarely puts a foot wrong and is someone Ruben Amorim can rely on. Plugged in a valuable hour here. Those types of players are worth their weight in gold.

Casemiro - 6

The away end gladly chanted his name during a comfortable first half but as Casemiro lost control in the second, so did United. He's still plugging in a valuable hour from the start of matches but his substitution looked only a matter of time from when the second half began.

Bruno Fernandes - 6

One of his more understated displays this season as the United captain took a backseat role to proceedings. Part of that credit goes to Tottenham for shutting him down. Could do with a rest… not that he'll get it during a busy international break.

Patrick Dorgu - 5.5

Struggled early on in what is his first start since the brutal defeat at Brentford. Got the runaround by Brennan Johnson and soon had Ruben Amorim shaking his head when he didn't pass forward. With the guidance of Bryan Mbeumo, who was helping babysit him down the left, he grew into this contest.

Amad Diallo - 6.5

Playing as a No 10 alongside Bryan Mbeumo for the first time since the Manchester derby, only this time he was the one kept in his preferred right-sided position. It paid off with a sublime assist for Mbeumo to open the scoring. Finished this one pretty quietly at wing-back once Benjamin Sesko came on.

Bryan Mbeumo - 7

Man of the moment right now for United and it was he who scored in front of the away end with a smart header to make it 1-0. He caused Pedro Porro all sorts of problems and ultimately he got into his marker's head, which is always a good place to be as an attacker. Faded with the rest of the team as it wore on.

Matheus Cunha - 6.5

Was tasked with playing through the middle with Benjamin Sesko dropped and it can be a thankless task in a Ruben Amorim system. Managed just the one shot before he was taken off - although his defensive contributions out of possession shouldn't go unnoticed. Did a lot of the dirty work he often gets accused of shirking.

MANAGER: Ruben Amorim - 6

Produced the perfect game plan for 45 minutes, then what could go wrong in the second 45 did go wrong. Finishing the game with 10 men after Benjamin Sesko limped off encapsulated how this very winnable game somehow went wrong. Escaped with a draw to keep the unbeaten run going but this was two points dropped.

SUBS

Benjamin Sesko (for Noussair Mazraoui, 59) - 3

Manuel Ugarte (for Casemiro, 72) - 4

Mason Mount (for Matheus Cunha, 72) - 6

Leny Yoro (for Harry Maguire, 72) - 6

Diogo Dalot (for Patrick Dorgu, 80)

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Tottenham vs Manchester United - Premier League LIVE: Latest score, team news and updates as Benjamin Sesko is DROPPED

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Tottenham vs Manchester United - Premier League LIVE: Latest score, team news and updates as Red Devils... - Daily Mail
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Follow Daily Mail Sport's live blog for the latest score, team news and updates as Tottenham host Manchester United at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, with Riath Al-Samarrai, Chris Wheeler and Nathan Salt reporting from the grounds.

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Ruben Amorim admits he is lucky to still be in a job as he goes head-to-head with Tottenham for the first time since bitter Europa League final defeat

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Ruben Amorim admits he is lucky to still be in a job as he goes head-to-head with Tottenham for the first time since bitter Europa League final defeat - Daily Mail
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Ruben Amorim admits he is lucky to still be in a job at Manchester United after losing the Europa League final to Tottenham in May.

While Spurs fired Ange Postecoglou despite lifting the club’s first trophy in 17 years at the San Mames in Bilbao, United backed Amorim after missing out on automatic Champions League qualification and £100million in revenue.

As the two clubs meet again for the first time in North London on Saturday, Amorim claimed that the Old Trafford board are trusting him to deliver bigger prizes in future.

‘I’m really lucky to be here,’ said Amorim, whose team finished just two places higher than Spurs in 15th place in the Premier League. ‘I know that it’s also important for someone to understand how lucky I am to have this opportunity.

‘If you see the game, I think we deserved to win. In the end, it doesn’t matter. It’s hard to see a coach that wins a European cup to go away and the other guy stays.

‘But sometimes it’s the difference of maybe in the future to win more important titles. So that’s, I think, what Manchester United is thinking: let’s give time to the coach and see what’s happening.

‘So I just want to say about that question, that I’m really lucky to have the support that I have in this club.’

The two clubs are level on points this season with United two places below a Tottenham side in sixth and now managed by Postecoglou’s replacement Thomas Frank.

Amorim is refusing to get carried away by United’s run of three wins and a draw after a difficult start that saw his job come under threat again.

‘What I think is that we can win any game,’ he added. ‘Let's try to address every detail to try to win every game.

‘Everything is so close; so close up and so close down. Three weeks can change everything. It changed everything. We had a completely different conversation four weeks ago.

‘So let’s just focus on winning at Tottenham. Can we win at Tottenham? I think we can. Let’s do everything to win the next one.’

Meanwhile, Amorim doesn’t know if Casemiro and Harry Maguire will stay at United next season. Both players have revived their Old Trafford careers under the Portuguese coach, but are out of contract in the summer and can speak to foreign clubs from the start of January.

‘We don't know what is going to happen,’ said Amorim. ‘My goal is to continue to count on Casemiro, with Harry Maguire, that he has the same problem.

‘I'm really happy with Casemiro, he is really important. I'm really happy with Harry. But let’s focus on this season and then we’ll see the next season.’

United have the option to extend Casemiro’s £375,000-a-week contract by a year, but Maguire is coming to the end of his 12-month extension and would need to agree fresh terms.

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Premier League star 'swindled out of more than £800k' - as police launch manhunt for Tottenham footballer's accused fraudster

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Premier League star 'swindled out of more than £800k' - as police launch manhunt for Tottenham footballer's accused fraudster - Daily Mail
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Have YOU got a story? Email Sam.Lawley@dailymail.co.uk

A Premier League footballer has allegedly been swindled out of more than £800,000 - as police launch a manhunt for his accused fraudster.

Maurice Gomes, 31, is said to have taken money out of the Coutts account of Tottenham midfielder Yves Bissouma, 29, during a 21-month campaign of scamming.

He is alleged to have 'dishonestly' transferred Bissouma's cash to himself without the Premier League star's 'knowledge or consent' between September 2022 and June 2024.

Prosecutor Rivka Shabtay said Gomes was behind the illicit bank transfers totalling £834,334.40 'to make a personal gain'.

Gomes, who lives in a £1.4million, six-bedroom house in Enfield, north London, failed to appear at Highbury Corner magistrates' court on Friday.

Ms Shabtay added: 'A postal requisition was sent to the defendant, a certification of service dated October 10, 2025. We ask for a warrant to be issued.'

The alleged fraudster is charged with two counts of fraud by false representation, with Bissouma the alleged victim in both cases.

Magistrate Victoria Woolfson said: 'A warrant is approved. That is the end of the hearing.'

Gomes's link to Bissouma, who is believed to be on at least £50,000 a week at Spurs, is not known and it is unclear how he could have accessed his account.

He was first arrested more than a year ago after the Tottenham star reported the discrepancies in his account.

The midfielder will likely have to give evidence at court.

Bissouma, who was bought from Brighton for £30million in 2022, is not the only Spurs player to have had a tough time off the pitch in recent weeks, after his team-mate Destiny Udogie was allegedly threatened with a gun in north London.

The Metropolitan Police launched an investigation after the incident involving the Italian left-back on September 6, while the club said on Tuesday it was providing support to Udogie and his family.

A 31-year-old man was arrested on suspicion of possession of firearms with intent, blackmail and driving without a licence following the incident. He has been bailed while inquiries continue, the force said.

Udogie was named by Italian media on Tuesday as the Premier League player involved in the incident, with the 22-year-old still producing an impressive display in the 4-0 win over Copenhagen in the Champions League later that night.

Ahead of Saturday's clash with Manchester United, manager Thomas Frank said everyone at Tottenham had rallied around Udogie.

'It is a terrible situation to have been in and I can't speak too much about it as it's a legal case, as we know, but the club and we have done everything we can to support him,' he said.

'We'll do that and he's clearly doing well on the pitch, which is good and we'll keep supporting him.'

Bissouma was one of the stars of Spurs' Europa League-winning run last season but has been frozen out of new manager Thomas Frank's plans this campaign.

The midfielder has not featured once for the north London side so far in 2025-2026 after persistently turning up late for training over the summer.

And he suffered another blow last month after he was carried off on a stretcher just nine seconds into his first outing of the season - during a substitute appearance for Mali against Madagascar in their 4-1 World Cup qualifying win.

He was brought on in the 67th minute with Mali 3-0 up but was hacked down just nine seconds after play resumed, leaving him writhing on the floor in pain. He tried to get up to walk off the pitch independently but was unable to.

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The warning signs that show it's crunch time already for Thomas Frank at Tottenham: Failing forward line, the stats that will set alarm bells ringing and why being 'ultra-safe' at Spurs is so dangerou

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Unlock more from Matt Barlow inside the Tottenham camp with a DailyMail+ subscription - brilliant exclusives, in-depth insight, analysis and more

Nobody is claiming lift-off but four goals for Tottenham against Copenhagen and the thrill of that Micky van de Ven solo effort lifted spirits.

'As a coach, I know it’s never as good or bad as you think,' Thomas Frank told Danish journalists afterwards, his way of offering positive crumbs to his compatriots while fully aware the maxim applied equally to his biggest win as Spurs boss.

Copenhagen were flimsy, easily beaten and Frank declined an invitation to look upon the emphatic result as a potential 'turning point'. Ever understated, he preferred to call it a 'step forward'.

No doubt he will hope one day to reflect upon it in more substantial terms, but three big games loom. First, at home against Manchester United on Saturday, then trips to Arsenal and Paris Saint-Germain in the space of four days after the international break.

These are truer tests of his progress in 21 weeks since his move across London from Brentford. The fixture list has been relatively kind so far but is becoming tougher and the scrutiny will intensify. Has he got what it takes? Does he belong?

Frank has quickly forged the bedrock of his team. Spurs are stronger, more solid, organised. His back six are dug in, noticeably deeper. Van de Ven’s recovery pace has barely been required. Behind them, goalkeeper Guglielmo Vicario has been a beneficiary of the extra protection of an orthodox back four and two midfield screeners.

This would have been the first step for any coach taking over from Ange Postecoglou. See also Sean Dyche at Nottingham Forest.

More ticklish problems lie further forward, finding the balance in midfield and loosening the security to help the front four, which is why the hammering of Copenhagen brought such a relief. At last, forwards scored and made assists, and tanks of confidence were replenished.

But what did Frank learn? Has he stumbled upon the best set-up for his players? Quick wingers darting in behind, perfect for the vision of Xavi Simons. Brennan Johnson, last season’s top scorer and still the most reliable source of goals in the squad, back in his favoured role on the right. Wilson Odobert adding a goal to those flashes of promise. Randal Kolo Muani finding some rhythm and a competitive edge.

Or was it simply down to the quality of the opposition? Kolo Muani and Richarlison were indeed wasteful, not clinical. And what would have happened without Van de Ven’s sensational goal to puncture Copenhagen’s spirit, just as Spurs went down to 10 men?

And what of Mohammed Kudus? Signed for £54million and the most impressive of the forward options until now, Kudus missed Tuesday’s win with an injury. Is he ushered straight back in? Or will he have to wait until Johnson’s suspension kicks in in Paris? Any opposition full back turning up in N17 would be relieved if the Ghanaian doesn’t start.

Tottenham have a battery of forward options. Even discounting James Maddison and Dejan Kulusevski, both injured and yet to play this season, Frank has 10 to choose from plus Pape Matar Sarr, more readily categorised as a midfield runner but deployed as a No10 when required.

All are gifted and capable of brilliance. All too good for the likes of Copenhagen and Doncaster. All maddeningly inconsistent. All capable of mediocrity.

Frank is frantically tinkering. In his first 17 games he has used 13 different combinations of front four (including the 5-3-2 shape he used once, in the Super Cup against PSG) and never the same combination more than twice.

On the four occasions he has gone back to something he tried before, it has proved less successful second time around. It must be infuriating even for a coach who likes variety to conjure bespoke tactical plans for different opposition.

None of the candidates at centre forward have seized the role. Richarlison is 10 games without a goal after starting the season with a bang; Dominic Solanke troubled by an ankle injury since the first friendly of pre-season. Mathys Tel is not ready. Kolo Muani has been slow to get going having missed five games with a dead leg.

Frank can select various attacking quartets – most with combined transfer fees close to £200m – and Spurs still feel lightweight up front, leaving him reliant upon goals from rare sources. Centre half Van de Ven is the top scorer with six and there have been four own goals.

These account for more than a third of Tottenham’s 29 in all competitions this season, which plays to the theory that Frank is fundamentally defensive and has prompted parallels to be drawn with Nuno Espirito Santo’s brief tenure. Unimaginative, ultra-safe, overly concerned about the threat of opponents, too dependent upon set-pieces and counter attacking for goals.

On Sky Sports, Jamie Carragher was scathing of Tottenham’s lack of ambition against Chelsea. He also invited viewers to lump Frank in with the likes of Nuno, Sam Allardyce, David Moyes and Roy Hodgson, whom he argued had all failed to make the step up to the elite from mid-ranking Premier League clubs because of their style of play.

Frank, when asked, shrugged off those remarks with his usual good nature. Influential studio voices gushed about his work at Brentford. Just as they saluted his tactical flexibility when he started life at Spurs by taking Paris Saint-Germain to penalties in the UEFA Super Cup, whacking three past Burnley and winning at Manchester City.

Results steer the narrative but at certain clubs there is little room for manoeuvre if you don’t offer a sense of adventure. And Spurs rank highly among them. Perhaps that shouldn’t be the case. Perhaps they have an overinflated sense of their own importance considering they have won only four major trophies in 40 years.

But that’s how it is. The fans are proud of their history and the identity it instils. They want to see the team impose it, not go into games worrying about the opposition. Hence the anger from the home stands last week when Spurs lost to Chelsea and recorded an expected goals metric of just 0.1, their lowest on record since 'xG' floated into the Premier League in 2012.

It’s the reason they fell head over heels for Postecoglou, who freed them from the tactical shackles of Antonio Conte and ended the long wait for a trophy. But the frowning cavalier was sacked because his team defended poorly, especially from set-pieces, and flirted with the bottom three.

Frank was identified for his tactical acumen and reputation for developing players at Brentford, a club at such a financial disadvantage in the Premier League that they would not get far without setting out to stop the opposition.

And here we are, disappearing back into the same maze. Only this time without Daniel Levy and nobody is sure how Vivienne Lewis, other interested family members and their freshly hired executives will go about trying to solve it.

Will they give Frank time? At Brentford it took him years to layer flair on top of the defensive solidity he considered the priority to establish them in the Premier League. Worryingly, as the below graph shows, Spurs are actually over-performing their xG by more than any other side in the league, and would be expected to have scored about seven fewer goals so far. In simpler terms, they are not creating much and being bailed out by excellent finishing.

This process under Frank might be accelerated by a bigger budget at his disposal, although while Spurs are in a different world to Brentford, they do not spend on fees or wages like those at the top they expect to rival, and are in danger of being overtaken by ambitious upstarts such as Aston Villa and Newcastle.

Is any of this about to change significantly post-Levy? The £100m capital injection by the new regime in October will not go far. There are vague promises of more where that came from, but time will tell.

Frank, meanwhile, must start winning home games in the Premier League and convince the masses he is on track. George Graham, who survived for two and a half years as arguably the least popular Spurs boss of all time, did so by the mantra of winning his home games. That was when he knew his team was being judged and while there’s more football than ever on TV, his principles hold true.

Manchester United’s visit to the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium delivers intriguing parallels. And not only for those searching for echoes of Nuno’s reign, which ended when Spurs lost 3-0 in the same fixture in the autumn of 2021.

There has been progress at United since Bilbao in May when Johnson’s scruffy goal condemned the club to a year without European football. That defeat gave Ruben Amorim a little extra time and space with which to continue sculpting his team, having beaten Frank to Bryan Mbeumo and added Matheus Cunha and Benjamin Sesko to the forward line.

In contrast to the continuity of Old Trafford, there has been five and a half months of upheaval at Spurs from the boardroom power shift, through the executive tier and a new coaching team.

Still, after their strikingly similar campaigns last season, the two teams are closely matched again. Both have won five of 10 in the Premier League, lost three and scored 17 goals. Spurs are two places higher because they have conceded eight fewer.

Stronger at the back. It’s a useful asset and an understated step forward. What happens next is the key.

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Revealed: The projected Champions League knock-out draw - with Chelsea on collision course with Euro giants

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Revealed: The projected Champions League knock-out draw - with Chelsea on collision course with Euro giants - Daily Mail
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The league phase of the Champions League reached its halfway point this week with the table taking shape as Europe’s elite clubs battle to reach the knock-out stages of the competition.

Bayern Munich, Arsenal and Inter Milan currently boast 100 per cent records so far, with their four straight victories putting them well on the way to sealing a top eight finish.

Manchester City occupy fourth place on 10 points, while reigning champions PSG, Newcastle, Real Madrid and Liverpool have nine points to lie in the final direct qualification positions for the last-16.

Statisticians Opta have predicted that the eight teams will remain in the qualifying positions when the league phase draws to a close in January.

It will leave the likes of Barcelona, Chelsea and Tottenham among the teams looking likely to have to negotiate an additional play-off round to advance to the last-16.

According to the predicted final table, Newcastle are expected to edge out Barcelona to finish eighth, with the Catalan giants taking the highest seeding in the play-off round.

PROJECTED CHAMPIONS LEAGUE PLAY OFF AND LAST-16 (SOURCE: OPTA) Play-off round Last-16 opponent Qarabag (17) OR Napoli (18) vs Atletico Madrid (15) OR Sporting Lisbon (16)Arsenal (1) OR Bayern Munich(2) Pafos (23) OR Frankfurt (24) vs Barcelona (9) OR Tottenham (10) Real Madrid (7) OR Newcastle (8) Club Brugge (21) OR Juventus (22) vs Chelsea (11) OR Galatasaray (12) Inter Milan (5) OR PSG (6) Bayer Leverkusen (19) OR Monaco (20) vs Borussia Dortmund (13) OR Atalanta (14) Man City (3) OR Liverpool (4) Bayer Leverkusen (19) OR Monaco (20) vs Borussia Dortmund (13) OR Atalanta (14) Man City (3) OR Liverpool (4) Club Brugge (21) OR Juventus (22) vs Chelsea (11) OR Galatasaray (12) Inter Milan (5) OR PSG (6) Pafos (23) OR Frankfurt (24) vs Barcelona (9) OR Tottenham (10) Real Madrid (7) OR Newcastle (8) Qarabag (17) OR Napoli (18) vs Atletico Madrid (15) OR Sporting Lisbon (16) Arsenal (1) OR Bayern Munich(2)

OPTA'S PREDICTED CHAMPIONS LEAGUE TABLE

All top eight teams automatically qualify

Teams from ninth to 24th reach play-off round

Teams from 25th to 36th are knocked out

Tottenham are projected to finish in 10th position, with London rivals Chelsea ending one place behind the reigning Europa League champions.

Barcelona and Tottenham would be paired together in the play-off round draw and would face the teams who finish 23rd and 24th.

Opta project would currently pit them against either tournament surprise package Pafos of Cyprus or German outfit Eintracht Frankfurt.

Tottenham are already due to face Frankfurt later in the league phase, while they also met the German side in the Europa League quarter-finals last season.

Chelsea could face a more daunting play-off tie against Italian giants Juventus, with the two-time winners currently predicted to finish down in 22nd.

The Blues or Galatasaray - who are on course to place 12th - would also be in line to draw Club Brugge.

Other ties could potentially see Italian champions Napoli or another surprise package Qarabag from Azerbaijan meet either Atletico Madrid or Sporting Lisbon.

Bayer Leverkusen and Monaco would be in line to play either Borussia Dortmund or Atalanta.

It would open up the prospect of an all-German last-16 clash.

The draw for the knock-out phase play-offs will take place on January 30.

The first legs will take place on February 17 and 18, followed by the second legs on February 24 and 25.

Teams will already have an insight into their possible paths through the competition at the conclusion of the league phase.

Arsenal and Bayern Munich would earn the top seeding under Opta's predicted table.

This would see the two clubs in line to meet the winners of the ties involving Qarabag, Napoli, Atletico Madrid or Sporting Lisbon in the last-16.

Man City and Liverpool would be the third and fourth seeds in the knock-out stages.

This would put the Premier League giants on course to face Bayer Leverkusen Monaco, Borussia Dortmund or Atalanta.

Holders PSG and last year's beaten finalists Inter Milan would be the fifth and sixth seeds.

This could lead them to face Chelsea, Galatasaray, Club Brugge or Juventus.

Current projections would see Real Madrid and Newcastle face either Tottenham, Barcelona, Frankfurt or Pafos.

It would open up the prospect of a Clasico between Barcelona and Real Madrid in the last-16.

A potential all-Premier League tie between Tottenham and Newcastle would be another possibility under the current projections.

The first legs of the last-16 ties would be held on March 10 and 11, with the return matches held on March 17 and 18.

The league phase rankings will be relevant for seeding for the quarter-final and semi-finals, in addition to determining the seeding for the knock-out phase play-offs and round of 16.

Seeded teams for the quarter-finals will have the advantage of playing the second leg of their quarter-final tie at home if they make it that far.

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