Four ways Tottenham can beat Ajax

By Jordan Klingsporn / Roar Guru

Tottenham Hostpur went down 1-0 at home to Ajax in the first leg of the UEFA Champions League semi-final.

Donny van de Beek scored in the 15th minute to give the guests the advantage going into the second leg in Amsterdam.

It was a frustrating game for all Spurs fans like me, but here are four ways Tottenham can overturn the 1-0 deficit and go through to the Champions League final.

1. Don’t forget about Bournemouth
One of the big reasons why Spurs lost the first leg was the lazy match against West Ham.

You could see the Hammers wanted the win way more than Tottenham. Spurs had 63 per cent of possession, but West Ham had two more shots and three more on target.

West Ham also committed five more fouls. This style of play made it very clear that Tottenham were happy to settle for a draw and focus on next week. I’m happy we lost because we definitely learnt a few lessons.

Saturday’s game against Bournemouth may be a preview of the semi-final.

In Bournemouth’s last match against Southampton, they had 56 per cent possession, but 13 less shots. They also started with five at the back.

I wouldn’t be surprised if Bournemouth does something similar to try and fork out a draw, which is probably what Ajax will do. It would be the perfect practice match for the Lilywhites.

2. Pick a different formation
Mauricio, 3-1-4-2 is not a real formation.

When you have two of your best attackers out, I don’t see why you’d have six attackers with two strikers.

Pochettino decided to start Danny Rose – who is generally a left back – at attacking midfield. The coach was able to rectify this by putting Rose back in his normal position after Ajax went 1-0 up.

Pochettino cannot make the same mistakes, and must go back to basics.

Start off by putting the players back into the positions they are used to playing in. Put Danny Rose back into left back, and Dele Alli into attacking midfield.

(Photo by Julian Finney/Getty Images)

Go back to the 4-1-2-1-2 formation that Spurs used in the second leg against Manchester City in the quarter-final. That way, pacey pair Lucas Moura and Son Heung-min can play up front with Christian Eriksen doing the playmaking.

Also, Danny Rose and Kieran Trippier can go back into standard fullback roles, and Moussa Sissoko can start in midfield along with Dele Alli.

3. Go all out early
Mirroring the second leg of the Manchester City match may be the best way to go.

They’ve got the formation, now they need the game plan. Because Ajax has a younger side than Spurs and also more stamina, Tottenham must go hard early when everyone is fresh.

In the game against Manchester City, Spurs scored two goals within the first ten minutes – so if something similar happens, it’s really up to the defence.

When the young boys of Ajax are starting to push on towards the end of the game, Tottenham’s experienced defence could power them home in the end.

4. Don’t make the same mistake
The last two Champions League ties Ajax have played, Real Madrid and Juventus have allowed the Dutchmen to play the way they want to play.

This is a mistake that Spurs can not make. And they won’t.

This may be where the advantage of losing the first leg is.

Real Madrid and Juventus played very well in the first leg of their ties with Ajax, so they thought a similar effort would get them through.

They were wrong. Spurs know they need to be better.

With Son back in the team and some lessons learned, Tottenham will advance to the final.

The Crowd Says:

2019-05-08T02:38:04+00:00

reuster75

Guest


As a Spurs fan i'm use to clutching at straws so am clutching hard right now at the Liverpool straw - if they can come back against Barcelona from 3-0 down we can come back from 1-0 down. Liverpool showed us the way by saying 'sod it, let's go for it' and it paid off. The task is easier for us as a win sees extra time as the wort case scenario, we don't have to worry about winning by a certain scoreline. My hope is with top 4 basically assured in the league the players can rouse themselves one last time knowing that a solid rest awaits them even if we do make the final.

2019-05-05T11:40:27+00:00

Nick Symonds

Guest


Yeah, don't know how I made that mistake.

2019-05-05T00:34:34+00:00

Josh H

Roar Rookie


Do you mean Bournemouth?

AUTHOR

2019-05-05T00:33:48+00:00

Jordan Klingsporn

Roar Guru


Yep But it was Bournemouth, not Watford that we played.

2019-05-05T00:31:33+00:00

Nick Symonds

Guest


After watching Tottenham vs Watford it's their player discipline they need to work on.

2019-05-04T13:46:19+00:00

aussierad

Roar Rookie


I predict Sonny will score a brace. Well he better after that mind blowing self destructive red card he got today...

2019-05-04T13:04:43+00:00

Nick Symonds

Guest


SIDE NOTE - The FC Tasmania bid team must be pretty annoyed that you can have a team playing at 3 different ovals in 3 different cities but you can't have a team playing at 2 ovals in 2 cities. Kardinia Park and Docklands are way bigger than North Hobart Oval as well. - WESTERN UNITED STADIUM PLANS Western will be playing the bulk of their home games in their first two seasons at Geelong's Kardinia Park (known currently as GMHBA Stadium) but Bisetto and his colleagues have no fears of any SCG-like problems from overuse by multiple codes. The Geelong Cats use the ground but also play many of their AFL matches in Melbourne, while it hosts Big Bash cricket only on a handful of occasions when a drop-in wicket is used. Western will need to play some of their A-League matches in their first two seasons at other grounds, and Ballarat's Mars Stadium and Marvel Stadium in the Docklands have been touted as potential venues. - https://www.theage.com.au/sport/soccer/western-s-self-owned-stadium-will-ensure-no-repeat-of-scg-problems-20190409-p51cdt.html

2019-05-04T12:51:07+00:00

Nick Symonds

Guest


NEWS: Jets for sale as owner looks to cut costs - McKinna, who last week travelled to China for key strategic meetings with Lee, revealed that the billionaire has been looking to move on from the club since the middle of 2018. "He (Lee) did want to sell the club 100 per cent lock, stock and barrel about nine months ago and there were a couple of interested parties but nothing came of it,” McKinna said. “Martin’s preference now is that he wants to keep the club, but have a shareholder involved to help take some of the financial load. "He would look at selling if someone wants to buy 51 per cent or even 100 per cent … he would definitely look at that.” Lee, who bought the Jets in 2016 for $5.5 million, has been downsizing his once sizeable portfolio of football investments including folding his Chinese club Shenzen Ledman which played in China's second division. Trade tariffs between the USA and China has had a major impact on Lee's fortunes with his LED lighting company Ledman Group suffering a severe downturn in profits. - https://theworldgame.sbs.com.au/jets-for-sale-as-owner-looks-to-cut-costs - Is the A-League in crisis? 1) Newcastle Jets for sale 2) Victory vs Phoenix only had 22k viewers on Fox for a finals match 3) Western United starting next season at Kardinia Park, Mars Stadium and Docklands

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