Tottenham prove place on Europe’s top table with win in Dortmund to reach Champions League last eight

Dortmund 0-1 Tottenham (0-4 agg): After being battered in the first half, and rescued only by a combination of feverish defending and Hugo Lloris in God mode, Harry Kane’s goal on 48 minutes anaesthetised the tie with one swing

Jonathan Liew
Signal Iduna Park
Tuesday 05 March 2019 23:08 GMT
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Mauricio Pochettino on Tottenham reaching the Champions League quarter-finals

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Tottenham Hotspur: Champions League quarter-finalists. You’d have been hard pushed to imagine that back in the blindness of autumn, when Spurs were conceding a late equaliser in Eindhoven that left them with a point from their first three group games. But here they are, in the last eight, and fearing no team on earth. Not after staring down the former European champions on their own turf, claiming a stirring away win after 45 minutes of pure, backs-to-the-wall defence.

We expected a battle. We certainly expected Dortmund to hit them hard from the start. But in front of 66,000 fans and the iconic Yellow Wall, perhaps we didn’t expect this sort of response. After being battered in the first half, and rescued only by a combination of feverish defending and Hugo Lloris in God mode, Harry Kane’s goal on 48 minutes anaesthetised the tie with one swing, turning the second half into a procession.

In the industrial heartland of Germany, Tottenham wurst-case scenario never materialised. Besides Lloris, Moussa Sissoko was one of the outstanding players on the pitch, stamping out danger and finding the time to set up the only goal of the game. Mauricio Pochettino may have grumbled in public about the amount of time his team had to prepare. He may still grumble in public about the budget he has to balance. But the longer he keeps pulling performances like this out of the bag, the more hollow those excuses will sound.

Dortmund, meanwhile, went for it. They had no choice. A genuine five-man attack, with Mario Gotze, Raphael Guerreiro, Marco Reus and Jason Sancho – a world champion, a European champion, a twice German player of the year and a really, really good child – behind Paco Alcacer. Plenty of threat, but also plenty of space in behind for Tottenham to attack. First, though, they had to get the ball.

This proved to be a far thornier problem than anticipated. Dortmund’s tempo and movement were excellent, their press well co-ordinated, their ability to move the ball through tight spaces exemplary, and before long the game had morphed into a siege. When they weren’t desperately chasing yellow shirts, Tottenham were struggling to get the ball out of their final third. Pochettino quickly withdrew Son Heung-min to the left wing, a 5-3-1-1 becoming a 5-4-1. After half an hour, their share of possession was just 25 per cent.

And after a peremptory clearing of the throat, the chances began to flow for Dortmund. Jan Vertonghen made a brilliant tackle after 10 minutes to dispossess a bounding Reus. Abdou Diallo pulled the ball back for Gotze when he probably should have shot. Lloris made two brilliant saves in succession from Julian Weigl and Gotze. Ben Davies made a heroic block to deny Reus and was mobbed by euphoric team-mates as he rose to his feet, in the way anxious parents embrace their children when they’ve just been rescued after 18 days trapped in a cave.

This was feral, primal chaotic stuff: terrifying if you were a Spurs fan, of course, yet utterly gripping whichever side you were on. The Dortmund fans bayed and sang themselves hoarse and occasionally even chuckled loudly and incredulously, unable to understand how the match was still goalless. It’s hard to remember Pochettino’s Tottenham being outplayed quite this comprehensively in Europe as they were during the first half of football: not even Barcelona or Juventus managed to sustain this sort of pressure for this long.

Sissoko celebrates after Kane's winner
Sissoko celebrates after Kane's winner (Bongarts/Getty Images)

And yet, what should we read into the fact that Spurs withstood it? And not just withstood it, but then managed to take the lead within three minutes of the restart? On 48 minutes, the ball ran free in midfield, and in the momentary hiatus Kane and Sissoko both reacted quickest: the former to drift unmarked into the centre, the latter to thread a first-time ball into his path. Kane was clean through, and a look and a touch was all he needed to send the ball high into the net, the tie firmly put to bed.

High in the north-east corner of the stadium, several hundred plastic steins of beer went flying. The little sliver of travelling Spurs fans were going berserk, Kane’s goal and the knowledge that Dortmund now needed five to win giving them free rein to kick back, relax and start dreaming of their next European trip. “Where’s your famous Yellow Wall?” they taunted as the air drained out of the Westfalen like a punctured lilo. “Is this the Emirates?”

They knew, of course. They knew all along. So did Pochettino and his team. They knew they had nothing to worry about here, that class and character would win out, and a hard-won three-goal advantage would be more than enough on the night. But bloodlines run thick in football, sometimes thicker than we like to admit. And somehow, for many under the age of 40 the idea of Spurs, the club of Darren Caskey and Paul Stalteri, as a major European power – as the sort of club that goes into games like this and comes out unscathed the other side – still doesn’t quite feel right.

Who do you fancy next? Atletico? Ajax? Paris? Probably not Manchester City, not yet. But though they now walk among the giants of the world game, they walk not in their wake or in their shadow, but line astride, as equals. Over 90 minutes, they can win or they can lose (although curiously, they don’t seem to able to draw). But they’ll never go into a game fearful or cowed or feeling like the smaller team. Because: lads, it’s Tottenham.

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