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Dominic Solanke scored his first goal for Tottenham as they came from behind to beat Brentford in an entertaining game at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium.

After going behind inside 30 seconds, Ange Postecoglou’s side hit back to win convincingly and ease any potential unrest after back-to-back Premier League defeats.

The visitors went in front after just 23 seconds when Bryan Mbeumo superbly volleyed home from Keane Lewis-Potter’s cross.

Spurs were level on eight minutes when Ethan Pinnock’s pass was cut out on the edge of the box by James Maddison and after his shot was saved, Solanke coolly tucked in the rebound.

It was the striker’s first goal since his ยฃ65m move from Bournemouth in the summer.

The home side continued to dominate, and after another loose Brentford pass led to Brennan Johnson firing a neat finish past Bees goalkeeper Mark Flekken just before the half-hour, they were more than deserving of their lead.

Maddison made sure of the points late on with a delicate dink after running on to Son Heung-min’s pass.

After falling behind so early, Spurs responded well and were much the better side in a chaotic first half, with Brentford gifting them possession time and again.

But it was the visitors who had the best opportunity late on in the half with home keeper Guglielmo Vicario saving from Mbeumo after being robbed of possession on his own six-yard line by Fabio Carvalho.

Spurs had their chances early in the first half, but Brentford felt they should have been afforded a way back into the game just before the hour when Vicario appeared to handle outside of his box.

Brentford’s frustration was added to when the Italian goalkeeper produced a fine save to claw out Kevin Schade’s well-directed header.

While the away side tried to force an equaliser, Maddison’s goal on the counter eased the home fans’ nerves as Spurs clinched a second league win of the campaign.

With Brentford searching for an equaliser, Vicario came a long way off his line to try to claim a cross.

He failed to take it cleanly and, as his momentum took him out of the penalty area, he reached back to palm the ball away from a Brentford attacker.

The visitors were adamant Vicario had handled outside the box but referee John Brooks turned aside their appeals and as it was not deemed denial of a goalscoring opportunity, the video assistant referee team did not intervene.

VAR can only get involved in decisions on goals, penalties, direct red cards and mistaken identity, and it was decided the incident did not fall into any of those categories.

Even if the handball had been given, Vicario would not have been sent off as it did not prevent a clear chance for Brentford to score.

“Not only looked, he had handled it outside the box, but that incident did not define the game,” said Brentford manager Thomas Frank.

“It was a mistake. It could have been a free-kick to us. It could have helped us. But, hey, you never know.

“I think the probability of scoring from a direct free-kick is like 0.0543, so probably not the biggest probability for scoring anyway.

“And I think John Brooks overall had a very good game. The way he handled soft fouls both ways was really good.

“I understand how it is. We can’t be too – I don’t like the word aggressive, but – in-their-face because it’s just our frustration. We can’t do anything about it. Hey, move on.”

With their team having made their worst start to a league season in nine years, Spurs fans may have been fearful when their side fell behind so early in the game.

Instead, they witnessed a superb response as the hosts swarmed Brentford, forced their opponents into errors and soon equalised.

The pass from Pinnock was a poor one but Spurs were ready to pounce in a sequence that summed up the first 45 minutes.

Solanke was the beneficiary on that occasion – a simple finish to get off the mark for the season – but Brentford’s generosity in possession meant there were plenty of chances to go around.

“He was good again. I think he’s been good in every game he’s played for us and strikers love scoring goals,” Postecoglou said of Solanke.

“A great moment for him to score his first goal for the club, particularly at home.

“Aside from that, again it was a really strong performance by him. I thought he led the line really well.”

Spurs must take plenty of credit for the way that harried their visitors and set traps to win back the ball before springing forward at pace.

By the time Johnson put them in front, the winger had already gone close twice, and Son burst clear and rounded Flekken, only for some uncharacteristic hesitation that led to him being crowded out.

18 Comments

  1. Hello. Enjoying your show, A question, do you think the manager being more active on the touchline will make that much difference, I dont mind as long as we play with a quick tempo,

  2. If the 'generational talent' Mikey Moore is to be sacrificed for the benefit of Korean shirt sales, his agent should start talking again to Dortmund, who expressed interest in him before he signed his first professional contract last month. Dortmund have a good track record with precocious English teenagers, after all. Nothing like keeping Levy on his toes to remind him that football is about footballing excellence, not primarily selling shirts. Obviously, if the Korean is better than the THFC Academy's brightest young starlet, then Moore will have to improve to get into the side, or alternatively leave anyway to ensure his development continues with game time every week in an environment where he is a core part of a first XI.

  3. My analysis. I'll apologise now to all the Serial Killer Optimists, who take everything to heart, can't hear an opinion without crying and have to keep reminding everyone how morally together they are. Take a breathe virtue-signallers. It's only a comment and the rest of us don't care.

    We can't defend. Our tactics will work if we have Real Madrid and Man City players – and of course, provided we outscore the opposition.
    We won yesterday imo, because after that worldie within 30secs, Brentford couldn't hit a barn door.
    Delighted to win, but we need to start working on our defence and creating actual goal scoring chances. Romero should be dropped.
    Thanks for reading.

  4. Seeing a lot of overreaction. We beat an injury riddled side that will possibly be in the lower side of table. Even with all that there was still an element that weโ€™d concede. Standards are too low at this club.

  5. Would it be fair to say that Ange allowed players to play more in their natural positions, which allowed them more time and space to contribute.
    If he did then Kudos to him.
    I just hope that this win doesn''t give Ange the feeling that his troubles are over ?? COYS

  6. We have to see this kind of intensity/ intent against better teams . If we put united to the sword , then follow it up at Brighton, then I'll be somewhat impressed.

  7. Can Tottenham's Ange keep it up? It depends if he's taking his Viagra. Sorry guys, you would know that Finbarr Saunders is my great hero wouldn't you. Actually I've got two great heroes. The other is the late, great music hall comedian Max Miller (known as the Cheeky Chappie) whose statue can be seen in the municipal gardens in Brighton, just down the road from me. When I moved to Brighton I went looking for Donald McGill postcards to send to my friends, featuring a fat lady and a double entendre, but I'm afraid that this is trendy PC Brighton and such postcards are in short supply. So I sent views of the pier instead. Max would definitely not have approved.

  8. 7:32
    The undeniable.

    For me he doesnโ€™t give me the initial gut feeling I first felt when we signed Gordon Durrie. Later Pavlychenco, soldado or Vincent Jansen.

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