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Sports

Tottenham knocked out of Champions League by Leipzig

By : Tetteh Djanmanor on 10 Mar 2020, 10:51

Hotspurs

Tottenham Hotspur’s Champions League campaign came to an end as they were well beaten by RB Leipzig in the last 16.

The German club – who were only formed 10 years ago – led 1-0 from the first leg in London and Marcel Sabitzer’s double at the Red Bull Arena put Leipzig in control.

Spurs keeper Hugo Lloris should have done better for both goals – getting a hand to both the Leipzig captain’s 20-yard shot and near-post header.

Emil Forsberg scored with his first touch after coming off the bench to give Leipzig a 4-0 aggregate win.

Injury-hit Spurs never looked capable of mounting a comeback like the one against Ajax last season which took them to the final and will now finish the season without a trophy again.

Jose Mourinho’s side – who have not won in six games in all competitions – will need to find some form if they are to be back in this tournament at all next season. They are seven points behind the top four in the Premier League.

Mourinho’s Champions League woes continue

Spurs manager Mourinho was once considered one of the Champions League’s top managers – winning in 2004 with Porto and 2010 with Inter Milan.

But the Portuguese has now failed to win any of his eight Champions League knockout games since 2014.

The stats do not make good reading. This was his heaviest ever Champions League aggregate defeat and it is the first six-game winless run of his 935-game managerial career.

He rightly bemoans their injury list, with Steven Bergwijn joining Harry Kane, Son Heung-min and Moussa Sissoko out of action – but they should still be doing better.

Leipzig appeared hungrier, first to every ball, especially in the first half when the damage was done. Their two wing-backs had the beating of their opposite numbers, with Angelino, who looked ordinary in the first half of this season for Manchester City, causing Serge Aurier so many problems.

In the centre Timo Werner – who scored the only goal of the first leg three weeks ago – was having the time of his life up against Eric Dier.

Spurs did start well and Sabitzer’s opener was against the run of play. Werner’s shot was blocked and then he squared the ball to the midfielder to blast home from outside the box. Lloris could not keep the ball out despite getting a touch.

Defensive solidity was once Mourinho’s forte but his side have kept just three clean sheets in 26 matches since he replaced Mauricio Pochettino in November.

They were lucky not to be further behind when Werner tapped home Angelino’s cross – but the offside flag correctly went up.

But the game was done when Aurier failed to deal with a long ball and Angelino crossed for Sabitzer to head past Lloris, who again touched the ball but let it through.

Leipzig continued to have chances, with Werner forcing a save and then shooting over the bar before Dier’s attempted clearance from Patrik Schick almost went into the Spurs net.

They had three shots on goal but Giovani lo Celso, Dele Alli and Gedson Fernandes’ efforts all resulted in routine saves.

Things did not get as bad in the second half as they could have, until Forsberg popped up to lash home a loose ball seconds after coming off the bench.

Leipzig’s finest hour
Leipzig’s unique history – or lack of it – makes the honour of greatest moment in their history a bit more achievable.

Since being founded by energy drinks giant Red Bull in 2009 they have won four promotions and played in one German Cup final. But this was their first ever Champions League knockout tie.

They beat last year’s finalists 4-0 on aggregate – and they deserved every bit of that victory.

Their highly rated manager Julian Nagelsmann – once nicknamed Baby Mourinho – is the youngest person to manage in a Champions League knockout tie. He is now the youngest to win one too.

They have built a good squad on reasonably little money – by Champions League quarter-final standards – and Austrian Sabitzer was the difference with his two goals.

Leipzig have strength in depth too – imposing centre-back Dayot Upamecano missed the first leg but was excellent this time – and they could even bring on Sweden forward Forsberg in the 87th minute for Sabitzer to add the fourth overall.

That made them the only team to ever take a 3-0 lead against Mourinho in the Champions League.

Nagelsmann’s side, five points off top in the Bundesliga, have to wait until Friday, 20 March to discover their quarter-final opponents.

Man of the match – Marcel Sabitzer (Leipzig)

Source: BBC