Tottenham Hotspur warmed up for their north London derby at home to Arsenal in the worst possible fashion.
Ange Postecoglou's men were second-best all over the pitch in Saturday's 4-0 hammering at Newcastle United. They can have no arguments with the result or the wide margin of defeat, no Erik ten Hag-isms about how they actually dominated the game with their possession or smattering of half-chances.
Spurs remain a team and club in transition going from one extreme identity to another, and there are going to be bumps in the road, but this was the first time across Postecoglou's debut season where you wondered if his stubborn methodology will come to bear tangible fruit.
Their only other thrashings this season have come with caveats or at least explanations. The 4-1 loss to Chelsea came with nine men. A 4-2 defeat at Brighton & Hove Albion over the festive period was not representative of the equal game played. Falling 3-0 to Fulham was deserved, but wasn't a collapse on their principles or ideals.
This, however, was different. Newcastle pounced upon every weakness in Tottenham's philosophy. You want to play a high line? We'll run in behind with three quick attackers and make your offside trap redundant. You want to play through us? You'll have to play through all 11 of us. You think you can coast on physical advantages? We'll knock you down like a stack of dominos.
Micky van de Ven, lauded as Tottenham's superhero last week and enjoying a phenomenal debut season to this point, was turned to mincemeat by Alexander Isak and then Anthony Gordon for the hosts' quick-fire double before the break. Pedro Porro and Destiny Udogie, who prior to this season had almost exclusively played as wing-backs in their careers, didn't cover
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