MANCHESTER, England -- Three thoughts on Tottenham's stunning 3-0 victory over Manchester United at Old Trafford.
1. Spurs deepen the gloom for Mourinho
Tottenham
maintained their 100 percent start to the season and heaped further
pressure on Manchester United manager Jose Mourinho by emerging with
three points from Old Trafford for the first time since January 2014.
Harry
Kane's second-half header and two from former United target Lucas Moura
secured the win for Spurs, who moved joint top of the Premier League
alongside Liverpool, Chelsea and Watford.
The
victory hammered home the title credentials of Mauricio Pochettino's
team, but the defeat, United's second in three games this season, has
now placed huge importance on United's trip to Burnley on Sunday.
Another defeat at Turf Moor ahead of the international break could raise
the previously unthinkable prospect of Mourinho's job being under
threat.
United, who dominated the first half but failed to take a
number of clear-cut chances, are now already six points off the pace in
the race for the title, but they will begin worrying about a top-four
finish if this form continues.
For Spurs, though, Pochettino's men
have delivered an early-season statement of intent by proving they can
win away from home against a top-six rival. This was only their third
win in 21 clashes away from home against a big-six opponent, but it was
an emphatic display that suggested they can push for the title this
season.
As for United, they look a million miles away from that.
2. Kane shows his class against wasteful Lukaku
Romelu
Lukaku cost Manchester United £90 million when signed from Everton last
year, but if Harry Kane were ever to leave Tottenham, you wouldn't get
much change from £200m by comparison. The market has changed since
Lukaku swapped Goodison Park for Old Trafford, thanks to Neymar's £198m
move from Barcelona to Paris Saint-Germain, but you ultimately get what
you pay for and Kane showed at Old Trafford just why he is in the £200m
bracket.
Big strikers take their chances in big matches, and while
Kane scored from his first chance to put Spurs ahead with a second-half
header, Lukaku had already missed three clear scoring opportunities by
that stage. After Lukaku's third miss, a header wide from Fred's
27th-minute cross, Jose Mourinho turned to his bench and held up three
fingers to signal his displeasure at the Belgian forward's wastefulness.
The
United manager had a point, too. When you pay so much for a striker,
you expect him to deliver when it matters, namely in the games against
big rivals, but Lukaku rarely finds the back of the net in the tightest
of matches. Kane, on the other hand, is ruthless. He won the World Cup
Golden Boot by taking most of his few chances for England in Russia and
he did the same at Old Trafford.
When Kane outjumped Phil Jones to
head in a 50th-minute corner, it was his first-ever goal at Old
Trafford and gave Spurs a crucial lead. From that point on they took
ahold of the game and scored another to make the points safe, but it
would have been different had Lukaku been similarly clinical for United.
His miss between Spurs' first and second goals, when he was denied by a
sharp Hugo Lloris save, underscored it further.
3. Shaw makes Southgate's trip worthwhile
Gareth
Southgate names his first England squad since the World Cup this
Thursday and he made a final check on the contenders by watching from
the stands at Old Trafford. The long-term admirer of Luke Shaw will have
left the ground boosted by the performance of the Manchester United
left-back.
Shaw has endured a nightmare at Old Trafford since
arriving from Southampton in the summer of 2014, with injury and fitness
restricting the 23-year-old to fewer than 70 first-team appearances in
four years. But he has now started each of United's games this season
and he looks fitter and leaner than ever before.
Jose Mourinho has
given Shaw a long-awaited chance to prove himself, favouring the
youngster over regular left-back Ashley Young against Spurs, and he was
one of a small handful of United players who performed to anywhere close
to their ability in this game.
Shaw should be back in Southgate's
squad for the Spain and Switzerland games, but Danny Rose also
performed well on the left flank for Spurs on Monday night. At 33, Young
has insisted that he will not retire from the international scene, but
Shaw and Rose might just force him out of the picture if they continue
to perform like this for their clubs.
Source: Soccernet
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