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Tottenham Hotspur

Kinsky poised to push for summer exit after early Champions League substitution

Kinsky seeks summer exit after Champions League substitution in Tottenham’s 5-2 defeat to Atlético.

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Antonin Kinsky looks set to pursue a summer exit from Tottenham after being withdrawn in the first half of the club’s 5–2 Champions League defeat to Atlético Madrid. The 22-year-old was replaced following errors that led to two early goals for Julián Álvarez and a separate opening in which Micky van de Ven lost his footing, allowing Antoine Griezmann through on goal.

Trailing 3–0 inside the opening quarter of an hour, Igor Tudor turned to Vicario and Kinsky was hooked before half had properly begun. Tudor did not appear to acknowledge the goalkeeper as he left the pitch. According to The Telegraph, the humbling has left the goalkeeper “humiliated” and he is expected to push for a loan move away from Spurs this summer.

Kinsky joined Spurs from Slavia Praha in January 2025 as emergency cover for an injured Vicario. The 22-year-old had impressed with his much improved distribution before Tuesday’s match, a trait that deserted him on the night. He has been limited to occasional domestic cup appearances after Vicario returned to full fitness, and is said to have pushed for a loan exit in each of the previous two transfer windows without success. The Telegraph’s report questions whether Kinsky will ever be in position to make another appearance for Spurs after his evening in the Champions League.

Players inside the dressing room are thought to have been “shocked” by Tudor’s decision. Tudor defended his call in full: “It was, before the game, the right choice to do in the moment like we are, with the pressure on Vicario, another competition,” Tudor insisted.

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He added: “Tony is a very good goalkeeper. It was for me the right decision. After this, of course, it’s easy to say that it was not the right decision. So I explained to Tony also, speaking after: he’s the right guy and a good goalkeeper.

“Unfortunately, it happened in this big game, these mistakes. He was sorry. The team is with him, me too. I was speaking with him. He understands the moment, he understands why he goes out. As I said, he’s a very good goalkeeper. We are with him, we are all together. It’s never about one player. It’s happened. It’s the Champions League again. We paid [for] this start of the game.”

Griezmann, after a dominant display, offered: “I think it’s a shame,” the French forward told Canal+. “If the coach—the current one or another—starts with that goalkeeper, you have to see it through. Mentally, it must be very tough for the goalkeeper. It wasn’t the best solution.”

Former Manchester United and Spain shot-stopper David de Gea posted his support for Kinsky at halftime, lamenting the unique difficulties experienced by a player in his position. Joe Hart criticised the handling on TNT Sports: “[He had] a couple of bad moments, but to rip him off in this situation and not even acknowledge the guy? Every single one of Tottenham’s players who are feeling the pain don’t know what to do. How is that good for him?

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“It is a thing with keepers, you have got to accept you will have nights like that. Everyone has them. [Gianluigi] Buffon, [Manuel] Neuer, [Peter] Schmeichel … they have had moments, but everything that has gone on on top of it, he will feel so unwelcomed as far as the management is involved. ]

Vicario conceded two goals himself as Spurs were ultimately condemned to a 5–2 defeat, the club’s sixth in succession. Never before in the 143-year history of Tottenham Hotspur have they ever lost half a dozen games on the spin.

Arsenal

Rice: Arsenal face unfair scrutiny over set pieces amid wider tactical debate

Declan Rice questions selective criticism of Arsenal’s set-piece success and wider tactical debate..

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Declan Rice has pushed back against what he called disproportionate criticism of Arsenal’s use of set pieces, saying the attention stems from the team doing them well. Rice told The i Paper he found the reaction puzzling. “Everyone talks about it and then everyone does it—so it’s confusing!” he said. “But they’re not doing it to the level that we do it. You can see that when you’re seeing teams take corners. We can still get better and that’s the good thing about it.”

The debate has been heightened in recent weeks. After Arsenal beat Chelsea 2–1 earlier this month in a match that produced three set-piece goals, Liverpool manager Arne Slot criticised the direction of the modern game, insisting it was “not a pleasure ” to watch as he questioned the reluctance to punish excess physicality in the penalty area.

Tottenham Hotspur winger Mathys Tel echoed those concerns during an appearance on ZACK, describing corners as chaotic. “We’re all bunched together, everyone’s pushing, knocking each other to the ground, holding on to each other,” Tel lamented. “Forget it. The goalkeeper can no longer get out, he can no longer see.” He added a broader observation on the league: “I’m going to tell the truth, yes [it’s less exciting]. In the sense that it’s no longer a show, it’s really annoying to watch.

“There are fewer spectacles. There isn’t a Vinicius [Junior] pulling off a sombrero, dribbling past you, or a Kylian [Mbappé] bursting past you. Here, I’d say it’s more structured, maybe too much so, with clear ideas, all the set pieces, little details that can sometimes make the difference. But sometimes you think it might be too much.”

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That critique met public defence from Wayne Rooney on his self-titled podcast. Rooney, Manchester United’s all-time top scorer, praised Arsenal’s approach and argued coaches should exploit set pieces. “I’ve heard a lot of people talking about Arsenal and the way they’re playing but I think they’ve been brilliant,” Rooney argued. “The set pieces are part of football—why would you not use it? They put bodies in the box, if teams aren’t clever enough or haven’t got the players to deal with it, why wouldn’t Arsenal continue to do that?

“I would be doing it even more if I was Mikel Arteta. It’s part of the game and I love it. They don’t have to change anything. They maybe haven’t scored as many goals from open play as they would like but they’ve made up for it in other ways. ]

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Premier League

Warnock Taunt Highlights Spurs’ Managerial Gamble as Tudor Era Stumbles

Neil Warnock’s jibe at Tottenham underlines the risk in appointing Igor Tudor after Thomas Frank’s exit.

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Tottenham Hotspur have found themselves on the receiving end of sharp commentary as the club battles a sudden slide in form. One of the latest to cast doubt over the club’s trajectory was Neil Warnock, the veteran manager whose career began in 1980 at Gainsborough Trinity and stretches across almost five decades.

Warnock’s long list of achievements includes a record eighth promotion with Cardiff City in 2018 and a remarkable tally of 1,626 professional games managed in English football. Now back working in non-league with Torquay, he remains candid about his standing. Speaking after a 3–0 defeat to Ebbsfleet United he joked, “They should have took me at Tottenham, shouldn’t they?”

The quip underlines the gulf between Warnock’s experience as a seasoned man-manager and Spurs’ recent choices. He proved that he’s “still got it” at Huddersfield Town as recently as 2023, saving the Terriers from Championship relegation. At the same time, the record shows his Premier League record is less impressive than his achievements elsewhere.

Tottenham’s search for a long-term solution accelerated after the departure of Thomas Frank last month. Rather than appointing a modern Warnock-type such as Sean Dyche, the club took a different route, pursuing a recommendation linked to former sporting director Fabio Paratici and handing interim responsibility to Igor Tudor.

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Tudor arrives with a résumé of short-term, often positive, interventions: spells at Udinese, Lazio, Hellas Verona and Marseille, and an immediate improvement in fortunes at Juventus after Thiago Motta’s sacking last March. Spurs had a five-point buffer when Tudor was named interim, but three successive defeats have left them just one point clear of the relegation zone.

The contrast between Warnock’s career-long résumé and Tottenham’s recent managerial gamble is stark. The club’s hope was that Tudor’s fresh approach could arrest the downturn, but results so far have reduced the margin for error and intensified scrutiny of the decision.

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Man Utd

De Zerbi Linked to Manchester United as Spurs Continue Talks

De Zerbi is reportedly open to Manchester United while Spurs continue talks amid ongoing instability

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Reports suggest Roberto De Zerbi is interested in the Manchester United job even as Tottenham Hotspur continue to hold talks with him. The situation has added pressure to an unsettled managerial picture at both clubs, where interim managers Michael Carrick and Igor Tudor are fighting for their futures.

Tudor is reported to be at risk of being sacked after just three games, with Spurs sitting one point clear of the relegation zone. While Carrick is believed to have done enough to remain in the running at United, the potential availability of De Zerbi will complicate summer planning for both sides.

Talks between Spurs and De Zerbi have been held, but the Italian is expected to hold out for more appealing offers this summer. His high octane soccer earned admirers during spells with Sassuolo and Shakhtar Donetsk between 2018 and 2022, and it was at Brighton & Hove Albion that he established himself among the world’s elite.

It is widely accepted that De Zerbi overachieved with the Seagulls and he spoke with a handful of big names, including both Spurs and United, during the summer of 2024 before taking his talents to Marseille. The French side finished second in Ligue 1 during his first season in charge, playing a possession-heavy brand of soccer that was both aesthetically pleasing and effective on the field.

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There is a sense that his approach would suit a team built to be favorites every week, but his style of management remains a concern for some suitors. De Zerbi is a fiery character who is not afraid to raise his voice and challenge anybody in his path, be that his own players or those above him in the hierarchy. His departure from Brighton stemmed from public disappointment towards his limited impact in the club’s transfer dealings, and that could be a major issue for both United and Spurs as they lean into the modern approach of appointing “head coaches” to lead the team and hand the transfer business to a recruitment department.

United, having shaken off the cobwebs of the Erik ten Hag and Ruben Amorim eras, have enjoyed enough on-field success to remind the world of their pedigree and reputation as the biggest brand in English soccer. With the promise of a hefty transfer budget this summer, the allure of the Red Devils is clear. Spurs, meanwhile, face the added complication that they cannot even offer assurances of Premier League status next season after two seasons at the wrong end of the standings, leaving them with an uphill battle to retain their place among England’s ‘Big Six.’

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