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Soccer

When will Tottenham not feel like a team in transition?

It wasn’t so long ago that, in a time of need, Mauricio Pochettino would turn to Vincent Janssen.

In the pair of meetings with AS Monaco in the 2016-17 Champions League group stage, Janssen was introduced from the bench to try and overturn a 2-1 deficit. Both times, Tottenham Hotspur bumped at the principality club’s defense like a frustrated housefly trying to breach a closed bathroom window. Both times, the scoreline stayed the same.

Janssen scored just two goals from open play that season, but, through a lack of alternatives, Pochettino was forced to persevere with the diffident Dutchman.

In spite of spiraling construction costs for replacing White Hart Lane, Pochettino has since somehow managed to assemble a bulkier and more varied roster. Wednesday’s damaging 2-2 Champions League draw at PSV Eindhoven, however, suggests the tweaking is not over for the Argentinian. There are clear improvements in his squad, but there appears to be an inescapable state of transition in north London.

Rather than Janssen being afraid of playing anything other than the safe option, Tottenham now possess Lucas Moura, who in the ninth minute produced a sublime pirouette on the white paint of the left flank before scoring Spurs’ first goal a half an hour later. He was an under-the-radar buy in January – only Toni Kroos and Dani Alves created more chances in the 2016-17 Champions League season – and he began this term with three goals in his opening three Premier League games.

JOHN THYS / AFP / Getty

Kieran Trippier, whose gradual inheritance of a regular starting berth ensured Kyle Walker’s £50-million sale wasn’t particularly missed, eclipsed everyone else on the park with eight key passes, one of which set up Lucas’ goal. Erik Lamela, arguably the first player to properly comprehend Pochettino’s philosophy when he was appointed, showed he is fit and on form in a cameo off the bench after elongated spells in the treatment room.

The way Pochettino has been able to accommodate the sales prescribed by chairman Daniel Levy and injuries to a previously thin squad add further bullet points to the talented boss’ lengthy curriculum vitae, but the increasing want for something tangible in north London – namely silverware – means errors like the ones committed by Hugo Lloris and Toby Alderweireld in Eindhoven merit greater scrutiny.

Lloris mindlessly upended Hirving Lozano for a deserved red card and, eight minutes later, watched PSV’s late leveler from the dressing room. This isn’t a one-off. He rushed out of his goal at Wembley earlier this month, giving Philippe Coutinho an easy opportunity to put Barcelona ahead. Lloris was also culpable for a blunder at Chelsea at the start of April, and had an awful error in the World Cup final against Croatia largely forgotten because France were already en route to glory.

Soccrates Images / Getty Images Sport / Getty

At 31, what appears to be a downturn in quality from Lloris is ahead of schedule. There may be external factors to his struggles (he was discovered by police covered in his own vomit when operating a vehicle in central London last month) but his form, or lack thereof, cannot be tolerated by a team with Tottenham’s aspirations. The wider concern for Spurs is that Michel Vorm and Paulo Gazzaniga don’t present reasonable replacements for a team vying in the upper echelons of English football.

Then there’s Alderweireld. His dawdling after 30 minutes set in motion a result that may eventually condemn Spurs to a best-case scenario of Europa League football after Christmas. Lozano had been giving Ben Davies a tough assignment earlier in the match, so for Alderweireld to switch off with the scuttling attacker on his shoulder was going to be costly, despite the Belgian’s best efforts to make amends.

Hanging onto Alderweireld is going to cost Tottenham a lot of money, and it’s surprising his exit wasn’t brokered amid an already difficult relationship with Pochettino due to dwindling minutes. An unhappy defender who was apparently subject to a £50-million offer from Manchester United in the last transfer window can now leave for nothing next summer when his contract winds down.

Changes are afoot, and Pochettino will have less money to conduct them.

Manchester City romped to the title last season but still signed Riyad Mahrez and unsuccessfully scoured the summer market for a deep-lying midfielder. But, unlike Tottenham’s constant tides of change, that was renewal and a means to remain hungry for success. Spurs, meanwhile, are locked in a transition, and just as the squad had been fleshed out to the point that Janssen was made redundant, the older, usually reliable parts seem to be breaking off.

When will the old “they’re improving” excuses abate? Will Pochettino stick around long enough to see the spine of Davinson Sanchez, Harry Winks, Dele Alli, Christian Eriksen, and Harry Kane truly reach fruition?

Soccer

Escalator malfunction injures multiple fans prior to Roma-CSKA

More than 20 individuals were injured Tuesday in Rome after an escalator inexplicably malfunctioned in a metro station and sent several people violently crashing toward the bottom, according to the BBC.

In a video posted to social media, multiple fans traveling to the Stadio Olimpico to watch CSKA Moscow face Roma in the Champions League can be seen caught in a dangerous bottleneck at the base of the escalator after it suddenly speeds up without warning.

#BREAKING: Multiple football fans have reportedly been injured after an escalator breaks at a Subway station in Rome, Italy ahead of the AS Roma and CSKA Moscow game. (Video: @RBWorldorg) pic.twitter.com/sS4ZjiozNF

— Chris Koseloglou (@chriskose) October 23, 2018

Photos of the machinery posted afterward detail the damage.

Developing | An escalator broke in Rome leaving several soccer fans injured, Italian news agencies report. pic.twitter.com/TgF4hLNKYL

— euronews (@euronews) October 23, 2018

Roma later pledged its support to providing aid to those who were seriously injured in the incident.

Soccer

Barcelona president reveals new badge design has been canned

Josep Maria Bartomeu and others behind the scenes at Barcelona are entering a period of “internal reflection” after their proposed badge redesign was roundly met with anger from the club’s supporters.

The planned crest tweak has been ditched after club members expressed disappointment at an AGM over “FCB” being removed and other slight changes made to the current badge.

This is the proposed update to the Barça crest, subject to member approval
?? pic.twitter.com/csIHvX2ZyS

— FC Barcelona (@FCBarcelona) September 27, 2018

“There were doubts about whether the AGM was the right place to decide the matter,” club president Bartomeu told Catalunya Radio on Monday, as reported by ESPN’s Sam Marsden. “Some people thought it should have gone to a referendum. (In the end) we got rid of the issue, it was democratic.

“It was as simple as removing something because the members did not accept it. Now we will have some internal reflection over the badge.”

It was slated to be the first change to the Barcelona crest since 2002 – and the 10th overall – to help the club “adapt to modern times.” Following the response to this design, Barcelona have vowed to never ditch “FCB” from future drafts.

Soccer

Usain Bolt receives contract offer from Central Coast Mariners – or does he?

The Usain Bolt saga shows no sign of slowing down and continues to be shrouded in uncertainty.

Days after the 32-year-old former Olympic champion rejected the chance to sign a first professional soccer deal with Maltese champions Valletta FC, it appears Central Coast Mariners may have made their move.

Bolt’s agent, Ricky Simms, has claimed the Australian outfit, with whom the Jamaican scored his first goals for a pro team this month, has offered the superstar a deal.

“In response to the media stories, yes, Usain has been offered a contract (by Mariners),” Simms said, as reported by the Associated Press. “I do not want to make any further comment at this stage.”

That’s great, then. Another contract for Bolt to peruse. Except, perhaps not.

Mariners head coach Mike Mulvey has stated that if a deal has indeed been offered to Bolt, he knows nothing about it. Mulvey even went as far as to suggest an attacking line including on-loan Aston Villa striker Ross McCormack may not need bolstering by a man for whom a career in football has been little more than an afterthought.

“You have a look at our front line today and you wonder whether he could get into any of those positions, wouldn’t you?” Mulvey said. “I do appreciate how important this story is for the rest of the world.

“You’re just talking about speculation, I don’t know anything about what you’re talking about and that’s the honest truth.”

Bolt did not play in Mariners’ 1-1 draw with Brisbane Roar on Sunday. The club, when asked for an official stance on the former sprinter’s future, told BBC Sport it would not comment on media speculation.

What happens next? Who knows?

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