Bodø/Glimt v Tottenham Hotspur: Europa League semi-final, second leg – live | Europa League
Key events
23 min: Porro curls over the wall and towards the top-left corner. Haikin palms over the bar, a fine save, especially as the free kick took a small nick off a Bodo defender. Porro trots out to the left to take the corner, flashing it through the box. Johnson can’t get anything on it, six yards out. Shame for Spurs, because an eyebrow would have been enough to steer that into the goal.
22 min: No Maddison, of course, so Porro looks like the chosen one for this free kick. Kulusevski hovering about too, though.
21 min: Spurs will be more than happy with their start. Even happier now Solanke has just been bundled over by Berg, just outside the Bodo D. A free kick in a very dangerous position.
19 min: More impatient abuse for Vicario as he prepares to take a goal kick. To be fair to the Spurs keeper, a new ball was rolled onto the pitch the nanosecond the previous one in play had rolled over the byline. Give the man a chance! Bodo clearly want to keep up a high tempo. Spurs aren’t quite so fussed.
17 min: Berg has a whack from the edge of the Spurs D, but there are way too many defenders in the road. Spurs clear their lines. This is lively, without yet clicking over into exciting.
16 min: Richarlison slips a pass down the left for Udogie, whose low cross pinballs through the Bodo box but fails to drop to a green shirt. The visitors beginning to ask a few questions.
15 min: Porro throws long from the right. Or attempts to. His fling barely reaches the edge of the Bodo box.
13 min: Progressive work by Udogie down the left, and here comes Tottenham’s first corner of the evening. Porro swings it to the near post, where it’s eyebrowed across the face of goal by Van de Ven. Nobody in Seven Sisters green there to bundle home. Goal kick.
Destiny Udogie swings in a cross. Photograph: Paul Childs/Action Images/Reuters
11 min: Hauge drops deep and looks long for Hogh down the middle. Van de Ven does very well to read the danger and intercept.
10 min: Bodo are seeing more of the ball during these early exchanges, though Spurs seem happy enough to sit back and get used to what’s what. “Hopefully Spurs can avoid spursing it up tonight,” begins Kjetil Dimmen. “Glimt have not dealt with their recent success particularly gracefully. Among other things, they now try to hover up the best players in Norway, expecting to pay nothing in the process. Think Real Madrid on a much, much smaller scale. Besides, Spurs should have a better chance against Man Utd in the final, and I really, really do not want to be stuck having to root for Glimt there.”
8 min: Vicario takes his sweet time over the resulting goal kick, and receives the first lecture of the night from the referee. The home fans also have their say on the matter.
7 min: Bodo ping it around the back awhile. Then spring down the left through Hauge, who drives into the Spurs box and wins the first corner of the game. The set piece is hit long, Blomberg chesting down just to the right of the six-yard box and lashing a shot into the side netting.
5 min: A bit of space for Høgh down the left. He exchanges passes with Saltnes, and a speculative ball is sent into an empty box and out for a goal kick.
4 min: The ball’s holding up a bit on the wet artificial pitch. Nothing too dramatic but Spurs will need to recalibrate from the usual conditions they face.
2 min: Spurs are on the front foot early doors. Bentancur crosses from the right. The ball drops to Richarlison, who shoots from the left-hand corner of the six-yard box. Sjøvold blocks. The hosts clear their lines.
Richarlison has an early effort block by Fredrik Sjoevold. Photograph: Justin Setterfield/Getty Images
1 min: Bodo nearly gift Spurs a chance within the first ten seconds, a loose ball across the back, but Gundersen block-tackles Johnson, who was hoping to bust clear down the inside-right channel. The hosts breathe again.
Pennants are swapped, coins tossed, hands clasped … and Bodø, 3-1 down after the first leg, get the ball rolling.
The teams are out! Bodø in bright yellow, Spurs in third-choice green [MBM hack squints hard, readjusts monocle] “all-over print inspired by the Seven Sisters elm trees”. A fantastic atmosphere at the Aspmyra, hardly surprising given the locals, as Jacob Steinberg reported at 7pm, have been pyro-partying all day and all night. And there are more fireworks being launched right now, to a soundtrack of AC/DC. What a blast! “Jacob’s report about supporters letting off fireworks reminds me of the early morning of the Peru v New Zealand WC playoff match second leg in Lima in 2017,” writes Craig McEwan. “At the time I lived near the hotel the NZ team stayed at, in the Miraflores district, very near the coast. At the crack of dawn the Peruvian air force flew a couple of their fighter jets at high speed just over the beach and past the hotel. It scared the bejezzus out of me woke me up and would have disturbed the Kiwis who went on to lose 2-0 while Peru qualified.” We’ll be off in a couple of minutes!
No thunder tonight, but there is rain.
Ange Postecoglou speaks to TNT Sports. “We’ve had to deal with injuries all year … [Dejan Kulusevski] is coming back at the right time because losing [Lucas Bergvall] and [James Maddison] hasn’t been great … having Kulusevski back is key for us … we like to play quick as well [as Bobø do at the Aspmyra] … we did some things really well the other night … those things will be effective tonight and that’s what we’ve got to focus on … every moment is important … I don’t think we need too much motivation … the players are aware of what is at stake … we’ve earned the right to be in this position … there’s an opportunity for us to bring it home tonight.”
How Bodø/Glimt reached the semis. They beat Porto, Braga, Beşiktaş and Maccabi Tel Aviv on their way to a ninth-placed finish in the mega-group. They saw off Twente in the knockout playoffs, the teams sharing four injury-time goals over the two-legged affair, which Bodø eventually won 6-4 on aggregate. Bodø then saw off Olympiacos in the round of 16 (4-2 agg) then Lazio in the quarters, on penalties after a 3-3 aggregate draw. They also gave a good account of themselves at Old Trafford during the league phase, which could end up standing them in good stead should they make it to Bilbao.
It’s been a bit smoother for Spurs. They beat Qarabağ, Ferencváros, AZ, Hoffenheim and Elfsborg during the group, finishing comfortably in fourth. They’ve since beaten AZ in the round of 16 and Eintracht Frankfurt in the quarters without too much fuss. They’ve also done themselves proud at Old Trafford this season, as well as beating Manchester United at home in both Premier League and League Cup. Long-in-the-tooth / battle-weary / cynical Spurs supporters will have their theories as to how this story is likely to end, but for now everything looks promising.
Pennant watch. First things first, hats off to Bodø/Glimt for becoming the first Norwegian club to reach the semi-final of a major international competition. A lesser-known fact is that they’re also the first club in Uefa history whose graphic designer knocked out the match pennant while keeping both of their feet up on the desk for the entirety of the job. Congratulations to one and all!
This is what Bodø captain Patrick Berg will be handing over during the pre-match pleasantries. Photograph: David Lidstrom/UEFA/Getty Images
Having said that, it’s not as if the Spurs art department have been pulling out all the stops. Honestly, if either of these teams qualify for next year’s Champions League, it’s not just the manager and playing staff who will have to raise their game a level.
This isn’t what Spurs captain Cristian Romero will be exchanging, it’s from last week. But you get the gist. Photograph: Alex Pantling/UEFA/Getty Images
“Hello from Bodø!” Well hello, Jacob Steinberg! Our man in the Arctic Circle reports …
I’m in position in the press box at the Aspmyra and it’s already beginning to fill up with the yellow and black of Bodø/Glimt. The sprinklers have been on too, just to make the artificial pitch even slicker, and it’s raining. It’s not too cold and it’s still very light here in the Arctic Circle but you can feel the temperature starting to drop. There was also some top banter from the ultras last night: they let off fireworks outside the Spurs hotel in the early hours. Overall you can feel the excitement in the town. It really feels like it’s going to be a huge test of Tottenham’s character. Still, it’s six years to the day since their win over Ajax...
Bodø/Glimt make three changes to their starting XI from the first leg. Two defenders out: Isak Dybvik Määttä and Sondre Brunstad Fet. One in: Brede Moe. In midfield, captain Patrick Berg and Håkon Evjen are back in favour; Villads Nielsen, like Määttä and Fet, drops to the bench.
Tottenham make one change, and it’s enforced. The injured James Maddison is replaced by Dejan Kulusevski.
Tottenham Hotspur: Vicario, Porro, Romero, van de Ven, Udogie, Kulusevski, Bissouma, Bentancur, Johnson, Solanke, Richarlison. Subs: Danso, Tel, Gray, Spence, Odobert, Sarr, Davies, Austin, Whiteman.
Referee: Maurizio Mariani (Italy). VAR: Marco Di Bello (Italy).
Preamble
After last week’s efforts in N17 …
… Tottenham Hotspur have one foot in the final against (let’s go out on a limb and call it) Manchester United. However, there are reasons that give pause.
1. Ulrik Saltnes’ late goal will have given Bodø/Glimt belief 2. Ulrik Saltnes’ late goal will have planted seeds of doubt in the Spurs camp 3. Bodø/Glimt have won three of their previous four European ties in which they’ve lost the first leg away from home 4. Bodø/Glimt have already beaten Porto, Beşiktaş, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Twente, Olympiacos and Lazio at home during this campaign 5. This game will be played inside the Arctic Circle on an artificial pitch 6. Ange Postecoglou isn’t exactly renowned for shutting up shop 7. Lads it’s etc.
So you can pretty much guarantee that very few Spurs fans will be taking this for granted. But their team are in the box seat, and have the following going for them: they’ve won all five of their previous matches against Norwegian clubs; they’ve won their two most recent European semis (against Hajduk Split in the 1983-84 Uefa Cup and Ajax in the 2018-19 Champions League); they’ve won 18 of their previous 21 Uefa ties when winning the first leg at home; they’ve proved they can do solid with a battling 1-0 win at Eintracht Frankfurt in the quarters; they’ve only lost two of their last 14 games in Europe; they’ve scored more goals (340) than any other team in Uefa Cup and Europa League history; and Ange Postecoglou isn’t exactly renowned for shutting up shop, so will go for the early goal that will surely kill off this tie.
We make that 7-7, then. Which would be more than enough to see Spurs through on aggregate. Kick-off is at 9pm in Bodø, 8pm BST. It’s on!