Tottenham travel to Red Star Belgrade in desperate need of a pick-me-up

Stuttering in the Premier League, Pochettino's side aiming to get their season back on track with a Champions League win in Serbia

Soccer Football - Premier League - Everton v Tottenham Hotspur - Goodison Park, Liverpool, Britain - November 3, 2019  Tottenham Hotspur's Son Heung-min looks dejected after Everton's Andre Gomes sustains an injury   Action Images via Reuters/Carl Recine  EDITORIAL USE ONLY. No use with unauthorized audio, video, data, fixture lists, club/league logos or "live" services. Online in-match use limited to 75 images, no video emulation. No use in betting, games or single club/league/player publications.  Please contact your account representative for further details.
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MATCH INFO

Red Star Belgrade v Tottenham Hotspur, midnight (Thursday), UAE

Tottenham Hotspur's trip to Belgrade to face Red Star could prove to be a turning point in their troubled season. Victory in Serbia would keep their Champions League campaign on track while a defeat is likely to intensify rumours that Mauricio Pochettino's time at the club has run its course, and that a replacement for the Argentine will be found during the international break.

Spurs sit 11th in the Premier League table after Sunday's draw at Everton, 10 points off the top four. It is the first time the North London club have been in the bottom half in November since Pochettino took charge in 2014.

It is a far cry from the summer when Pochettino's stock was sky high after guiding the club to a fourth-place finish and a first-ever Champions League final.

While Spurs came up short in Madrid against Liverpool, their roller-coaster run to the final was one of last season's success stories.

At the same stage of last season's group phase Spurs had a solitary point from three matches. They went to Barcelona for their final group match needing to at least match Inter Milan's result against PSV Eindhoven to progress to the knockouts. And while an already-qualified Barca played a far from full-strength team, Spurs eked out a 1-1 draw and became the first team in 12 years to have more possession than Barca's fabled ball hoggers at Camp Nou in a European tie.

After dispatching Borussia Dortmund in the last 16, Spurs progressed to the semi-finals after Raheem Sterling had a last-gasp winner ruled out, at a time when VAR used to be the North London club's best friend. Ajax, Europe's darlings of 2018/19, had their fairytale run cruelly ended when Lucas Moura's last-minute winner secured a 3-2 win in the second leg.

The Brazilian's hat-trick that night in Amsterdam came at a time when the team's totem, Harry Kane, was on the sidelines injured. It should have been the launch pad for Moura's progression from short-term solution to permanent fixture under Pochettino, but the Spurs manager has used the former Paris Saint-Germain forward only sparingly this term despite several first-team players suffering alarming dips in form.

Erik Lamela has been preferred ahead of Moura but the Argentine lacks the same goal threat and too often flatters to deceive. Son Heung-min's mental state will be a consideration too after the South Korean was visibly shaken by the sight of Andre Gomes screaming in agony after the Spurs forward's tackle on the Everton midfielder during Sunday's 1-1 draw at Goodison.

Those factors should make the case for Moura's inclusion from the start all the more pressing. The 27-year-old player hardly uprooted any trees against Everton but he is by no means Spurs' only underachiever this season.

It was the Brazilian's header that earned Spurs a point against Manchester City at the Etihad when they should have been on the receiving end of a rugby score. His long-range effort against Olympiakos on Matchday 1 of the Champions League proved crucial as Spurs were forced to hang on for a point in Attica.

epa07970277 Tottenham Hotspur's Lucas reacts during the English Premier League soccer match between Everton FC and Tottenham Hotspur at the Goodison Park in Liverpool, Britain, 03 November 2019.  EPA/PETER POWELL EDITORIAL USE ONLY. No use with unauthorized audio, video, data, fixture lists, club/league logos or 'live' services. Online in-match use limited to 120 images, no video emulation. No use in betting, games or single club/league/player publications
Lucas Moura has struggled for game time this season under Mauricio Pochettino. EPA

In one sense, Pochettino could point to Spurs being ahead of where they were last season, in Europe at least. Four points from three games is three more than they managed at the same stage 12 months ago, but even those numbers are skewed. A draw against Olympiakos and a win at home to a poor Red Star last time out came either side of a 7-2 humiliation to group leaders Bayern Munich, Spurs' heaviest home defeat ever.

With Bayern, on the lookout for a new full-time coach following Niko Kovac's removal at the weekend, expected to beat Olympiakos in Group B's other match, victory at Red Star would go some way to alleviating the cloud of depression hanging over Spurs and give them a four-point cushion over their opponents with two games left.

That could be easier said than done. The Serbs have lost away to both Bayern and Spurs by an aggregate of 8-0 but can draw on memories of a recent victory over Liverpool and a draw with Napoli at home last season, as well as a 3-1 win against Olympiakos at the start of October as proof they are a match for most teams at the Red Star Stadium.

MATCH INFO

Red Star Belgrade v Tottenham Hotspur, midnight (Thursday), UAE