Tottenham Hotspur were blown out at home. Man U and Arsenal are struggling. Maybe there's a new best in class.
[View in browser](
[FOX SPORTS INSIDER WITH MARTIN ROGERS]
In today’s FOX Sports Insider: Tottenham and the EPL are reeling after Bayern Munich embarrassed them at home ... witness another gymnastics first ... and tonight we’re treated to both the MLB postseason and NHL opening night.
Soccer’s UEFA Champions League is an unforgiving place; an elite world where wobbling confidence, jittery form or internal doubt is swiftly exposed. When things go badly, like they did for Tottenham Hotspur in a 7-2 home thrashing against Bayern Munich on Tuesday, they go really badly.
What makes the Champions League stand out even more as the flagship club competition in the world is that, similarly to the passion on display at the World Cup, teams represent not only themselves, but by extension, the countries and the leagues they populate.
So when a result of freakish nature such as Bayern’s triumphant raid on North London takes place, it leads to wider questions. The most popular one — being asked ever since the seventh goal smacked into the Tottenham net and condemned last season’s Champions League finalists to its most humiliating defeat of recent times — was a broad one indeed: can the English Premier League still claim to be the best domestic competition on the planet when one of its leading lights has been outclassed so systematically?
The answer is complicated. For a start, while Tottenham is one of four EPL Champions League representatives this season, it’s not like they’re tearing things up on the home front, either.
In the EPL, the Spurs are in a four-way tie for sixth place, with a dismal home loss to Newcastle early in the campaign and an embarrassing exit from the minor knockout competition EFL Cup against lower-tier Colchester last week. Head coach Mauricio Pochettino has gone from being a potential target for Real Madrid to facing the real danger of losing his job altogether.
[STORY IMAGE 1]
“This was a long time coming,” Bleacher Report football insider Dean Jones told me via telephone from London. “You’re talking about a side that’s very low on confidence. Even going into the Champions League final last season, they were in bad form.
“The score itself was obviously a surprise but the fact that they took a beating from a top team? That definitely wasn’t. There is just a really bad vibe that has set in and they’re struggling to find direction.”
Bayern, champions of the German Bundesliga for the past seven seasons, might be the worst team of all to face if you’re behind and your players’ heads have dropped. The last three goals were quite simply ruthless and clinical.
“This was the worst result of the Mauricio Pochettino era, never mind this season. But that doesn’t mean it was the worst performance,” write Jack Pitt-Brooke at The Athletic. “For the first 40 minutes or so, right up until Robert Lewandowski made it 2-1, Tottenham were well on top.”
Yet the question of whether the EPL maintains its prime position as the world’s best league is both valid and timely — and not just because of this result. Arguably the two biggest and most significant clubs of the EPL era, Manchester United and Arsenal, are both suffering through dismal stretches with no end in sight. Chelsea is unable to spend its way to better fortune due to a ban on transfers as punishment for irregular dealing. Manchester City and Liverpool are streets ahead of the pack and look poised to continue that domination.
“The Premier League is really hard to judge at the moment, because Manchester City and Liverpool are so much better than everyone else,” Jones added. “All the traditional powerhouses have slipped due to terrible planning, none of them are well prepared for the situation they’re in.
“In some ways it makes it more exciting, because the positions outside the top two are wide open and up for grabs. But it is not the best quality league in Europe right now.”
Jones believes Italy’s Serie A (boosted by Cristiano Ronaldo’s second season since moving to Juventus) probably has a better overall standard, while Spain’s La Liga would also have a strong argument if not for the wavering form of Real Madrid and Barcelona. The Bundesliga, a destination for a growing number of young Americans, does not spend the kind of exorbitant transfer fees and wages of the English teams, but makes up for it with outstanding player development systems.
EPL teams who fall on hard times typically have one way to try to alleviate their difficulties: by throwing money at the problem. Transfer windows resemble a kind of reverse Black Friday, a mass of panic-driven spending — at vastly inflated prices.
One defeat by Tottenham isn’t going to stop the EPL from being a financial powerhouse and it doesn’t by itself offer definitive proof that the league is on the wane. But English soccer’s heavyweights have some real problems, and this was one of the latest symptoms.
Here’s what others have said ...
David Hytner, The Guardian: “The more immediate challenge is to come to terms with what was a humiliation. The scars will run deep for some time and the fear is that they could derail their season. In their 137-year history, [the] Spurs have never conceded seven at home and never before have an English team been so badly beaten at home in Europe.”
Matias Grez, CNN International: “It's hard to pinpoint exactly where things have gone wrong so quickly for Spurs, although it's perhaps fair to say that reaching the Champions League final papered over some cracks that had started to show some time before. With that appearance in the Champions League final coming amid a run of just four wins in its last [18] matches, it feels as though last season's European success came in spite of its form, not because of it.”
Peter Crouch, Daily Mail: “It’s a huge crushing blow to [Spurs] and they will suffer a hangover from this. You can’t get beat seven at home, I don’t care who it is against. These are top international players. People have been questioning the character right from the start of the season, and a result like this is only going [to make people] ask more questions.”
[IN OTHER WORDS]
- Dalilah Muhammad is still searching for her purpose even after breaking a world record in the 400-meter hurdles that had stood for 16 years, [writes Scott Cacciola at the]( [New York Times](.
- [Dave Sheinin at The]( [Washington Post]( notes two seemingly immoveable objects: the year of the home run meeting October pitching as the MLB playoffs get underway.
- The Astros heeded their data and clung to their top prospects — until the final moments before the trade deadline. [Ben Reiter at]( [Sports Illustrated]( [has the inside story]( of how the Astros landed Zack Greinke and assembled a rotation poised to dominate the postseason.
- Full-on haymakers, shot-gunned Red Bull and the sound of Tigers going to war: inside Ed Orgeron’s motivational techniques, [by Jayson Jenks at]( [The Athletic](.
[THE INTERNET IS UNDEFEATED]
[THE INTERNET IS UNDEFEATED](
If you're a fan of the unbelievable, go ahead and click through to watch the video above. That's Simone Biles hitting a double-double (two flips, two rotations) beam dismount in practice ahead of the World Championships in Stuttgart, Germany. Biles, who is redefining the sport of gymnastics, plans to keep writing her name into the official gymnast judges' Code of Points. The double-double dismount skill will enter the Code as "the Biles" if the 22-year-old superstar lands it at the Worlds this weekend. We'll be watching!
[VIEWER'S GUIDE]
Tampa Bay Rays at Oakland Athletics (ESPN, 8 p.m. ET)
The Nationals captured the Wild Card with a dramatic come-from-behind win on Tuesday night, and now it’s the American League’s turn to dazzle us with its play-in game. October baseball is already in full effect.
Washington Capitals at St. Louis Blues (NBCSN, 8 p.m. ET)
Hockey is officially back! Opening Day of the 2019-20 NHL season is here, as the defending Stanley Cup champions face the Capitals in their home opener. There will be a second Opening Day game on NBCSN at 10:30 p.m. ET, as the Vegas Golden Knights host the San Jose Sharks.
WWE NXT (USA Network, 8 p.m. ET)
For the first time, NXT will be live for two hours on the USA Network, and they’re bringing a pay-per-view worthy lineup of matches. The NXT Championship, Tag Team Championship and Women’s Championship will all be on the line on Wednesday night.
[BET OF THE DAY]
[BET OF THE DAY]
Super 6: Thursday Night Football
This week’s Thursday Night Football tilt on FOX is quite the matchup, with the 3-1 Rams visiting the 3-1 Seahawks. And to get properly prepared for that NFC West showdown, [check out FOX Sports Super 6]( where you have a chance to win $25,000 — for free! — with a six-way parlay on Thursday night. From who will score the first TD of the game (where 35% of the action is on Todd Gurley, despite questions about his health) to which team will win and by how many points (36% of fans are on the Rams by 7-14), all you have to do is sign in, make your picks, and watch the game on FOX!
[WHAT THEY SAID]
“I never thought of losing, but now that it' s happened, the only thing is to do it right. That's my obligation to all the people who believe in me. We all have to take defeats in life.”
— Muhammad Ali
[FOLLOW FOX SPORTS]
[Twitter]( [Facebook]( [YouTube]( [Instagram](
Download the FOX Sports app for live scores and streaming
[App Store]( [Google Play](
Available on:
[tvOS] [Roku] [fireTV] [androidtv] [XBOX] [Google chromecast]
[tvOS] [Roku] [fireTV]
[androidtv] [XBOX] [Google chromecast]
Forwarded this message? [Sign up](.
Trademark & Copyright Notice: ™ and © 2019 FOX Media LLC and FOX Sports Interactive Media, LLC. All rights reserved.
Please do not reply to this message. If you do not wish to receive emails like this in the future, please [unsubscribe](.
FOX Sports respects your privacy. Click [here]( to view our Privacy Policy.
FOX.com
Business & Legal Affairs - Manager Digital Media
P.O. Box 900
Beverly Hills, CA 90213-0900