Tottenham: Mourinho dismisses 'Spursy' tag but says defending must improve
Tottenham manager Jose Mourinho is not overly concerned by his team's poor home form but knows they must be much tighter at the back.
Jose Mourinho acknowledges that Tottenham have an issue defending from set-pieces but insists the draw against West Ham was a one-off and not evidence his side are "Spursy".
Spurs let three-goal lead slip
Returning to action after the international break, prior to which they had thrashed Manchester United 6-1, Mourinho's men looked to be coasting to another big win at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium on Sunday. They led the Hammers 3-0 early in the first half and, despite failing to add to their tally, maintained that advantage into the final 10 minutes.
But a remarkable finish saw Fabián Balbuena pull one back and then Davinson Sánchez head into his own net before a stunning Manuel Lanzini strike deep into stoppage time rescued a 3-3 draw for David Moyes' side. Spurs dropped two points in the final seconds against Newcastle United, too, with a contentious penalty award following a free-kick.
And another set-piece on the opening weekend saw Dominic Calvert-Lewin head a winner for Everton, meaning Tottenham are yet to win at home in the Premier League this season. But while Mourinho acknowledges the need to improve, speaking ahead of the Europa League clash with LASK, the coach dismissed the idea his team are "Spursy", a phrase used by rival fans to mock Tottenham's perceived propensity to collapse.
"That denomination is not important for me, the past is not important for me," he told reporters. "The future is, of course, important for me. "What can I say? We are a team in evolution. I believe that nobody has played better than us with the ball, which is a big evolution from last season. We are a very exciting team to watch, I believe. That is very important and that's the DNA that we want to have. Is that enough to win matches? No. You have the proof that we have eight points when we played so amazing in every match apart from the Everton match. Southampton, Man United, Newcastle and West Ham, we played amazing football. This is very difficult to do. But, of course, we need to play for a result and we have to learn how to do it. What happened [on Sunday] is a bit out of context with what has happened this season. Against Southampton, we were losing and we were strong enough to change the result. Against Man United, the worst thing happened to us, which was after one minute we were losing, and we were strong enough to change that result. Against Newcastle, we were solid, playing amazing, solid, and what happened was one of the beauties of VAR this season. So this game is completely out of context. I believe that winning 3-0 in minute 80, we can play 50 more matches and it's not going to happen again. So I don't want to be sticking on this and [have] stories about 'Spursy' and this kind of thing. We just need to defend better from set-pieces. Even defensively, the team is playing very well. We've conceded one single goal from open play, against Southampton, one. Apart from that: penalties, free-kicks, VAR goals. We are quite solid."
Spurs will be without defenders Eric Dier and Japhet Tanganga tomorrow. Mourinho would only confirm Sánchez - the scorer of the own goal - as a starter against LASK, with the defender speaking alongside his coach, who added: "The only thing I ask is that you don't ask him about his amazing goal on Sunday."
Sánchez said: "Of course, [the West Ham draw] was hard to take, we know that. It had to be better. In the same way, we have enough experience to take it and not repeat it."