Premier League:Â Tottenham Hotspur 3 Crystal Palace 1Â
Almost two years after his last goal for Chelsea, Timo Werner is still proving to be an enigma, but at least he has found a role at his new home that suits his strengths and could help Tottenham qualify for a Champions League place.
Chelsea paid âŹ50m back in 2020 for the German forward, who is neither an out-and-out winger nor a number nine, but he failed to live up to expectations at Stamford Bridge and the Blues took a âŹ25m hit when they sold him back to RB Leipzig two years later.
Ten goals in 56 games was a poor return for a man tasked with leading the line for Chelsea, and once back in Germany, he failed to find the goalscoring form of old that had made him one of Europeâs most dangerous forwards.
But Ange Postecoglouâs system at Spurs is ideal for fast-raiding widemen who can score the odd goal, and although Werner is as erratic as ever with his finishing, he is playing a key role in Tottenhamâs push for a top four finish.
On Saturday against Crystal Palace, he overhit a couple of crosses and missed a golden chance to put Spurs ahead, but after Eberichi Eze scored a spectacular goal for the Eagles, Werner equalised to spark the now traditional Tottenham comeback.
Cristian Romeroâs header put them in front soon afterwards, and Heung Min Son showed Werner how to finish when one-on-one with the goalkeeper to secure three points. The German had earlier missed a similar chance, but otherwise gave Palaceâs defence a torrid time and should have had a penalty after being tripped in the box.
Werner has acknowledged that his primary role is not to score goals but more to assist with their fast breaking, attacking play, and admitted he was delighted to score his first goal in England since April 2022.
âI havenât really felt any pressure to score (my first goal) because the guys here have made me feel very comfortable from day one. They have made it easy for me to focus on playing football, and now Iâve got the first goal done, itâs even better for me.â
Postecoglou said Wernerâs goal should give him the confidence to score more, while adding that he has signed him on loan primarily as a player to help create goals. âI understand with attacking players, goals make them feel better and more confident, relieves the pressure a bit. Apart from his missed chance, his general play was really good taking on the full-back with aggressive running, and his goal came at a good time for us. Iâve been really happy with him since he arrived.â
Werner agreed: âYou can play well, but if you donât score itâs not the best game you can play, so this was a big step for me to get more confidence and hopefully I can take it into our next games.â
For Palace, this was a reality check for new manager Oliver Glasner, whose first game since replacing Roy Hodgson was a thumping win over Burnley last week. The Austrian knows he still has work to do if he is to steer Palace to safety, but his side looked solid for most of the game. âWe did a really good job for 70 or so minutes, stuck to the plan, but to play at Tottenham you need to keep that high level throughout the whole game. We have to learn from it.â he said.
TOTTENHAM (4-2-3-1): Vicario 7; Emerson 6, Romero 7, Van de Ven 7 , Udogie 7 (Lo Celso 89); Bentancur 6 (Johnson 62), Bissouma 6; Kulusevski 6, Maddison 7 (Hojbjerg 82), Werner 7 (Sarr 82); Son 7 (Scarlett 89).
C PALACE (5-4-1): Johnstone 7; Munoz 6, Ward 6, Andersen 6, Richards 6, Mitchell 6; Ayew 6 (Edouard 71), Wharton 6 (Hughes 71), Lerma 6, Eze 7 (Franca 66); Mateta 6.
Referee: John Brooks 7.
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