Spurs can emulate Liverpool and reach final, says Crouch
Peter Crouch, whose goal gave Tottenham Hotspur a 1-0 aggregate
victory over AC Milan, believes Spurs are developing the same qualities that
took his former club Liverpool to the Champions League final in 2007.
Crouch’s goal at the San Siro proved decisive as the two teams
fought out a tense 0-0 second leg draw in the last-16 at White Hart Lane on
Wednesday which put Spurs through to the quarter-finals of the tournament for
the first time. Crouch came on as a late substitute when Milan beat Liverpool
2-1 in Athens four years ago when they won their seventh title, but was on the
winning side as Spurs showed surprisingly resilient defensive qualities on
Wednesday.
The lanky striker, who caused Milan problems until he came off
in the closing stages, believes Spurs can emulate, or even better Liverpool’s
performance in 2007. “When I reached the final with Liverpool in a lot of those
games we had to grind results out,” Crouch told reporters. “If you are going to
get to the final you have to face top class opposition, you’re not always going
to have the ball and I think if you defend well you’re going to get results.
That’s what we did at Liverpool and I think that’s what we did tonight.” Asked
if his Spurs team are better than the one Liverpool had, he said: “I think individually
we are. In that Liverpool team that reached the final, we were extremely
organised, we knew our jobs inside out. Certainly this Tottenham side has got
better individuals and probably more attacking with the flair that we’ve got.”
Impossible dream
While Crouch did the damage in attack, Michael Dawson, Spurs
skipper on the night, had a superb match in defence and alongside William
Gallas, managed to nullify the threat from Milan’s forwards, the disappointing
Zlatan Ibrahimovic, Pato and Robinho. “I think tonight we proved something
different. We can be resilient as well. So why can’t we get to the final?
Normally we are a very attacking team but tonight we had to change the way we
normally play. I think the whole team has to take credit for the clean sheet.”
Harry Redknapp, who has become the first English manager to
guide a team into the last eight of the Champions League, was also buoyant
afterwards, but kept his feet very much on the ground. “It’s been a great night
for Tottenham, but we are not going to celebrate yet,” he told reporters
afterwards. “This is an impossible dream for us, if someone had said two years
ago we would be in the quarter-finals of the Champions League you’d have
thought they were mad. I am just going home and not getting too carried away.
I’ll have a cup of tea and a bacon sandwich, and take the dogs out.”
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