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Relieved Pochettino says Spurs win over Dortmund "massive"

ByReuters

Published 13/09/2017 at 22:37 GMT

By Martyn Herman

Eurosport

Image credit: Eurosport

LONDON, Sept 13 (Reuters) - It was not the kind of dominant home display Tottenham Hotspur fans came to expect last season but the 3-1 win over Borussia Dortmund in their Champions League opener on Wednesday was "massive" according to manager Mauricio Pochettino.
His side managed only 37 percent possession against the Bundesliga leaders who showed why they were good enough to reach the quarter-finals last year, but thanks to two fine goals by striker Harry Kane Spurs sent the faithful home happy.
More significantly perhaps was the fact that it got the Wembley monkey off their back after their failure to win either of their opening two Premier League games at the stadium which is their temporary home while their new ground is built.
Defeats by Monaco and Bayer Leverkusen at Wembley last year, when they played their Champions League home games there, fuelled the belief that the national stadium, where Tottenham had won only two in 12 before Wednesday, was a jinx.
When Dortmund's Andriy Yarmolenko curled home a stunner to cancel out Son Heung-min's strike in a frenzied opening to the Group H match, Spurs feared the worst.
But Kane lashed home his first goal in the 15th minute and coolly made it 3-1 on the hour to give Tottenham breathing space.
"It was massive to get off to a winning start," Pochettino, who led Tottenham to second place in the Premier League last season, told reporters. "It means more than three points today.
"To get three points against a fantastic team like Dortmund who have unbelievable players was massive for our confidence."
Tottenham were unbeaten in their final season at White Hart Lane, dropping just four points and generally dominating opponents with high-tempo football.
The question was whether they could emulate that on a bigger Wembley pitch, without their renowned 'home' atmosphere, especially against quality opposition.
This season's rather unlucky 2-1 defeat by Chelsea increased those concerns but Pochettino said the way his side dug in against Dortmund proved they could find other ways to win.
"It was tough in the first half and they dominated the game," he said. "But we were clinical. It was an important win, especially when you don't dominate the opposition but show different strengths.
"The performance was good but it was a day when the result was the most important thing. I hope people now stop talking about the (Wembley) curse."
Dortmund had not conceded a goal this season before Wednesday but despite their loss manager Peter Bosz, who led Ajax Amsterdam to the Europa League final last year, praised his team.
"We played very well in the first half and played some good football but we left some spaces behind the back four," he said after seeing Dortmund's 12-match unbeaten run end.
"It was difficult for Spurs to get the pressure on but unfortunately we didn't see that in the result."
Dortmund and Tottenham are likely to be battling for runners-up spot behind champions Real Madrid who beat Apoel Nicosia 3-0 on Wednesday to top the group. (Editing by Clare Fallon)
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