How Lucas Moura has added another dimension to Tottenham’s attacking play
By Oliver Young-Myles
After scoring twice against Manchester United on Monday evening, Moura has shown he is key to Mauricio Pochettino's attacking plans
Much has been made of Tottenham’s poor away record against their top six rivals, but Monday’s 3-0 win over Manchester United at Old Trafford shows that Mauricio Pochettino’s side are continuing to evolve in the Argentine’s fifth season in charge. Before the game, Spurs had won only two of their previous 20 matches away to United, Arsenal, Chelsea, Emirates Marketing Project and Liverpool, but a Harry Kane header and Lucas Moura double gave them an emphatic win over Jose Mourinho’s beleaguered team.
It was Mourinho’s biggest ever home defeat and one of his lowest moments as United manager. Spurs rode their luck at times and on another night could well have gone in behind at the break had Romelu Lukaku taken a couple of chances that fell his way. However, Spurs were clinical in the second half and the way in which Pochettino set his side out had a huge bearing on the result.
Pochettino’s tactical evolution
During Pochettino’s first couple of seasons in charge of Spurs, his team was set up almost exclusively in a 4-2-3-1 system with the wingers tucked in and the full-backs providing the width on the outside. In 2016/17, he successfully adapted to a 3-4-2-1 in response to Antonio Conte’s success with Chelsea using a back-three. Against United on Monday and for the final half hour of last weekend’s 3-1 win over Fulham, though, Spurs were set up in a 4-4-2 diamond with Christian Eriksen playing in his natural role as a No.10 and Lucas Moura partnering Kane in attack.
The average position map from the United game showed that all six of Spurs’ midfielders and attackers were bunched inside the confines of the centre circle. It didn’t really work in the first half as United managed to pin Kieran Trippier and Danny Rose deep into their own half, meaning Spurs, without any width in midfield, were forced into playing direct, which suited their opponents.
In the second half, though, the benefits of the system became clearer as Spurs regained some control in the middle while also having a quick, direct outlet up front. Kane’s opening strike – a majestic header planted in the stanchion of the goal – came via a Kieran Trippier set-piece, but both of Lucas’ goals were as a result of his positioning at the apex of the Spurs attack.
A new role for Lucas
When Lucas was signed from PSG in January, it was assumed that he had been bought to provide Spurs with natural width on the right wing as well as pace and dynamism during attacking transitions. Aside from Son Heung-min, Spurs lacked an attacking player with such characteristics.
Pochettino had long sought after a player of that ilk. A move for Crystal Palace’s Wilfried Zaha fell through in 2016 and Spurs instead turned to Moussa Sissoko, fresh from his barnstorming performances for France at the Euros. Sissoko’s kick-and-run style has never suited a team that plays in a controlled manner and Lucas’ arrival looked to spell the end of the Sissoko experiment on the right wing. Except Lucas hasn't really played there either.
Instead, the Brazilian has been used in tandem with Kane in a two-man strikeforce, at least in the last game-and-a-third anyway. The average position map of Spurs’ side from Monday’s game shows that Lucas, rather than Kane, was Spurs’ most advanced player – that can’t have happened too often since Kane’s rise to prominence in 2014.
As a natural winger, Lucas’ ability to commit defenders with his speed and close control is a key part of his armoury and it was in evidence for his second and Spurs’ third goal of the night when he breezed past Chris Smalling en route to burying an effort beyond David De Gea. His first, meanwhile, was equally clinical as he ghosted into the area to turn Eriksen’s cut-back into the corner.
Both of Lucas’ finishes were hit with such conviction and confidence that you could be forgiven for thinking it was Kane who had delivered them and, while he is renowned for being a wide player, the Brazilian’s goalscoring record at PSG indicates why Pochettino has given him his current role.
Although he has never surpassed the 20-goal mark in a campaign, Lucas’ return of 19 from 53 matches in the 2016/17 season shows that he has a knack for goalscoring. Indeed, it was only the arrivals of Kylian Mbappe and Neymar last summer that forced Lucas out of the PSG side after what had been his most productive season in the French capital.
‘He has brought different alternatives’
After the game, Pochettino was full of praise for Lucas, saying: “He is showing his quality. I am so happy, he’s a great guy and he brought the team different skills, different alternatives and the most important thing is to find a different place to how he was finding in Paris last year. I think it’s [up to us] to find the best place to help him to perform in the way that we want.”
If Monday night is anything to go by, the best place to get the most out of Lucas is up front, alongside Kane, in a 4-4-2 diamond. Pochettino’s tactics are evolving again and that can only be good news for Spurs and their in-form forward.
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