Twitter reacts to another first-half Tottenham implosion

There was a sinking feeling of deja vu for Tottenham against Liverpool on Sunday afternoon
There was a sinking feeling of deja vu for Tottenham against Liverpool on Sunday afternoon / Michael Regan/GettyImages
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Deja vu - the sense of unerring familiarity when witnessing an event you feel that you've already lived through - is supposed to be a glitch in the Matrix.

Whatever is wrong with Tottenham's backline in the opening exchanges of a match is far worse than a mere glitch. Just seven days after shipping five in the first 21 minutes against Newcastle, Tottenham limply rolled over to let in three goals after 15 minutes against Liverpool at Anfield on Sunday.

Spurs also conceded the opening goal against Manchester United after just seven minutes, going into the interval trailing 2-0 before an unlikely turnaround in the second half. As some Spurs began filing out of Anfield with a quarter-hour on the clock, optimism was evidently low among the travelling support.

Tottenham chairman Daniel Levy reacted to the mauling at St James' Park by sacking interim manager Cristian Stellini, Antonio Conte's former assistant, and promoting Ryan Mason - Stellini's assistant - back to a caretaker role he held in 2021.

Levy also sanctioned refunds for all the fans that travelled to Newcastle for the 6-1 thrashing dished out last week. While the possibility of the chairman eyeing up Matt Wells, Mason's assistant, wasn't mulled over, the watching public took great pleasure in predicting another raid of Tottenham's coffers.

Even the Tottenham fans that made the long trip north noted the potential for remuneration.

In fairness, Tottenham's travelling support has been put through the wringer across the club's last two away matches.

After enduring so much travel for so little success across the opening exchanges of successive trips on the road, Tottenham fans turned to gallows humour.

Admittedly, the wry grin on the faces of those in the Anfield away end may have been wiped off when Mohamed Salah converted a penalty for a rash lunge on Cody Gakpo after 15 minutes.

Just as he did against Newcastle, Harry Kane pulled one back for Spurs, this time lashing the ball between Alisson's legs before the interval as Liverpool - or at least Virgil van Dijk - threatened to snap.

However, the Reds preserved their advantage going into half-time, ensuring Tottenham's increasingly common tendency to implode stole the focus.


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