Kane’s August wait goes on

If the consensus was that Liverpool had ‘won’ the transfer window, then it followed that Tottenham had ‘lost’ it. When awarding school-style grades for each team’s efforts in the transfer market this summer, one article that appeared on a platform not a million miles away from here offered the light-hearted verdict that Spurs should be expelled.

Mauricio Pochettino's Tottenham side had a familiar look at Newcastle

But where it mattered – on the pitch – Tottenham were winners on the opening weekend. Their 2-1 victory over Newcastle at St James’ Park was not the most fluent of performances that Mauricio Pochettino’s side have produced, but it was one that brought three points. The win more than justified the sort of positivity preached by the coach beforehand.

Harry Kane has only just returned to full training after playing six games – and scoring six goals – for England at the World Cup in the summer. Even so, such is his appetite to get going this season, he was straight into the Tottenham line-up and looking to end that curious and unwanted record of having never scored a Premier League goal in August.

Harry Kane played the whole game but looked a little short of his best

Unfortunately, he could not end the sequence against Newcastle, falling a little way short of his very best form at St James’ Park. A sloppy touch when put through by Eriksen in the 34th minute robbed him of his big moment. A failure to connect with a right-wing cross from the same player four minutes into the second period was another half-chance spurned.

There will be other opportunities. Fulham are the visitors to Wembley next weekend and Tottenham travel to Old Trafford to face Manchester United before August is out. But on this evidence, Kane is going to need to use these early weeks of the season to feel his way back to match fitness. After all, there is no new signing waiting to take his place.

A bit of rustiness in defence

The early goal might have made it a straightforward afternoon but the team looked vulnerable throughout, with Newcastle finding lots of space in behind Aurier down the Tottenham right. Kenedy should certainly have done better with one second-half chance but a poor touch allowed Hugo Lloris to close him down quickly.

Kieran Trippier is likely to return to replace Aurier sooner rather than later but it will be interesting to see what happens in the centre of defence. Davinson Sanchez is a considerable threat in the air, winning the initial ball that led to Jan Vertonghen’s opener and going close to scoring himself soon afterwards, but there were issues at the other end.

Jan Vertonghen scored the opening goal in the eighth minute of the game

The Colombia international allowed Joselu to drift in behind him and divert Matt Ritchie’s right-wing cross into the net for the equaliser. Sanchez is a real physical presence and he is only going to improve but it still remains a curiosity that Toby Alderweireld is seldom partnered by his compatriot Vertonghen. He was sat among the substitutes instead.

Many had expected Alderweireld to depart this summer as he enters the final year of his Tottenham contract and it was no great surprise to see him omitted here after his World Cup exertions. But if the defender is to remain a part of things at Spurs then Pochettino must surely be tempted to involve him more than he has so far in 2018.

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