Tired Newcastle United must come out fighting, says Eddie Howe
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Tottenham Hotspur's Richarlison scores their second goal.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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LONDON – Eddie Howe urged an exhausted Newcastle United to come out fighting after their 4-1 defeat by Tottenham Hotspur, as the Magpies prepare for a do-or-die Champions League clash with AC Milan on Dec 13.
Howe’s side must beat the Serie A side at St James’ Park in their final Group F match and hope Paris Saint-Germain drop points against Borussia Dortmund if they are to make the last 16.
After waiting 20 years to return to the Champions League, Newcastle are desperate to extend their adventure in Europe’s elite club competition. But, hampered by injuries, the dismal loss at Tottenham in the Premier League on Dec 10 suggested they could be running out of steam at the worst possible time.
“We’ll look at the game and try and analyse it properly to work out who to select on Wednesday. We’re not flush with options,” Howe said.
“It is difficult because we play on Wednesday. We hoped to have the squad to cope with that, but we’ve had worse injuries than any team that I can remember.
“These last few games have been tough, but I think the lads are giving everything.”
After a 3-0 loss at Everton on Dec 7, Newcastle were outplayed and outfought in north London as Destiny Udogie and Richarlison put Tottenham 2-0 up before half-time.
Richarlison netted again after the break and Son Heung-min added a late penalty, with Joelinton’s stoppage-time strike no consolation for the weary Magpies.
With Newcastle languishing in seventh place in the Premier League, seven points adrift of the top four, a return to the Champions League next season cannot be taken for granted.
That makes this season’s campaign in the tournament even more significant for the Saudi-backed club, whose owners did not buy the Magpies to watch them scrap to qualify for Europe’s second- and third-tier competitions.
If PSG beat Dortmund, Newcastle will be eliminated regardless of their result against Milan.
But Howe hopes the return to fitness of England striker Callum Wilson and energetic midfielder Sean Longstaff, who both came off the bench against Tottenham, will provide a much-needed boost.
“We have light at the end of the tunnel. Callum and Longstaff are two huge players for us,” he said.
He is still without Jacob Murphy, Nick Pope, Harvey Barnes, Joe Willock, Dan Burn and Sven Botman while Sandro Tonali is banned.
Regardless of Newcastle’s fitness woes, which have contributed to four defeats in their last seven games, Howe wants his team to use the pain of their spluttering streak as fuel for a dynamic display against the Italian giants
“We have to be positive, take the pain and come fighting,” he said. “It’s a difficult moment for us. We probably expected it to come a little bit earlier than it has. The lads have been really good to sustain the results that we were having.
“The last two have been tough games. Not us at our best. Physically, we looked fatigued and there was not much we could do about it.
“But we just have to keep going. The more players we can get back, everyone is so important.”
Spurs, meanwhile, have ended their own slump after losing key players to injuries and suspensions.
The win at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium was their first in six matches. Manager Ange Postecoglou said: “We are trying to build something here and part of that is, through the tough periods, to not allow the lads too much of an attitude in terms of excuses.
“But the reality is – and I was probably too hard on them in retrospect – we got decimated after the Chelsea game (4-1 defeat). It’s no coincidence our form has improved since we got players back.
“It sounds like excuses but that’s the reality of this league. You don’t need too much analysis to see why, in the last few weeks, we haven’t been as conclusive in our results as earlier in the season.” AFP

