Harry Winks: From Flag-Bearer to Standard-Bearer at Tottenham

Tottenham’s Harry Winks. (Getty Images)
Tottenham’s Harry Winks. (Getty Images)
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Harry Winks: From Flag-Bearer to Standard-Bearer at Tottenham

Tottenham’s Harry Winks. (Getty Images)
Tottenham’s Harry Winks. (Getty Images)

It is a lovely story, a real ratings winner, and one that bears retelling at times like these. As a 15-year-old Tottenham academy hopeful, Harry Winks was given the honor of being a flag-bearer before the club’s Champions League quarter-final tie against Real Madrid at White Hart Lane in 2011.

It was an incredible thrill for him, being up close to Cristiano Ronaldo and all of the rest, but not least because first and foremost Winks is a Spurs fan who started going to home games with his father, Gary, when he was six or seven. By then, Winks had joined the club’s academy. He was five when that happened.

On Wednesday at Wembley, on another grand Champions League occasion – the last 16, first-leg tie against Borussia Dortmund – Winks completed his journey from flag-bearer to standard-bearer. And when the dust had settled on a memorable 3-0 win, nobody felt the elation more than him.

“I’ve been in the stands and I’ve watched Spurs play in the Champions League many years ago so to play, get the win and do as well as we did makes it that little bit more special,” Winks said. “It is up there with the greatest results I have had in a Spurs shirt. I am incredibly proud and delighted to be playing for the team.”

The headlines went to Son Heung-min and Jan Vertonghen, scorers of the first and second goals, with the latter imposing himself out of position at left wing-back. But Winks was the quiet force behind the victory – one he described as a “statement” to the rest of Europe.

Mauricio Pochettino has come to rely on Winks, particularly in the big Champions League games, preferring his playmaking skills in front of the backline to a more orthodox defensive presence. The manager prizes Winks’s composure in pressure situations, his ability to set the tempo with his passing and against Dortmund he got the team moving.

The first half was a struggle but, more than anyone, Winks tried to bring the urgency, the fizz on the ball. Once Son had made the breakthrough in the 47th minute Dortmund were strangely passive and Spurs sensed they were there for the taking. Pochettino’s team pressed in a more coherent style and Winks remained central to the gameplan. The 23-year-old saw a lot of the ball and the statistics showed that he finished with a 93 percent pass accuracy.

“The manager told us at half-time what we needed to do tactically to get on top and it worked,” Winks said. “It was just about when we went to press; it was to be more aggressive and more compact. He wanted us – from the defenders to the attackers – to be as compact as possible and to press as a unit. That was the most important message he gave to us.”

One of the things that stood out was Spurs’s patience and maturity. At this stage of the competition last season, they notoriously lost their focus against Juventus, conceding two goals in three minutes and a position of strength to exit. When they got on top this time, they tightened their grip.

“We have been in the Champions League for the last couple of years so we are starting to learn what teams are like,” Winks said. “Any small mistake gets punished. We have to be on it from minute one to full time. We have watched games back from the past where we have lost and we have taken a lot on board.”

The message from within the squad is that nothing will be taken for granted before the second leg on March 5. But they are aware of the magnitude of Wednesday’s result and the possibilities that it has opened up.

“We hope it’s a statement to show that we are up there, we mean business and we want to go as far as we can in the Champions League,” Winks said. “There is no better way of doing that than beating Dortmund 3-0 at home. We have got to win the second leg first before we can even look at how far we can go. But it’s a great result, hopefully we can progress and who knows where we can go?”

The Guardian Sport



Defiant Postecoglou Earns Some Respite as Tottenham Keep Season Alive

Football - Europa League - Quarter-final - Second Leg - Eintracht Frankfurt v Tottenham Hotspur - Deutsche Bank Park, Frankfurt, Germany - April 17, 2025 Tottenham Hotspur manager Ange Postecoglou before the match. (Reuters)
Football - Europa League - Quarter-final - Second Leg - Eintracht Frankfurt v Tottenham Hotspur - Deutsche Bank Park, Frankfurt, Germany - April 17, 2025 Tottenham Hotspur manager Ange Postecoglou before the match. (Reuters)
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Defiant Postecoglou Earns Some Respite as Tottenham Keep Season Alive

Football - Europa League - Quarter-final - Second Leg - Eintracht Frankfurt v Tottenham Hotspur - Deutsche Bank Park, Frankfurt, Germany - April 17, 2025 Tottenham Hotspur manager Ange Postecoglou before the match. (Reuters)
Football - Europa League - Quarter-final - Second Leg - Eintracht Frankfurt v Tottenham Hotspur - Deutsche Bank Park, Frankfurt, Germany - April 17, 2025 Tottenham Hotspur manager Ange Postecoglou before the match. (Reuters)

Ange Postecoglou has not had much to smile about in his second season as manager of Tottenham Hotspur but the under-pressure Australian now stands three games away from delivering the club's first silverware for 17 years.

The 59-year-old former Celtic manager has been mocked for his claim that he always wins a trophy in his second season with a club, especially with Tottenham on course for their worst Premier League finish since 1994.

His tactics have been regularly questioned and had Thursday's Europa League quarter-final away to Eintracht Frankfurt gone badly it might have spelt a hasty end to his tenure. Instead, Tottenham rolled up their sleeves and dug out a 1-0 victory for a 2-1 aggregate win.

With a two-legged semi-final against Norwegian outsiders Bodo/Glimt to come, Postecoglou appears to have bought himself some time and he was not shy in stating that fact.

"I think I said yesterday, I am the same manager today that I was yesterday so if people think us winning tonight makes me a better manager or whoever thinks I wasn't doing a good job yesterday, should be feeling the same way," he told reporters.

"I don't care, it doesn't bother me, it doesn't affect what I do. For me, it's always about the dressing room. Do the players believe? Do the staff believe?

"So, unfortunately for a lot of you, you're going to have to put up with me for a little bit longer, mate."

Tottenham have lost 17 of their 32 Premier League games this season and are 15th in the table and not mathematically safe from relegation. They have been criticized for being easy to score against, as was the case in the 4-2 loss to Wolverhampton Wanderers last week, but on Thursday they went back to basics and defended stubbornly in the face of Frankfurt pressure.

Whether or not it ends up being a turning point in Postecoglou's reign remains to be seen, but for now the gloom that has enveloped the north London club has lifted.

"Look, we can't get too far ahead of ourselves. We're in the semi-final and will play a difficult opponent in the semi, but it's not about my belief in the team," he said.

"What's more important is the belief the team has had because after a season like ours, it would be very easy for the players and staff, they could have left me in a pretty vulnerable place in terms of them splintering, but I've never felt that (even) with all the noise around our season."

Tottenham host Bodo/Glimt on May 1 with the return a week later. They are at home to high-flying Nottingham Forest in the Premier League on Monday.