Barca clash has special meaning for Spurs boss Pochettino

Mauricio Pochettino faced Barcelona nine times as manager of Espanyol, but tasted only one victory.

Published : Oct 03, 2018 02:02 IST , London

Mauricio Pochettino embraces Harry Kane, who scored a brace against Huddersfield Town at the weekend.
Mauricio Pochettino embraces Harry Kane, who scored a brace against Huddersfield Town at the weekend.
lightbox-info

Mauricio Pochettino embraces Harry Kane, who scored a brace against Huddersfield Town at the weekend.

In dire need of a famous victor to revive his team's Champions League campaign, Mauricio Pochettino will draw on the memory of the most cherished success of his career when Tottenham hosts Barcelona on Wednesday.

Pochettino's side can ill afford a damaging defeat against the Spanish champion after conceding two late goals to lose its opening Group B match 2-1 at Inter Milan.

A loss against Lionel Messi and company at Wembley would leave Tottenham facing a tough task qualifying for the knockout stages with four games remaining.

It is a perilous situation that leads Tottenham boss Pochettino to recall the day his Espanyol team upset the odds in the Barcelona derby to start his journey to managerial stardom.

Pochettino's three years in charge of Espanyol came after he spent nine years with the club, in two spells as a player.

That time in the trenches made Pochettino a favourite son of Espanyol's fans, giving the Argentine a special affinity for the rivalry with Barca.

Given Barcelona's history and financial might in contrast to the less glamorous Espanyol, it is little surprise Pochettino found it tough to get the better of the superpower from the other side of town.

Read: Kane inspired by Messi as Spurs aims to bounce back against Barca

In nine local derbies against Barca, Pochettino's team managed only one win, with five defeats and three draws.

But that lone success remains a touchstone moment for Pochettino.

Back in February 2009, Pochettino secured the first win of his managerial career in the most unlikely circumstances as lowly Espanyol stunned Pep Guardiola's star-studded Barca in the Camp Nou.

It was Espanyol's first victory at the home of its rival for 27 years and, even now, Pochettino can't quite believe it happened.

“I don't know how we did it. All the people were saying Espanyol were dead and had no chance,” he said.

“It was a special victory and an unbelievable memory.”

Enormous respect

Pochettino's special relationship with Espanyol has seen him refuse to contemplate the possibility of ever managing Barcelona, even though it would rank as a step-up from Tottenham.

The 46-year-old believes taking charge at the Camp Nou would be a betrayal of the deep roots he planted during his time in Catalonia.

“It motivates me being a periquito (Espanyol's nickname) and living so many years in Barcelona,” he said in quotes reported by Marca this week.

“Going back to the city is always nice and playing against Barcelona, too. It is always motivating.”

Asked whether it is certain that he will never manage Barca, he replied: “It's something that is more than understood.

“I have a lot of friends in Barcelona, who are from the Blaugrana and for whom I have enormous respect, but my path, and that of Barcelona, are different, opposite directions, and coaching there would be impossible.”

Having enjoyed an impressive Champions League group stage win over Real Madrid last year, Pochettino knows Tottenham is capable of toppling Barca as well.

Crucially, it goes into the game with Harry Kane back in form after the England striker shrugged off his early-season lethargy to net twice in Saturday's 2-0 win at Huddersfield.

Tottenham hasn't been at its best so far this term, but neither has Barca, with Ernesto Valverde's side failing to win any of its last three league games.

It did start its European challenge with a 4-0 drubbing of PSV Eindhoven however and Pochettino admits the long ball style played by Huddersfield at the weekend wasn't the best preparation for facing smooth-passing Barca.

“We are the third or the second team in the Premier League with most possession, but this was a different game,” Pochettino said.

“It was a game where the ball was more in the air than on the grass. I think if you were here you realised it was a massive fight between both teams.

“We'll see what happens on Wednesday. I'm sure it will be a completely different game than it was at Huddersfield.”

Sign in to unlock all user benefits
  • Get notified on top games and events
  • Save stories to read later
  • Access to comment on every story
  • Sign up / manage to our newsletters with a single click
  • Get notified by email for early bird access to discounts & offers to our products
Sign in

Comments

Comments have to be in English, and in full sentences. They cannot be abusive or personal. Please abide to our community guidelines for posting your comment