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Dele Alli, right, celebrates giving Tottenham the lead against Real Madrid with Kieran Trippier, who supplied the cross for the goal
Dele Alli, right, celebrates giving Tottenham the lead against Real Madrid with Kieran Trippier, who supplied the cross for the goal. Photograph: Laurence Griffiths/Getty Images
Dele Alli, right, celebrates giving Tottenham the lead against Real Madrid with Kieran Trippier, who supplied the cross for the goal. Photograph: Laurence Griffiths/Getty Images

Dele Alli double rocks Real Madrid for historic Tottenham victory

This article is more than 6 years old

To put this result in perspective, it had been five years since Real Madrid last experienced what it was like to lose a Champions League group game. They had won this competition three times out of the past four seasons and, though it didn’t particularly feel that way here, don’t discount the possibility of that famous old pot returning to the Bernabéu again next May. Not yet, anyway.

However, this was the night when the most successful club side in Europe found out the hard way why Mauricio Pochettino and his players have attracted so much acclaim over the past few years. It was the night Dele Alli nutmegged Sergio Ramos and, by the end, Cristiano Ronaldo could be seen dragging his fingers down his cheeks in frustration. For Spurs, it went better than they could possibly have dared to hope and, without exaggeration, sparked the sort of euphoria that should embolden them now to think they can actually win this competition. Yes, let’s not get carried away, but what other conclusion is there when they have taken apart the 12-times winners? “It wasn’t that we played badly,” Zinedine Zidane, Madrid’s manager, said. “We just came up against the better team.”

That makes it the most triumphant occasion yet of the Pochettino era, qualifying for the knockout stages with two games to spare, and the damage for Madrid might have been even worse if Alli had not headed wide from a glorious opportunity to complete a hat-trick, with the score at 3-0. No matter. Alli had already struck in each half before Christian Eriksen’s breakaway goal put Spurs in dreamland and, at that stage, Madrid were heading for the kind of drubbing that a club with their haughty self-regard would consider an affront. Ronaldo’s goal, 10 minutes from the end, changed the complexion a little but it would have needed an extraordinary feat of escapology to save Zidane’s team at that stage. And Spurs, frankly, are no longer a side with that kind of soft centre.

They had already supplied hard evidence in the Bernabeu two weeks ago that they were comfortable against elite opposition. That 1-1 draw undoubtedly helped to fix a mindset that they could take down Ronaldo et al and, in the process, they made it feel like a trick of the imagination that the common theory not too long ago was they did not enjoy playing at Wembley. The noise was as good as any time since Spurs took temporary residence. In fact, it was difficult to think of another occasion, certainly not an England fixture, when the volume has been turned so high.

Madrid often had more of the ball and Ronaldo, being Ronaldo, was a difficult and elusive opponent, shimmering with menace. Yet Tottenham gave everything to show they could excel at this level. They were quick to the ball, strong in the tackle and utterly fearless. The night was a personal ordeal for Casemiro, usually one of the more distinguished midfielders in the business, and Spurs also had the little moments of luck that are sometimes needed on the big nights. In particular, Alli’s second goal took a handy deflection off Ramos before flying in from 20 yards.

Yet this was a fully merited victory. Harry Kane’s willingness to take on opponents and drive forwards in attacking positions made him a threat all evening. Alli’s contribution went way beyond his goals and it was also another fine night for Harry Winks. Kieran Trippier fully justified his selection ahead of Serge Aurier and Hugo Lloris showed again that he was a splendid goalkeeper, just as he had done in the Bernabéu.

Quick Guide

Champions League group stage classics involving English clubs

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Newcastle 3-2 Barcelona (Sep 1997)

Described as 'the most spine-tingling, frenzied and, ultimately, nerve-wracking 90 minutes ever witnessed at St James’ Park' Newcastle’s victory came courtesy of Faustino Asprilla’s brilliant hat-trick. Barça gained their revenge at the Camp Nou but both ended up finishing behind Dynamo Kyiv

Man Utd 3-3 Barcelona (Nov 1998)

Despite throwing away a two-goal lead, it proved enough to take United through ahead of Barça, before going on to win the final

Leeds 1-0 Milan (Sep 2000)

A catastrophic error from Dida gave Leeds a crucial win courtesy of Lee Bowyer’s goal, with David O’Leary’s side going on to the semis

Newcastle 1-0 Juventus (Oct 2002)

Defender Andy Griffin was the hero as Newcastle beat Barça again, but they would gain their revenge in the next stage

Internazionale 1-5 Arsenal (Nov 2003)

A brilliant individual goal from Thierry Henry inspired a 5-1 rout  at San Siro, but Arsenal failed to reach the knockout stages that year

Juventus 0-3 Man Utd (Feb 2003)

Substitute Ryan Giggs scored twice in the second group stage tie, only for United to be knocked out by Ronaldo’s Real Madrid

Liverpool 3-1 Olympiakos (Dec 2004)

Needing to win by two goals, Steven Gerrard’s late strike catapulted Rafael Benítez’s side through and onto victory in the Istanbul final

Chelsea 1-0 Barcelona (Oct 2006)

Didier Drogba scored the winner but Michael Essien was the star as Chelsea beat the holders before losing to Liverpool in the last four

Tottenham 3-1 Inter (Nov 2010)

The game that announced Gareth Bale’s arrival on the big stage. His brilliant hat-trick saw off the holders

Man City 3-1 Barcelona (Nov 2016)

After several years of trying, City got one over on Barça thanks to two goals from Ilkay Gündogan, after Lionel Messi’s opener

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The game was always fraught with danger, as it tends to be when Ronaldo, Luka Modric and Isco are playing on the other side and Marcelo is joining in attacks as an auxiliary left-winger. Yet there was never any hint of an inferiority complex and Spurs passed the ball so purposefully it did not come as a surprise when Alli opened the scoring after 27 minutes.

They had, after all, already put together a near-identical move earlier only for Alli to hang back when Trippier drilled the ball first-time across the six-yard area. Trippier’s determination to occupy attacking positions was a prominent feature all night and the next time he aimed a low centre into the box Alli made sure he reached the ball first to apply the decisive touch in front of Kiko Casilla, Madrid’s goalkeeper.

Alli’s second of the night came 11 minutes into the second half, leaving Casemiro on the floor before getting lucky with his deflected shot, but the third goal was the outstanding one, starting in the Spurs half before Eriksen was suddenly bursting through the middle. Alli and Kane had combined to set their team-mate free. It was a counter-attack of penetrative speed and Eriksen showed considerable composure, expertly steering his shot past Casilla.

Ronaldo’s goal was a much scruffier event from one of several goalmouth scrambles in the final exchanges. Yet there was only a flicker of anxiety among a near-84,000 crowd. Spurs are too stout these days to go into meltdown. Their body language was of a team who seemed completely unsurprised by the result and their supporters will remember this victory for many years.

Pos Team P GD Pts
1 Tottenham Hotspur 4 7 10
2 Real Madrid 4 3 7
3 Borussia Dortmund 4 -4 2
4 Apoel Nicosia 4 -6 2

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