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Tottenham 3 LASK 0: Bale gets an assist on first Spurs start in seven years but Vinicius shines brightest in Kane role


A VICTORY and an assist in your first start – what more can you LASK?

This will not go down in history as Gareth Bale’s greatest ever match. Far from it.

Bale showed there is plenty of life left in him yet with an assist for Spurs in the 3-0 win over LASKCredit: Jamie McPhilimey – The Sun

But you never know, it could turn out to be one of the most significant of the Welshman’s career – certainly the latter stage of it.

As it just might be the one that gets him back on the road to superstardom.

Bale, 31, made his first start for his beloved Spurs since rejoining them on a season long loan from Real Madrid.

He won four Champions Leagues during his successful seven-year stint at the Bernabeu.

But last night he looked genuinely thrilled to be playing in Europe’s much-maligned second competition as he celebrated his long-awaited second full Spurs debut by forcing an own goal to seal that made it 2-0 before the break.

This was Bale’s first Spurs start since May 19, 2013 when he scored the only in a 1-0 home win over Sunderland in their final Premier League match of that season.

And this was his first Euro appearance for the North Londoners since their 2-2 draw with FC Basel in the first leg of the quarters of this competition six weeks earlier.

The return of the Cardiff-born Messiah was always going to hog the spotlight – and that is a shame for his new Spurs team-mate Carlos Vinicius.

Moura opened the scoring for Spurs in the comfortable winCredit: Reuters

The Samba striker had a stormer on his first start since arriving on loan from Benfica.

His all-action display and the way he linked up his with his fellow countryman Lucas Moura for the opening goal, shows Spurs may finally have found a frontman to deputise ably for and even play alongside Harry Kane.

The overworked England captain was even afforded a rare night off as Tottenham’s new boys took the load.

Bale will be relieved this went better than his cameo on Sunday when he came off the bench as a 72nd minute sub with Tottenham 3-0 up at home to West Ham – only to miss a glorious chance to wrap up for the points as the Hammers hit back with three late goals to seal a sensational comeback.

Toned and lean, the Wales ace looked a fine specimen as he fist-pumped his team-mates before kick off.

And as music from the empty’s stadium PA system died and the cool N17 night air fell silent all you could hear was Spurs keeper Joe Hart screaming “Are you ready for this? Are you ready for this?” like some demented second-rate DJ in Ibiza.

Bale’s first significant action saw him wriggle his way down the right past Andres Andrade to win a seventh minute later.

The former left-sided continued to hug the right touchline and moments later he played in right-back Matt Doherty to cross for Vinicius, who followed in the best traditions of Tottenham strikers such as Roberto Soldado and Vincent Janssen by somehow heading wide from close range.

One of the downsides with Bale playing out wide is that he is unable to dictate play as much as he did here when he was deployed more centrally.

Blowing heavily after 15 minutes – perhaps understandably on his first club start since Real Madrid’s 2-0 win over Real Mallorca on June 24 – he was unlucky not to win a free kick when he appeared to be tripped by Andrade after nutmegging him in the corner.

Vinicius redeemed himself by setting up Moura’s 18th minute opener with a wonderful reverse pass which allowed his fellow Brazilian to slot home his third goal of the season.

Bale then got his own back on Andrade for that earlier trip by collecting Erik Lamela’s pass and delivering a cross which the Panamanian defender turned into his own net to double the lead in the 27th minute.

In-between, the ever-improving Pierre-Emile Hojbjerg needed his head bandaged Terry Butcher-style after coming off second best in a challenge with Rene Renner, a tackler so bad they named him twice (well almost!).

The chippy little Austrian looked none too pleased when he was subbed eight minutes before the break.

Vinicius looked a talent for the now and future for SpursCredit: EPA

Spurs should have been 3-0 up by then as Erik Lamela’s shot was saved at the second attempt by keeper Alexander Schlager – just as Bale was set to pounce for a tap-in.

LASK, or Linzer Athletik-Sport-Klub to give them their full name, finished fourth in the Austrian Bundesliga last season.

They also reached the last 16 of this competition when Manchester United beat them 7-1 on aggregate in August.

LASK thrashed Slovak side Dunajska Streda 7-0 in the qualifier and recorded a stunning 4-1 win over Sporting Lisbon in the play-off before being drawn in Group J alongside Spurs, Royal Antwerp and Ludogorets Razgrad.

The Austrians had won four of their previous five matches and almost got a foothold in this tie when Andreas Gruber’s 25-yard shot was spectacularly tipped away by Hart.

Bale lasted an hour before being replaced by Son Heung-min in a triple substitution which also saw Dele Alli – remember him? – and Moussa Sissoko come on for Lamela and Hojbjerg, who appeared after the break without his headgear.

The events of Sunday clearly resulted in the second half being tenser than it ought to have been.

Son completed the scoring with a simple finish from inside the box in the 85th minute.

The aim now is clearly to get Bale fitter and sharper as quickly as possible so he can make even more of an impact than his modest one here.

Gareth Bale is on the ball in Spurs training


Source: Soccer - thesun.co.uk


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