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Tottenham Hotspur v Manchester United: Premier League – live

Minute-by-minute report: Ruben Amorim’s side look to extend their unbeaten run at Spurs. Join Tim de Lisle for updates

Tottenham Hotspur v Manchester United: Premier League – live

12.59pm GMT 28 min From the corner, United counter. Mbeumo send a hopeful ball forward to Amad, who does well to win a corner as Spence dashes back. 12.58pm GMT 27 min Mazraoui and Amad dovetail crisply on United’s right, but the cross from Mazraoui isn’t clinical enough. Spurs charge forward and win a corner as De Ligt would rather be safe than sorry. 12.56pm GMT 25 min Remember Harry Maguire turning into a right-winger in the Europa League last season? Now he’s dancing down the left! And getting a cross in, but Mbeumo can’t control it. 12.55pm GMT 24 min From the resulting corner, United want a penalty as Richarlison clears, but neither the ref nor the VAR is convinced. 12.54pm GMT 22 min Half-chance for United! Cunha controls a bobbling ball and gets a shot in, but it’s easily saved. He probably should have squared for Mbeumo, who was unmarked. 12.51pm GMT 20 min Van de Ven beats one man and an oooh of excitement goes round the ground. That’s all it takes now. 12.49pm GMT 18 min United have two left-backs on the field, Shaw and Dorgu, but Spurs keep getting down that side. Amorim waves his arms, as well he may. 12.48pm GMT 16 min Another good cross from Spurs, another failure to get on the end of it. This time the crosser is Johnson, the ball even better than the last one, and Richarlison is there or thereabouts – but he can’t get a touch. 12.47pm GMT 15 min Good work by Richarlison, tracking into midfield, leads, eventually, to Porro having time and space on the right. He whips in a characteristically good cross which nobody can get on the end of, perhaps because Richarlison has dropped too deep. 12.45pm GMT 14 min The ref, by the way, is Sam Barrott. When the game resumes, Shaw plays a lovely ball to Mbeumo, which doesn’t lead anywhere. 12.43pm GMT 12 min Kolo Muani goes down and Harry Maguire waves to the ref, who stops the game. We have an email! “As far as I can make out, the scarf in the photo at the top of the page says ‘Superspur’,” Kári Tulinius writes. “I’ve never heard that before. Is that a nickname for the Lilywhites that I just don’t know, or are the merchandising makers using AI to design their wares now?” I’m rather hoping that’s a rhetorical question. 12.41pm GMT 9 min At the other end Brennan Johnson bursts into the box but can’t keep the ball under control. Spurs’ pace may well bother United’s back three, with no Leny Yoro there to bail out his elders. 12.39pm GMT 8 min United half-chance! Bruno Fernandes wiggles forward and slips in Mbeumo, who plays a nice simple square ball – to nobody! Cunha needed to be there. Updated at 12.55pm GMT 12.37pm GMT 6 min Formations update: Richarlison is on the left for Spurs, with Randal Kolo Muani upfront. And Bryan Mbeumo has started on the left for United, for the first time I think. He’s been playing so well that you’d back him anywhere, but it does mean that his partnership with Amad on the right is shelved, and he has to forge a new one with Patrick Dorgu. 12.33pm GMT 3 min The corner is a deep one – too deep for Van de Ven, or anyone else. 12.32pm GMT 2 min An early blooper from Senne Lammens, who lets a back-pass brush his boot and go for a corner. 12.32pm GMT 1 min Spurs kick off, go back, go long and get an early shot in from Xavi Simons, blocked by Luke Shaw. 12.30pm GMT Members of the armed forces bring out wreaths and lay them on the centre circle. The crowd falls silent as a trumpeter plays The Last Post, filling the stadium with its mournful dignity. Updated at 12.33pm GMT 12.28pm GMT The players are out there and the TNT director is zooming in on Micky van de Ven, understandably after his wonder goal. He has six goals this season, more than any United player. 12.20pm GMT This will be the fifth time that Amorim has started with a middle four of Mazraoui, Casemiro, Fernandes and Dorgu, according to sources close to United Writing. They have had mixed results, losing on the road and winning at home. They lost at Chelsea, lost the Europa League final to Spurs, beat Villa at the end of last season and then beat Chelsea this season – but both those wins had a big hand from the opposing goalie, who was sent off. Today’s front three – Amad, Cunha and Mbeumo – have never started a game as the front three before. They are the 27th different front three Amorim has picked in his year at United. Updated at 12.21pm GMT 12.07pm GMT Some thoughts from Thomas Frank. “It’s about getting that consistency in performances,” he argues. He can say that again, and no doubt he will. “Big game, we’re ready, we look forward to it… We thought to have Richi [Richarlison] and Kolo [Muani] together could be interesting, hopefully a game-changer.” Hmmm … maybe he’s going 4-4-2. Updated at 12.12pm GMT 11.55am GMT Other Guardian live blogs are available. Over on Matchday Live, Billy Munday is your host and Nick Ames is holding a Q&A loosely centred on this match. If you’d rather have a little less conversation, a little more action, do join Rob Smyth for the big game in the Women’s Super League: Arsenal at home to Chelsea, starting any minute. My entire household has just set off for that one, festooned in scarves and replica shirts. Reader, I married a Gooner. Updated at 11.59am GMT 11.48am GMT Kobbie Mainoo is ruled out with a knock, which may have caused panic in the United hierarchy. For the past few weeks, he’s been the last vestige of the United youth system in the first-team squad, maintaining the club’s proud record of always having at least one Academy alumnus there on matchday for the past 88 years. His place on the bench goes to Jack Fletcher, son of Darren, so the record is safe for now. Amorim says he doesn’t “want to be the guy” who breaks that chain. But he was quite prepared to be the guy who endangered it with a purge of the first team that homed in on home-grown stars – banishing Marcus Rashford, selling Alejandro Garnacho and marginalising Mainoo. Updated at 12.02pm GMT 11.39am GMT Teams in full On second thoughts, I suspect United’s false-ish 9 is Bryan Mbeumo, which would allow the other two forwards to play on their usual sides, Amad cutting in from the right and Cunha from the left. Diogo Dalot drops to the bench, so, with Kevin Danso among the subs for Spurs, there may be no long throws for the first hour. Tottenham Hotspur (probable 4-2-3-1) Vicario; Porro, Romero, Van de Ven, Spence; Palhinha, Sarr; Johnson, Simons, Kolo Muani; Richarlison. Subs: Kinsky, Udogie, Danso, Rowswell, Bentancur, Scarlett, Odobert, Tel, Akhamrich. Manchester United (probable 3-4-2-1) Lammens; De Ligt, Maguire, Shaw; Mazraoui, Casemiro, Fernandes, Dorgu; Amad, Cunha; Mbeumo.Subs: Bayindir, Yoro, Heaven, Ugarte, Dalot, Mount, J Fletcher, Zirkzee, Sesko. 11.29am GMT Teams in brief: Frank picks two strikers No striker for United, two for Spurs. Richarlison and Randal Kolo Muani both start, with one of them presumably playing on the left. Mohammed Kudus is unfit and Brennan Johnson is on the right, ready to reprise his role as United’s conqueror from the Europa League final. 11.25am GMT Teams in brief: Sesko benched After showing faith in Benjamin Sesko at his press conference, Ruben Amorim drops him to the bench. Usually that means Matheus Cunha playing as a false-ish 9 and Mason Mount coming in at inside-left, but this time the Mount role goes to Amad, with Noussair Mazraoui coming in at right wing-back. So both wing-backs are full-backs (Patrick Dorgu being the other one) and United are more defensive than they have been recently. Updated at 11.32am GMT 11.00am GMT Preamble Morning everyone and welcome to the first Premier League game of the weekend. It’s the Sergio Reguilon derby! It’s a replay of the last Europa League final! It can’t be as boring as that was! Say what you like about Spurs, they are Ruben Amorim’s bogey team (and he has a few of those). They may have won only three home games in the league in the past year, two of them against promoted teams, but the other one was against Amorim’s United (1-0). They have also left Amorim empty-handed in the League Cup (4-3) and that Europa final (another 1-0). Last season these two famous clubs finished 15th and 17th in the Premier League, keeping each other company on the slide to incompetence. This season they have at least found their way back to respectability: Spurs are up 11 places to sixth while United are up seven to eighth. But Spurs have only done well away and United, apart from their triumph at Anfield, have only done well at home. United, as soon as they leave Salford, are a mid-table team (tenth in the away table); Spurs, at their own stadium, are still a piece of mouldy cheese (17th in the home table). On form, we can probably expect both of them to lose today. The good news for Amorim is that his nemesis, Ange Postecoglou, is no longer there to say “Lads, it’s United”. His Spurs hoodoo may have been just an Ange hoodoo. The bad news for Amorim is that since the start of last season Spurs have four wins over United with three clean sheets and a combined score of 9-3. And they have four players who scored twice in those games, although three of them are now injured – James Maddison, Dejan Kulusevski and Dominic Solanke. So Brennan Johnson may have to do it all by himself, just as he did in Bilbao. Thomas Frank needs to decide who’s ready to go again after the 4-0 cruise past FC Copenhagen. Amorim, with no European fixtures to worry about, needs to decide whether to stick with the XI who could only draw at Forest. The sole meeting so far between these managers, at Brentford six months ago, finished 4-3 to Frank. Given that both United and Spurs overhauled their attack in the summer while keeping faith with their defence, something similar seems perfectly plausible. The kick-off is at 12.30pm (GMT) and I’ll be back soon with the teams.

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