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Son Heung-min desperate for a medal and the "final piece" of his Spurs career

Son Heung-min is eager to help Spurs to European glory
Son Heung-min is eager to help Spurs to European glory

Son Heung-min is desperate to lead Tottenham to Europa League glory in Bilbao and complete the missing "final piece" of his career at the club.

Spurs captain Son has scored 173 goals in 451 appearances across 10 seasons in north London but failed to land silverware and has watched long-serving team-mates Hugo Lloris and Harry Kane depart in recent years.

The South Korean has been involved in two painful cup final defeats for Tottenham: to Liverpool - in the Champions League in 2019 - and a Carabao Cup loss at Wembley to Manchester City four years ago - but believes the feeling around next Wednesday's showpiece is different.

While Ange Postecoglou's Spurs have endured a torrid Premier League campaign, they have saved their best for Europe to knock out AZ Alkmaar, Eintracht Frankfurt and Bodo/Glimt in impressive fashion and boast three victories already over finalists Manchester United this term.

During an interview with Korean media at the club's Europa League final media day on Monday, Son said: "We've been talking about this for years. The biggest reason I stayed at Tottenham was because I wanted to do something others couldn't achieve.

"That's probably why I'm where I am now. You need all the pieces to complete a puzzle. I think I've gathered all the other pieces to make that puzzle complete.

"It feels like I've been missing that one most important final piece and I've been trying to find it for the past 10 years. I really hope I can finally complete the puzzle this time.

"It feels different this time. I really want to win - more than anyone else, I think. So many people are supporting us with the same desperate passion I feel. If we prepare well, I believe we can achieve it."

Son has watched various Spurs players leave and taste success elsewhere, with Kane the latest after he helped Bayern Munich to the Bundesliga title earlier this month.

The duo struck up a formidable partnership at Tottenham and while Kane left almost two years ago, he has given his old strike partner "energy" before a date with destiny at San Mames on 21 May.

"I actually texted Harry and he called me back on a video call! I was really happy to see him happy," Son reflected.

"He is one of my best friends and to see a once team-mate achieve so much, I was delighted for him like he's my family. With that positive energy, I hope he can support Spurs in the game as well so we can achieve a good result like his.

"For me, every game is special and every game is meaningful, but this game feels like an opportunity that may not come back."

Spurs manager Ange Postecoglou

Postecoglou believes victory for Tottenham could be a turning point for the club even if it may not be enough to prevent "white smoke" regarding his own future.

Tottenham's trophy drought stretches back 17 years and even further in Europe – a 1984 success in this competition when it was the UEFA Cup – but a dismal Premier League campaign means speculation over Postecoglou’s tenure remains.

Nevertheless, the Australian is determined to help his current squad etch their name into club folklore and replace black and white images at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium.

"For me personally, well you know great, it’s another trophy I can reminisce in my old age about, but more importantly what it means for the club," Postecoglou said.

"When you look at the historical backdrop of this club and what it’s been through in the last 20-odd years, I feel like it could be a turning point in terms of the way the club is perceived but also more how it perceives itself which I think is the biggest thing.

"That’s the hurdle this club has to overcome because it’ll always be there. Until you actually do it, then you are fair game for people to say 'you’ve always kind of fluffed it on the big stage.’

"Irrespective of what the opposition say or what anyone else says, what you’ve got to try and do is break that cycle. Whatever motivation you need to do that, you tap into.

"So, there may be things we do tap into but to really do something as significant as what you want to do, there has got to be a higher purpose than shutting people’s mouths up.

"I think it is more about ‘can you make an impact?’ I often say to the players that at the end of your careers, what you want to be able to do is go back to the clubs you served and know you’ve made an impact.

"The photos I see up on the walls at the stadium are all of Bill Nicholson. The 1984 winning team. A lot of them are in black and white. Can we get this group up on that wall?"

Impressive away displays at Eintracht Frankfurt and Bodo/Glimt have increased belief that this Spurs side can go all the way in Europe despite being 17th in the Premier League.

Injuries continued to affect Tottenham, with Lucas Bergvall and James Maddison out for the rest of the season, while Dejan Kulusevski sustained a muscle issue against Crystal Palace on Sunday and even Brennan Johnson provided a scare on Monday.

Johnson was fine to carry on after being accidentally tackled by his own team-mate Sergio Reguilon, which Postecoglou joked would result in his squad being wrapped up in cotton wool.

Victory in Bilbao would enable Postecoglou to achieve what predecessors Antonio Conte, Jose Mourinho and Mauricio Pochettino failed to in winning silverware at Spurs, but he referenced the white smoke of a new pope being chosen when he discussed potential Europa League final success.

Postecoglou added: "I could have been sitting here fifth last year, fifth this year – maybe people wouldn’t be waiting for the white smoke to see if it’s my last one – but they’d still be saying, ‘you know Ange, that’s great but it’s all been done before. Until this club wins something, you haven’t made an impact,’

"I kind of knew throughout my tenure last year, that’s what I was going to be judged on so now we have an opportunity to do that."

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