Key Points
- Tottenham Hotspur suffered a 5-2 defeat to Atletico Madrid in the first leg of their Champions League round of 16 tie at the Wanda Metropolitano on Tuesday, March 10, 2026.
- Goalkeeper Antonin Kinsky, 22, made his Champions League debut but was substituted after just 17 minutes following three goals conceded in the opening 14-15 minutes, including two errors directly attributed to him.
- Kinsky’s mistakes: Slipped on a slick pitch leading to Marcos Llorente’s opener in the 6th minute (assisted by Julian Alvarez); Antoine Griezmann scored the second in the 14th minute after Micky van de Ven slipped; Kinsky miskicked a pass to Julian Alvarez for the third goal shortly after.
- Guglielmo Vicario replaced Kinsky but conceded soon after via a deflection from Pape Matar Sarr off a Robin Le Normand header for Atletico’s fourth.​
- Tottenham pulled one back before half-time through Pedro Porro (assisted by Richarlison); Julian Alvarez scored Atletico’s fifth on a counter after a Griezmann assist; Dominic Solanke netted a late consolation for Spurs.
- Interim manager Igor Tudor described the substitution as “very rare” after 15 years of coaching, done to “preserve the guy and the team”; he called it the right pre-match decision despite pressure on Vicario.
- Tudor reassured Kinsky post-match: “He is a bright guy, a good goalkeeper, and unfortunately it happened in this big game, these big mistakes.”
- The loss marks Tottenham’s sixth straight defeat and worst run in 143-year history; Tudor is the first manager to lose his first four games in charge (aggregate 14-5).​
- Kinsky joined Tottenham from Slavia Prague for £12.5 million in January 2025; his last start was in October 2025 Carabao Cup ties.​
- Player ratings highlight Kinsky’s display as “arguably the worst goalkeeping display in Champions League history,” compared to Loris Karius; other low scores for Van de Ven (3/10), Djed Spence (3/10).​
- Club hierarchy reconsidering Tudor’s position ahead of second leg and Anfield trip; options include Robbie Keane, Sean Dyche, Ryan Mason.​
Madrid, Spain (North London News) March 11, 2026 – Tottenham Hotspur goalkeeper Antonin Kinsky endured a humiliating evening on Tuesday after being substituted during Spurs’ 5-2 defeat at Atletico Madrid in the Champions League round of 16 first leg, prompting a supportive message from interim coach Igor Tudor.
- Key Points
- What Happened in Kinsky’s Nightmare Debut?
- Why Did Igor Tudor Substitute Kinsky So Early?
- How Did the Goals Unfold in the 5-2 Defeat?
- What Did Player Ratings Reveal About Tottenham’s Display?
- Who Is Antonin Kinsky and What’s His Tottenham Background?
- What Is Tudor’s Future Amid Tottenham’s Crisis?
- Can Tottenham Recover in the Second Leg?
The 22-year-old Czech Republic international, handed a shock Champions League debut in place of the criticised Guglielmo Vicario, conceded three goals inside 14 minutes on a slick pitch at the Wanda Metropolitano, with two directly from his errors. Tudor hauled him off in the 17th minute, a decision he later called “very rare” after 15 years in management. Atletico ran riot with goals from Marcos Llorente, Antoine Griezmann, Julian Alvarez (twice) and Robin Le Normand, though Pedro Porro and Dominic Solanke offered late consolation for the visitors.
What Happened in Kinsky’s Nightmare Debut?
Antonin Kinsky’s Champions League bow turned into disaster from the outset. As detailed in player ratings by GOAL staff, a miscalculated pass from the back saw Kinsky slip, gifting the ball to Julian Alvarez, who set up Marcos Llorente for the opener in the sixth minute. Less than ten minutes later, Micky van de Ven slipped on a simple pass from Pape Matar Sarr, allowing Griezmann to slot home Atletico’s second in the 14th minute.
Kinsky’s misery peaked moments later when he miskicked a pass intended for Kevin Danso straight to Alvarez, who tapped in unchallenged for 3-0. BBC Sport reported the substitution at the 17-minute mark, with Vicario entering to applause from home fans despite the chaos.
FotMob described it as a “nightmare Champions League debut,” noting the two errors that catalysed Atletico’s dominance.
GOAL rated Kinsky 1/10, labelling it “arguably the worst goalkeeping display in Champions League history,” rivalled only by Loris Karius in the 2018 final. The piece highlighted the slick Madrid pitch as a factor, but individual faltering was key.​
Why Did Igor Tudor Substitute Kinsky So Early?
Interim boss Igor Tudor faced immediate scrutiny for benching Vicario, under pressure after recent critiques, in favour of Kinsky. As reported by TEAMtalk journalist Matthew Abbott, Tudor explained post-match:
“It is very rare. I have coached for 15 years and never done this. It was necessary to preserve the guy and to preserve the team. Incredible situation.”
He defended the pre-match call:
“Before the game, it was the right choice. Where we are with pressure on [Guglielmo] Vicario, Toni is a very good goalkeeper. After this, it is easy to say it was not the right decision.”
Football.London noted Tudor’s reassurance: “I was speaking with Toni after. He is a bright guy, a good goalkeeper, and unfortunately it happened in this big game, these big mistakes.”
Tudor attributed the collapse to fragility:
“The start of the game was too much for us. In this moment when we are fragile, when we are weak.”
GOAL’s analysis slammed Tudor’s tactics as “terrible,” exposing the side early.
How Did the Goals Unfold in the 5-2 Defeat?
The rout built relentlessly, per ESPN and Fox Sports box scores. Llorente (6′), Griezmann (14′), Alvarez (15′) put Atletico 3-0 up before Kinsky’s exit. Vicario conceded the fourth in the 22nd minute when a quick free-kick deflected off Sarr; Robin Le Normand capitalised after an initial save.
Porro pulled one back (26′, assisted by Richarlison) for 4-1 at half-time. Atletico’s fifth came in the 69th minute:
Alvarez scored 12 seconds after Jan Oblak denied Richarlison, via Griezmann’s assist on the counter. Solanke’s 76th-minute finish (assisted by Porro) made it 5-2. Substitutions included Atletico’s Alexander Sorloth (69′ for Llorente), Nicolas Gonzalez (73′ for Alvarez), Koke (81′ for Griezmann); Spurs saw Conor Gallagher, Xavi Simons, Joao Palhinha enter.
What Did Player Ratings Reveal About Tottenham’s Display?
GOAL’s comprehensive ratings painted a grim picture beyond Kinsky. Defensively: Kevin Danso (4/10) outpaced; Cristian Romero (5/10) lacked leadership; Van de Ven (3/10) unsteady. Midfield: Porro (5/10) showed fight; Sarr (3/10) poor first touch; Archie Gray (4/10) overwhelmed; Djed Spence (3/10) lost possession.​
Attack: Mathys Tel (5/10), Richarlison (4/10, missed chance), Randal Kolo Muani (2/10) substituted at half-time. Subs: Vicario (4/10), Gallagher (5/10), Solanke (6/10, lively), Simons (5/10), Palhinha (3/10); Tudor (3/10). Solanke’s goal raised questions over his benching.​
Who Is Antonin Kinsky and What’s His Tottenham Background?
Signed from Slavia Prague for £12.5 million in January 2025, Kinsky had limited action before this. BBC noted his last starts were October 2025 Carabao Cup matches. An unrelated Yahoo Sports piece from earlier praised a debut under Ange Postecoglou: “Brilliant. Fantastic… an outstanding footballer,” but that predates this horror show.
What Is Tudor’s Future Amid Tottenham’s Crisis?
The defeat is Tottenham’s sixth in a row, worst in club history; Tudor’s four losses aggregate 14-5. TEAMtalk’s Graeme Bailey reported hierarchy in talks post-match, rethinking patience:
“The club’s hierarchy are now in talks… Spurs are considering all options.”
Robbie Keane (linked to Palace, Celtic), Sean Dyche, Ryan Mason eyed; long-term targets may go to Real Madrid or Manchester United.​
Tudor dodged sack questions with “no comment,” adding: “I recognised what we are and which problems we have… I try to do my best. What a coach needs to do.” Pressure mounts before Anfield.​
Can Tottenham Recover in the Second Leg?
Trailing 5-2, Spurs face an uphill battle next week. Tudor noted a near-equaliser chance at 4-2 via Richarlison, but fragility prevailed: “We began the game too weak. Even in the second half… we nearly had a chance… but then we conceded again.” Pundits see the tie as over, per ESPN. Fans demand change.
This comprehensive coverage draws from multiple outlets, ensuring neutrality and full attribution.
