Son Heung-min Tottenham 2021-22Getty Images

How has Tottenham star Son become a Premier League Golden Boot contender?

It speaks volumes that on the day of Arsenal’s trip to take on Tottenham, the player the visitors most fear is not the man with 11 goals in 14 games against them, Harry Kane.

Instead, ahead of the most crucial North London Derby in years, it his his forward partner who will have been giving Mikel Arteta nightmares.

There is no greater compliment to Son Heung-min, whose 27 goal contributions this season places him second in the Premier League charts behind Mohamed Salah.

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Twenty of those have been goals, making him the league’s top non-penalty goalscorer and leaves him just two behind Salah in the running for the Golden Boot.

Son has always been a little under-rated, his highlights reel and hard-working attitude for some reason failing to grab enough attention outside of Tottenham.

It is certainly strange that Son has not been the subject of record-breaking transfer bids in the same way that Kane has. 

Finally, though, he is getting the attention he deserves thanks to those goalscoring numbers shooting up significantly over the last two years.

Across all competitions, his 21 goals this season is a joint-career high, level with his 2020-21 performance, but achieved in eight fewer matches.

Son Heung-min Tottenham GFXGetty/GOAL

The reason for Son’s improvements are largely tactical. Under a series of counterattacking managers, from Jose Mourinho through to Antonio Conte, Son’s role has changed significantly from the days when he was part of a possession-centric side, and Tottenham’s new way of playing is better suited to the South Korean’s skill set.

Beginning with Mourinho and taken up, with wildly different success rates, by Nuno Espirito Santo and Conte, Spurs have spent the last three years as a team with a deeper base line than most big clubs.

The focus is on making use of transitions – when the ball is turned over – to break quickly into space, as opposed to pressing high and focusing on dominating possession.

Although this is a rather broad description of what separates Mourinho, Nuno, and Conte from most other ‘Big Six’ managers such as Pep Guardiola, Jurgen Klopp, Thomas Tuchel, or Arteta, it is a helpful way to appreciate how Son’s role has shifted.

Whereas under Mauricio Pochettino, when Son would expect to get hold of the ball in the final third, taking part in a longer phase of build-up play that means he is facing an opponent chiefly sat behind the ball, now he collects possession in deeper areas and is part of a three-pronged attack to counter at speed.

Son Heung-min Antonio Conte Tottenham GFXGetty/GOAL

Naturally, this suits Son’s brilliant dribbling and acceleration, as well as his unusually high technical ability while running at pace.

And while Tuchel or Klopp, for example, would be equally keen to utilise these qualities, they would do so from high turnovers, not from the deeper shape that a succession of managers at Tottenham have deployed.

This is captured neatly in the statistics. As the table below shows, Son is passing longer and more vertically season on season, while the number of passes made while under pressure has dramatically reduced over the last two years.

Progressive distance of passes, per 90

Long passes completed, per 90

Passes made while under pressure, per 90

2017-18

93.9

1.25

7.94

2018-19

87.6

1.67

7.36

2019-20

92.6

1.89

7.31

2020-21

93.8

2.54

5.92

2021-22

105.2

2.42

5.42

This points to instructions for Son to be more direct, but also to him receiving the ball in larger amounts of space.

That second point is crucial. With more space in which to work, and bearing down on the defence while on the counter, Son is far more productive.

The second part of the tactical shift from which Son has benefitted is the adapted role of Kane, something first started by Mourinho and (reluctantly) taken up by Conte.

Son Heung-min Harry Kane Tottenham GFXGetty/GOAL

Mourinho, never one to coach attacking players with much detail, gave Kane the freedom to do whatever he wanted, which led to Tottenham’s number 10 acting like one.

Initially Kane dropping deeper worked well for Mourinho, although over time it left them short on players in the final third.

Conte has gone on record saying he would like to sign a creative midfielder so that Kane can focus on playing as a striker, but for now he has embraced what Mourinho (then Nuno) discovered – albeit with greater tactical specificity.

What we see now is Son complimenting Kane’s movement by making runs on the shoulder of the last defender. Essentially the two players have swapped around, leaving Son as the de facto number nine.

Shot accuracy

Goals per shot on target

Distance per shot (metres)

Total goals

Expected goals (xG)

2017-18

45.9%

0.35

16.0

12

10.4

2018-19

37.8%

0.43

18.9

12

7.6

2019-20

48.1%

0.28

16.6

11

8.9

2020-21

51.5%

0.46

17.0

17

10.3

2021-22

52%

0.51

15.8

20

13.4

He scored four goals in 13 league games under Nuno this season (0.3 per game) and 17 goals in 29 (0.6 per game) under Conte.

Son has embraced this change and become a clinical centre forward in the process. Son’s shot accuracy has gone up – largely because he is taking them closer to goal – while he is out-performing his expected goals (xG) more spectacularly every year.

There is no doubt Son could perform at any club in the world, and indeed if he was given the chance at a more territorially dominant one such as Manchester City or Liverpool, his goalscoring numbers would likely be even higher given the added quality around him.

But in a Spurs shirt, Son is most comfortable in a tactical system that relies upon counterattacks; that gives him the ball in space, hurtling into the final third, and acting like a number nine from within a system designed by one of the world’s best tacticians.

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