Xavi Simons’ ACL injury has landed at the worst possible time for Tottenham Hotspur and the Netherlands, ending his club season and taking him out of the 2026 FIFA World Cup picture.
Tottenham confirmed that the Dutch attacking midfielder ruptured the anterior cruciate ligament in his right knee after Saturday’s 1-0 Premier League win over Wolverhampton Wanderers.
The club said Simons will undergo surgery in the coming weeks before starting rehabilitation with Tottenham’s medical team.
The moment Tottenham could not afford
Simons left the match on a stretcher after a second-half incident against Wolves. He had tried to continue briefly before going down again, but the injury was later confirmed as serious.
The 23-year-old said he was “heartbroken” after learning the extent of the damage, with his season now over and his World Cup hopes gone.
For Tottenham, the timing is severe. Spurs are fighting to stay in the Premier League and sit 18th, two points from safety, with four matches left against Aston Villa, Leeds United, Chelsea and Everton.
Why Xavi Simons ACL injury changes the stakes
An ACL rupture is one of football’s most disruptive injuries because it removes a player from short-term selection and forces clubs to plan across months, not weeks.
That is why this is not only about Tottenham. It affects three layers at once: Spurs’ survival fight, the Netherlands’ World Cup planning, and Simons’ personal development after a major move to English football.
Simons joined Tottenham from RB Leipzig for £52 million last summer. He has made 28 Premier League appearances, scoring twice and providing five assists.
Those numbers do not fully explain his value. Tottenham needed his movement, ball-carrying, and link play during a tense final stretch.
The World Cup door closes early
The injury also removes Simons from the Netherlands’ plans for the 2026 FIFA World Cup in the United States, Canada and Mexico.
The Dutch begin their Group F campaign against Japan on June 14. Simons had been expected to compete for a major role in Ronald Koeman’s squad, but rehabilitation timelines now make that impossible.
FIFA also reported that Simons has been ruled out of the tournament after the ACL setback.
Spurs face a thinner final stretch
Tottenham’s final four league matches now carry even more pressure.
A squad already under strain must continue without one of its most creative players. Roberto De Zerbi will have to reshape his attacking structure, especially in matches where Spurs need control rather than survival football.
The bigger consequence is clear. Tottenham have lost a player who could influence their run-in, while the Netherlands have lost a World Cup option before the tournament has even started.
For Simons, the fight now moves from selection to recovery. For club and country, the problem is immediate: the games will not wait for him.
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