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23rd July 2019
01:17pm BST

"It was unbelievable to play at such a high level against such good opposition. At the starts nerves kick in but once you start the game you just want to keep going. You don't want to stop. When you get experience at this level you just want more and more."Fellow Spurs academy player Japhet Tanganga was pitched in from the start, too, and had to deal with the likes of Ronaldo and Mario Mandzukic in his defensive brief. Standing alongside Tanganga, Parrott admitted he had "butterflies" walking out the tunnel to 50,000 fans but 'as soon as you cross that line, it's just another game'. On his 30th minute involvement in the Lamela goal, which he sparked on the counter from inside his own half, Parrott reflected on what it was like to take on the Italian goalkeeping legend. When Parrott was born, in February 2002, Buffon had already won 25 caps for Italy and would, three months later, win the first of his 11 [two have since been revoked] Serie A titles.
"Just Buffon to beat," Parrott reflected, "it sounds a bit surreal! I just tried to keep it down and it was so close going in, but luckily enough 'Coco' [Lamela] came in on the rebound and scored so, happy days."https://twitter.com/PremierSportsTV/status/1152913723121688576 As for getting a taste of more first team action, the teenage forward said the fact the Mauricio Pochettino is so willing to give young players a chance 'motivates all of us to keep pushing on and pushing on'. "Hopefully this can push us all on and hopefully we can just keep going," he added. Check out the full interview here: Spurs are in action against Manchester United on Friday, and a possible final if they win that meeting with Los Blancos, before they close out their pre-season with an August 4 clash with Inter Milan. They open their Premier League season by hosting Aston Villa and Parrott would love to be involved in that match-day squad.
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