Arsene Wenger heads into his 51st North London derby tomorrow, and the Frenchman has an astonishing record against Spurs.

Under his stewardship, Arsenal have lost just eight times in the fixture, and only one of those has been at home.

That was a 3-2 win for Spurs in 2010, who came from 2-0 down to earn a famous win with goals from Gareth Bale, Rafael van der Vaart and Younes Kaboul.

However, the Lilywhites have enjoyed a much better record against their arch-rivals in recent times, and are unbeaten in six Premier League meetings, with two wins and four draws.

Harry Kane has scored in the last five of those, and will be looking to continue that run at the Emirates, as he chases a third-consecutive golden boot award.

Spurs have lofty ambitions, and those are beginning to bear fruit, thanks to third and second-placed finishes the the last two seasons, and even Champions League holders Real Madrid couldn't find a way to beat them over two games.

Their record away at the so-called 'big six' in the Premier League under Mauricio Pochettino is worrying though, and is something that must change if they are to register their first title since the rebranding in 1992.

They've won just one of 16 matches, a 2-1 success at Manchester City in 2016, and have lost nine, including four of the last five.

And Wenger has jumped on the mental instability that he has seen in his North London rivals, heaping the pressure on them ahead of their first meeting this term.

In his pre-match press conference, the Frenchman claimed Spurs will not win a trophy until they can fix their fear in big matches, something which is proven having won just the League Cup twice in the last 26 years.

"You have to fight a little bit against your inhibitions - the fear that you won’t get over the line," he claimed.

"Basically you need to focus on what is important and not focus on the trophy too much. You have to keep your nerves and get the players to focus on what is important.

"You always have anxiety. It is always difficult to finish a job.

"It is up to us to get over the line and win trophies and it is not easy."

Pochettino is yet to win a trophy as a manager, which has seen him criticised in some quarters despite his success at both Southampton and Spurs.

And it is that lack of a winning-mentality that Wenger seems to think is Spurs' downfall, as he alluded to his belief that his focus at Arsenal in the past was not on their rivals.

"I was always more focused on finishing in the Champions League than Tottenham," he added.

"When we had less financially we needed the money to pay for the stadium, so I was more focused on that than Tottenham. I was never too focused on Tottenham."