Dissent was in the air with Manchester City in total control at half-time at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium.

The hosts were two goals down and the deficit could and perhaps should have been more.

Yet on a day when campaign group Change for Tottenham called for an open revolt in the stands over the club’s perceived lack of ambition in the transfer market and high ticket prices, Thomas Frank’s side staged a superb fightback to draw 2-2.

By the time Dominic Solanke registered his second goal of the game with a wonderfully improvised scorpion kick, any possibility of a mass walkout had been averted.

Instead of concluding to half-empty stands, “Oh when the Spurs go marching in” reverberated around the ground at full-time in complete contrast to the chorus of boos only 60 minutes earlier.

“We can create something magic together – the players and the fans – when we are united like we were, especially second half but also the Dortmund game,” Frank told BBC Sport.

“That atmosphere, intensity – that’s what pushed the players and they really needed it.

“What I like and what I think is truly important is when your back is against the wall as a team and a group you need to fight. You can never give up.

“I love that never-say-die attitude from the players and the fans were massive for us. The mentality is building stronger and stronger.”