By almost any measure, Tottenham’s season so far has been a major success. Sitting at third place in the Premier League table behind two juggernauts in Man City and Liverpool, Spurs hold a reasonably solid four-point lead over Chelsea in fourth, and they’re seven points up on Arsenal and Manchester United through 23 games. They’ve done this while battling through a tidal wave of injuries, including knocks on Victor Wanyama, Jan Vertonghen, Christian Eriksen, Lucas Moura, Eric Dier, and Moussa Sissoko. But for as well as they’ve triumphed over the gaps in their line-ups, an injury to Harry Kane in a Jan. 13 loss to Man Utd that’s going keep the star striker out for at least a couple months—timed with the departure for two weeks of Son Heung-min to the Asian Cup—darkened Tottenham’s outlook. Now, it’s somehow gotten worse. Despite a dramatic 2-1 win against Fulham on Sunday on an unlikely last-minute winner from Harry Winks, Spurs’ three points were marred by even more bad news. Attacking midfielder Dele Alli, the most important goal-scoring presence in the current lineup, is out until at least March with a hamstring strain. The absences of Dele, Kane, and Son come unfortunately timed…