So Tottenham Hotspur's season can now begin. By the time they play Norwich City on Saturday, the transfer window will have closed, their squad will be complete and all the muttering and manoeuvring in the background will have ceased. The trouble is they will not be able to recover the two games that have slipped away. Again.

It was difficult to ignore the ghosts of the recent past at White Hart Lane, and not only because of Benoît Assou-Ekotto's gloriously off-message answer to the question of whether Harry Redknapp's sacking in June had been a surprise. "Yeah, I was very surprised," the Tottenham left-back said. "Very surprised because I don't think there are a lot of managers who finished fourth and they are sacked so … I was surprised, yeah."

André Villas-Boas has replaced Redknapp but the similarities to the beginning of last season are plentiful. Luka Modric wants a transfer and he is in no frame of mind to play; uncertainty clings to the future of other players; the club's incoming business is unresolved. Under Redknapp last season, Tottenham lost their opening Premier League fixtures to Manchester United and City and, following the latter, he bemoaned "a feeling round the place … for me, it's not been right".

The mood has been more upbeat under Villas-Boas and, as he pointed out, the team have one more point than last season, even if this draw against an upwardly mobile West Bromwich Albion represented a disappointment after the defeat at Newcastle United last Saturday. Albion were full value for James Morrison's injury-time equaliser that cancelled out Assou-Ekotto's 25-yard deflected drive.

Tottenham's slick and incisive moves in the first half only lacked a cutting edge in front of goal but the overriding impression was that something was missing. The crowd sensed it; for the opening home game of the season, the atmosphere was surprisingly flat for periods. It was West Brom who finished with the bit between their teeth. They were rampant for the last 10 minutes or so, with Tottenham clinging on desperately before they were breached by Morrison's nonchalant side-foot.

Tottenham anticipate a busy week leading to Friday night's transfer deadline and, given their propensity to leave things late, there is no guarantee that any new signings will be cleared to face Norwich. The striker Emmanuel Adebayor, a substitute against West Brom after signing on Tuesday, should be closer to match fitness.

Modric's composure was missed and Villas-Boas said that the midfielder's transfer to Real Madrid was "just a question of time". It feels as though the deal will be announced when Tottenham have secured a replacement.

Villas-Boas might reflect that he needs time and there was no sense of alarm at the club's poor start.

"Look at how we started last season and we ended up finishing fourth," Assou-Ekotto said. "I am not worrying at the moment. We haven't changed much from last season and maybe we will have one or two new players. We are a good team and I will not think that we can't finish fourth."

Steve Clarke was determined to manage expectations after the dream start to his managerial career at West Brom. Getting to 40 points, the accepted survival cut-off, remained the priority, he said. He was also determined to avoid building up Romelu Lukaku, the on-loan Chelsea striker, whose impact at White Hart Lane as a 63rd-minute substitute was immense. Lukaku had been a goalscoring substitute in the opening day home win against Liverpool.

Clarke missed the injured Peter Odemwingie at Tottenham but Lukaku's power and menace has given him a selection teaser. "I think he will kill me if I use him as an impact sub," Clarke said, with a smile.

Clarke has found the job all-consuming. The golf and his love of fly-fishing have gone by the wayside. "Two games in, and I can say I'm enjoying it," he said. "But I am realistic enough to know that there can be many different Saturdays."

Man of the match Claudio Yacob (West Bromwich Albion).