Tottenham legend Glenn Hoddle was overcome with emotion after seeing his boyhood club stage a remarkable comeback to reach the Champions League final just seven months after he had a heart attack in the BT Sport studio.

Having recently returned to punditry work after making a recovery following heart surgery, Hoddle was working in the BT studio again as Lucas Moura scored a second-half hat-trick to send Spurs into the Champions League final.

BT captured the moment that Hoddle celebrated the 96th-minute winner wildly with fellow pundit Rio Ferdinand - and the former England defender and host Gary Lineker were quick to check on Hoddle's health after.

Glenn Hoddle, Rio Ferdinand and Gary Lineker celebrates Tottenham's dramatic victory

Lineker asked Hoddle: 'Glenn, are you OK?'

He said: 'Yeah, I'm fine. I've never been happier.

'I'm so glad that I'm still around to see this. I've been a Spurs fan since I was eight years of age, what a proud moment that was.'

Hoddle has recently returned to punditry work after making a recovery following heart surgery

Lineker replied: 'I'm so glad you're here to enjoy it with us.'

Ferdinand then jokingly patted Hoddle on the heart as the former England manager added: 'Incredible, two footballing miracles in two nights. Emotions flying in here. Incredible. I've never been happier.'

Hoddle, a life-long Spurs fan who made more than 400 appearances for the club over 12 seasons, suffered a heart-attack on his 61st birthday last October after collapsing at the BT Sport studio.

Fellow pundit Rio Ferdinand jokingly touched Hoddle's heart after the dramatic finale

He added: 'I said before the game, don't leave anything in the dressing room. They did that at half-time. They showed so much character and deserved it.

'He's (manager Mauricio Pochettino) doing a fantastic job. It's easy to say that but he is. You can see how close he is with his players. They've not gone out and spent loads. He decided he didn't want to buy in those two transfer windows and where can it go from here.

'Now in the final, is it Spurs' year? They've had good fortune but worked on it. It's going to be a wonderful final. Take the league stuff out of it. It's a one-off game. Experience of playing in a final, you make it as normal as you can and Liverpool will be ahead of Spurs on that one.'