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Tottenham Hotspur 1 v 2 Ipswich Town
FA Premier League
Sunday, 10th November 2024 Kick-off 14:00
Tottenham Hotspur 1-2 Ipswich Town - Match Report
Sunday, 10th Nov 2024 16:15

Goals from Sammie Szmodics and Liam Delap ended Town’s 8,236-day wait for a Premier League victory as the Blues beat Spurs 2-1 on manager Kieran McKenna’s first return to his old club. Szmodics’s overhead kick gave the Blues the lead in the 31st minute, then Delap added the second on 43 as Town led at half-time for the first time this season on their inaugural competitive visit to the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium. Rodrigo Bentacur pulled a goal back on 69 but the Blues held on to claim a vital first win of the season and climb out of the relegation zone.

Axel Tuanzebe made a surprise return to the Blues’ XI, having undergone surgery due to severe cut to his hand last month.

The DR Congo international came in at right-back with Ben Johnson moving to the right-sided role ahead of him. Omari Hutchinson switched to the middle with Conor Chaplin dropping to the bench.

In Town’s only other change Jens Cajuste joined skipper Sam Morsy in midfield for Kalvin Phillips, suspended following his red card last week.

Former Tottenham pair Massimo Luongo and Jack Clarke were on the bench, along with Harry Clarke, back from his suspension, with Nathan Broadhead dropping out of the 20.

Spurs named the same team which beat Aston Villa 4-1 a week ago with central defender Cristian Romero OK despite missing the 3-2 Europa League defeat away against Galatasaray on Thursday due to a toe injury.

Town, in their pink third kit for the first time with co-designer Ed Sheeran in the stand, threatened in the second minute, Hutchinson seizing on Radu Dragosin’s hesitation to win the ball and then send in a cross which fell to Szmodics following some indecisive defending, the Irish international hitting a shot from a tight angle which home keeper Gugliemo Vicario forced behind.

From the corner, Dara O’Shea flicked a header across goal from the near post which struck Dominic Solanke and flew not too far wide. Referee Darren England missed the former Bournemouth man’s touch and awarded a goal-kick.

Spurs quickly started to take control the game and will feel they should have scored in the third minute when Son Heung-min looped across from the left to the near post and Brennan Johnson, son of Blues legend David, stabbed wide with some home fans already celebrating.

But it was far from all Tottenham and in the eighth minute, following good work from Cajuste, a Szmodics cross from the left was turned behind in front of Ben Johnson breaking into the back of the box.

From the resultant corner, Town went very close to going in front. Burgess got away from his man at the far post and headed back across goal but off the bar.

Spurs broke quickly through Son, who cut the ball across the area from the left but too far in front of his teammates and Brennan Johnson eventually shot well over.

On 11, as the frantic very open start continued, Solanke’s shot from inside the box was deflected over, then from the resultant flag-kick on the right, Son twisted and turned his way away from Ben Johnson on the left before hitting a strike which clipped a defender but which Aro Muric was still able to claim.

It took eight minutes for the game’s next chance as the pace briefly slowed a little, Solanke hitting a shot on the turn which Muric did well to palm wide down to his left. Two minutes later, Tuanzebe was booked for kicking the ball away after Ben Johnson had conceded a free-kick.

In the 26th minute, Brennan Johnson’s low cross from the right struck Leif Davis and deflected towards Muric’s left post but the keeper was able to scramble a cross to save.

While the home side had been on top and had had a number of chances, but the Blues had had their moments and the better opportunities and in the 31st minute they went in front.

Johnson and Cajuste exchanged passes on the right after a break involving the Swede and Liam Delap. Johnson laid it back to the on-loan Napoli man, who crossed, the ball flicking off Delap’s head as he challenged with Romaro and up into the air, and Szmodics’s overhead kick found the corner of the net.

The Town support at the other end went wild, as they did the last time the teams had met when Finidi George similarly scored an overhead kick.


After a long delay while Solanke underwent treatment, Spurs went about looking for a leveller, Ben Johnson making an impressive challenge on Destiny Udogie as the Italian international burst into the box. There were claims for a penalty from the home fans but not from the players.

Delap thought he’d bullied his way through on goal as the half moved into its final five minutes, however, referee England felt he had done so illegally and pulled play back as Vicario dived at his feet.

There was a scare for the Blues in the 42nd minute when Muric played the ball out straight to Pape Matar Sarr midway inside the Town half in space. For a moment it appeared Spurs players were queuing up to score but somehow the Blues escaped.

And from the subsequent break, they doubled their lead. Hutchinson broke forward riding challenges, finding Davis on the left, who moved it on to Szmodics, whose low cross was diverted towards his own goal by Dragusin and Delap added the final touch from a yard out, gleefully smashing his sixth goal of the season - his fifth in his last six games - into the roof of the net. The Town fans at the other end of the ground again went into raptures.

The Blues saw out four minutes of injury time to lead a game at half-time for the first time since promotion, the home fans booing loudly at the whistle.

As was always likely, Tottenham had seen most of the ball and chances, but aside from Johnson’s early shot wide and Solanke’s effort which was well-stopped by Solanke, the resolute Town backline, effectively a five-man defence when out of possession, having been solid and Muric handling confidently when required.

Town had shown their threat on the break from the early stages with Spurs always looking vulnerable to those counter-attacks.

Szmodics took his opportunity clinically, echoing Finidi’s goal in Town’s last game at White Hart Lane, and then the former Colchester man made an important contribution to the second, Delap making sure the ball was forced over the line and becoming the first Town player to score in three successive away games since Claus Thomsen in 1994.

Within seconds of the restart, Delap was booked for clattering into Romero with whom he had been enjoying a physical battle all afternoon.

Son struck the half’s first shot on goal in the 48th minute, cutting in from the left and hitting an effort which Muric did well to palm over.

The Blues found themselves under pressure, Bentancur heading wide before the home side won a corner on the right from which they thought they had scored.

Bentancur flicked the ball on and Solanke turned it home off his arm. Referee England initially awarded the goal but after a VAR review, it was quickly chalked off, the first time Town have had a ruling in their favour this season.

Town attacked for the first time since the break in the 55th minute, Davis, making his 100th start for the club, winning a corner from which Spurs broke and Solanke shot well over. The home fans booed Muric as the keeper took his time over the restart, as he had each time since the break.

Three minutes later, Delap battled again with Romaro, then used his strength to turn away and lay-off to Hutchinson, who screwed his shot well wide.

As the game passed the hour mark, there was a VAR check for a penalty, a cross from the right having struck Davis but Town again came out on the right side of it with the full-back appearing to be outside the box and his arm in a natural position even if the ball had struck it. Once the corner was eventually taken, Son shot not too far over from distance.

On 66, Ben Johnson was booked for being one of several players to foul Sarr, who was subbed while receiving treatment. Timo Werner took over.

Three minutes later, with the Blues preparing to make changes, the home side pulled a goal back.

Bentancur got away from his man and powered a header into the top corner of the net at the near post.

Town immediately made those changes, George Hirst and Jack Clarke replacing Delap, who had been hobbling in the preceding couple of minutes, and Szmodics.

Having pulled a goal back, the Lilywhites went looking for an equaliser, Werner forcing Muric to tip over with an effort from distance on 71.

Three minutes later, a Romero effort was blocked, before Brennan Johnson scraped a shot wide from the edge of the area.

There was some respite for Town on 79 when Hirst received treatment following a clash with Dragusin.

The striker was OK to continue and in the 84th minute the Blues won a corner from which the home side broke, Werner blazing over from the edge of the box, much to the delight of the travelling Town support.

Spurs switched goalscorer Bentancur and Brennan Johnson for Yves Bissouma and James Maddison for the final scheduled six minutes with the Blues seeing more of the ball and playing more of the game in the Tottenham half, Clarke seeing an effort blocked after Hutchinson had kept the ball for what seemed like an age without finding the space to shoot.

The fourth official indicated eight additional minutes, the Blues swapping the excellent Cajuste, who looked to have picked up a niggle earlier in the half, for ex-Spur Luongo. Two minutes later, Davis was booked for a foul on Kulusevski right in front of the dugouts.

Two minutes from the end of added on time, Muric made a big save, the ball running loose to Solanke on the right of the box and the Kosovan keeper standing up and saving with his heel and Burgess heading away to Clarke, who was fouled to take the pressure off.

Town successfully saw out a free-kick harshly awarded against Davis and there was time forHutchinson to get booked for encroaching, then Burgess, who along with O’Shea had been superb at the back, to head away for the umpteenth time before referee England blew the final whistle, Hirst receiving a painful elbow to the back of the head from Dragusin in the dying seconds and requiring lengthy treatment.

The Blues’ staff on the bench joining one another in a group hug on the touchline as the fans roared over in the far corner.

Having got their noses in front in the first half, Town battled their way to their first Premier League victory since beating Middlesbrough 1-0 in April 2002, a run of 12 matches over 8,236 days, weathering a Spurs storm for long spells.

By the end, the Blues had seen off the worst of it with the home side perhaps tiring following their European exploits on Thursday.

There were notable performances throughout the team, from Cajuste and Morsy in midfield to the entire backline and Muric, who had probably his most solid game for the club.

The standout, however, was Hutchinson, whose tireless intelligent running in the second half gave the backline some respite, taking the ball forward, winning fouls and also creating one or two opportunities.

The first win of the season - Town’s third 2-1 victory over Spurs in successive games in the Premier League and their fourth in total - is a significant monkey off the collective back as we go into the third international break of the season.

The Blues’ win at White Hart Lane in December 2021, which ended a 15-game Premier League winless run, was the start of a streak of seven wins in eight which took them to 12th. McKenna will hope that history repeats itself in the weeks to come.

The result sees the Blues move out of the relegation zone up to 17th a point ahead of Crystal Palace with McKenna’s other former club Manchester United at Portman Road in a fortnight.

Tottenham: Vicario, Pedro Porro, Romero, Dragusin, Udogie, Bentancur (Bissouma 84), Sarr (Werner 66), Kulusevski, Johnson (Maddison 84), Solanke, Son (c). Unused: Forster, Spence, Davies, Gray, Bergvall, Lankshear.

Town: Muric, Tuanzebe, O'Shea, Burgess, Davis, Morsy (c), Cajuste (Luongo 92), Johnson, Hutchinson, Szmodics (J Clarke 71), Delap (Hirst 71). Unused: Walton, H Clarke, Woolfenden, Townsend, Burns, Chaplin. Referee: Darren England (Doncaster). VAR official: John Brooks. Att: 61,505.


Photo: Matchday Images



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timbousa added 17:38 - Nov 10
Some thoughts.

1) Muric - needed a solid game and got one. He still has anxiety-racked look as my dog when realizing it's bath time.

2) A completely different defense with Tuanzebe there. Son was very quiet considering his quality.

3) A back five might be the way forward in most games. Definitely against Manchester United. For once, there was always that extra defender there to kill off most threats.

4) Cajuste - Class and composure. Looked like someone who belonged at this level.

5) Delap - so much fun and the most un-Spursy player in the Premier League. Will throw his granny through a wall to score a goal.

6) Hutchinson - Run, Omari, Run! His smart sprinting took the Town over the line in the final 10 minutes when he was the main outlet with everyone else behind the ball.
11

yorkieblue62 added 17:44 - Nov 10
MOD2 pundits cant be any worse than the unmentionable geordie was in his 40 secs after the Brentford game. So bad I made an official complaint to the BBC for which I am promised a response....still waiting !!
6

Jcb2007 added 17:45 - Nov 10
I'll take that thank you. O'Shea mom the for me.

I was there the last time we beat spurs in the prem. My company had a box and no one wanted to take the customers as it was December. I snapped their hand off, posh dinner, Pat Jennings raffled a signed spurs shirt , and if I recall a table of Ipswich fans won it..
4

leftie1972 added 17:50 - Nov 10
Get in there! A fantastic day for the Manager and the Club as a whole. Such a gritty display from all the team. I was nearly wetting myself praying for the ref to blow the final whistle.
2

SpiritOfJohn added 18:15 - Nov 10
Great win for the boys in pink. Formation, tactics and endeavour spot on again, as they were against Brentford and Leicester, but this time the ref and VAR didn't interfere, except for the decision in our favour. Well done to the manager, staff and players for bringing us our first top flight win in 22 years. Let's hope there are many more to come!
3

Dissboyitfc added 18:34 - Nov 10
Great win, so typical of ipswich to win a game like this! I really think that ashtons meeting with Webb had an effect, last couple of weeks that would not even have been looked at! A good day in Norwich for me tomorrow!

Not often i will cheers a Man Utd win, hopefully shut up that gobby manager, i still cant believe he said, " we expected to win" and "we were the best team and deserved the victory" Deluded.com
6

RobsonWark added 18:40 - Nov 10
Credit where credits due. I have probably been Murics's biggest critic this season but today I thought he had a great game.
4

RobsonWark added 18:55 - Nov 10
VAR was never going to give Solanke's goal. If it did there would be a definite case of fraud. He wrapped his boot around the shot and it was going out for a goal kick but it hit his arm and changed direction by about 90 degrees. Don't be thankful for VAR for that. But we were robbed of a penalty for the challenge on Chaplin against Brentford!
2

Steve_ITFC_Sweden added 18:56 - Nov 10
I wonder how many of you were at White Hart Lane in 2001? i seem to remember Spurs had most of the play but we nicked it at the end. The Spurs fans after the game were quite friendly. Today we actually had much more of the play. COYB!
1

RobsonWark added 19:09 - Nov 10
A guy at work who is a Spurs season ticket holder said to me that he gave his ticket to another season ticket holder mate when he was on holiday with his family and asked for his ticket for todays match so that he could take his daughter. His words to me were "No disrespect, but I chose this game as it's her first game that she will have been too and I'm hoping we'll get about 6 goals so she will go away happy". I told him that apart from the Everton game and the West Ham game (that I didn't see) that we have been very competitive such as being the better team against Liverpool for first 60 minutes and that we were the better team against Aston Villa and that our downfall this season is giving away silly goals. We will stay up this season.
6

Somersetractor added 19:17 - Nov 10
Massive... Confidence... Hope... These boys have enough quality
2

bluesince76 added 19:49 - Nov 10
Played well today Hutchison motm for me cajuste looks a decent player defence a lot more solid with tuanzebe in it this win should give the team a big boost going in to play Red devil's well done to everyone involved.
3

ITFC_Singapore added 19:53 - Nov 10
Dara O'Shea. That is all. (Well actually also Omari !! OFF THE RIGHT !!)
0

algarvefan added 20:26 - Nov 10
O'shea was outstanding and everyone put in a hero's shift, no complaints, lets all just bask in the light of that win and in 2 weeks time do United!!!!
3

GSH71 added 20:26 - Nov 10
Brilliant result lads well chuffed , hopefully greaves will be back nxt game , anyone know where broadhead is not even in the subs today , he was one of our better players last season ??
1

Bergholtblue added 21:37 - Nov 10
I was wondering where our first win was coming from.
This was not one of them. Fantastic result! onwards and upwards

0

Bergholtblue added 21:37 - Nov 10
I was wondering where our first win was coming from.
This was not one of them. Fantastic result! onwards and upwards

0

Bergholtblue added 21:37 - Nov 10
I was wondering where our first win was coming from.
This was not one of them. Fantastic result! onwards and upwards

1

Rimsy added 22:46 - Nov 10
Superb performance all round. O'Shea excellent at the back and my mom. Delap is a beast and you can see defenders hate playing against him. My top moment of the game was when Delap, near the subs bench, went for a header surrounded by 3 Spurs players, walks away with a smile leaving the 3 sprawled on the floor.
1

shakytown added 00:48 - Nov 11
where are all the idiot boo boys who wanted Kieran out. Needs to be change they reckon. Owners wont put up with the performance. Pack of bloody morons.
-1

Mariner1974 added 01:27 - Nov 11
Crackin' first win for the Boys in Blue & Pink. Great solid team performance, and though a shame to not see Chappers on the team sheet, McKenna called it perfectly with the doubling up on Son with Axel/ Johnson & sensible containment approach with defence coming first, and the threat we pose on the break with the likes of Omari, Delap and Sammie.

Cajuste looked the business alongside Morsy, and all round we played with more desire, more belief and more freedom than Spurs.

The chat with Howard Webb worked as well. John Brooks was the most even and level headed of refs I've seen in a mighty long time. Roll on Utd!
3

delias_cheesy_flaps added 03:01 - Nov 11
Excellent display by the lads, virtually error free and deservedly got the win.
I genuinely believe this win will instil that self-belief in the team (if it was lacking) that we can compete with most teams in this league.
Muric had his best game today, it was quite ironic his one fluffed kick, indirectly led to our winning goal. He commanded his area well and kicked long which was good to see.
Our defence looked great but so much safer with Axel back.
Pink every week, home and away!
3

adeblueboy added 08:00 - Nov 11
One other best moment was when Burgess took VAR into his own hands and decided for them that it was no goal and rolled the ball back from the centre circle to Muric!
0

Nomore4 added 08:04 - Nov 11
I said after Everton game it wouldn’t be a shock if we beat Spurs and Man Utd. Keep the faith.
Whilst most comments from those on here was saying change the manager, we are rubbish especially Muric. And relegation was 100% certain.
Now it would appear ITFC are great after all….
Never hear of negativity from real Town supporters obviously.
-1

Nomore4 added 08:11 - Nov 11
Respect to Walktheline and a few others….Always positive unlike Linkboy and BlueBoy always ready with the negativity drivel.
-2


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