Tottenham and Liverpool have produced some entertaining
matchup in recent years. Although not as high-profile as any London Derby, the
intensity of the match has always been enormous. An enjoyable night was well
anticipated.
Both teams may not be at their peaks, but there are things
to cheer about recently. Luis Suarez, despite all the controversies around him,
has been in magnificent form. Together with the revived Jose Enrique at a more
advanced role and the promising Raheem Sterling, Liverpool has been showing
some spectacular attacking football.
Wingers combined for Spurs' first goal |
November has been a nightmare for Tottenham, with
consecutive losses to Wigan, Manchester City and Arsenal, as well as the fans
incident at Rome last Thursday. However, they recovered with a London Derby win
over West Ham. There were more delights for the fans, as they witnessed Clint
Dempsey finally live up to expectation, also the return of Moussa Dembele after
a long rest.
While both midfielders started for Tottenham on Wednesday
night, Stephen Caulker was absent due to illness. The agility of Suarez and
Sterling was a concern for Michael Dawson and William Gallas, but it seemed Liverpool
had more to worry about in defence. Glen Johnson, who is never famous of his
defensive ability, could not match Gareth Bale's speed, with Stewart Downing,
the unnatural left back, caught napping at the far post to allow Aaron Lennon
send Bale's cross into the net with ease only 7 minutes into the match.
Tottenham have often found themselves fail to clinch matches
from winning position this season. This time, they made use of the momentum
from the opening goal and did not let chances slip. Gareth Bale had already
threatened Pepe Reina with a freekick earlier, but he didn't miss his second
attempt. Whether it was the loosely-organised wall or the poorly-positioned
goalkeeper, the well-struck thundering freekick gave Tottenham an early
two-goal margin.
Dembele's return was a great boost to Tottenham's midfield. With
the presence of the all-rounded midfielder, Tottenham dominated the midfield
and had endured a 3 minutes possession spell in the first half. The fluid
football was surely delightful to watch, but there were moments of fragility in
front of their goal. Kyle Walker who twice rescued Spurs, with a crucial
clearance to keep Suarez's attempt half a yard away from a goal.
Joe Allen and Jordan Henderson had been far from effective
and were outshone by Sandro and Dembele. Steven Gerrard had little room to operate
and in consequence, Suarez was left frustratingly alone up front. Careless
passing by Tottenham's defenders granted the away team a handful of opportunities
early in the second half, but none of them did actually worry Hugo Lloris. Jose
Enrique had a couple of decent chances, though ruined by his own decision
making and Walker's solid defending.
Kyle Walker was the star of the night in defence |
Crowds were getting impatient as the home team could not
reproduce their performance in the first half. When Gareth Bale scored again, there was little
cheering in the stadium. The innocent Welsh could not get out of the way of
Lennon's clearance from an empty goal. The own goal brought Liverpool back in
the game, while Spurs once again found themselves on the brink of gifting
points away from a winning position.
Sigurdsson continued his disappointing campaign. The Iceland
midfielder, who shone on loan with Swansea last season, completely lost his
direction at White Hart Lane. Spurs was essentially operating with one man less
when Dempsey was taken off. Composure was nowhere to be seen when under pressure
and Liverpool was so close to pulling off a leveller. Suarez fired a volley in
the box way over the bar and Jose Enrique's stunning shot following a clearance
from corner just clipped the outside of the post. With time ticking by, the
quality of the match deteriorated. The Kop was in a rush for a late equaliser,
but lost the ball cheaply at least three times in the last 5 minutes of the
game.
Finally, Spurs was able to hang on for the second
consecutive home victory. Bale would be
relieved that their brilliant first half was just about adequate to overcome
Brendan Rodger's side. With results elsewhere at their favour, Tottenham races
ahead of Everton and Arsenal and is now only 3 points away from the fourth
position.