Match Report: Spurs 1 Lucky Pochettino’s Chelsea 4 (and they were lucky).
Match
Report: Spurs 1 Lucky Pochettino’s Chelsea 4 (and they were lucky).
You can understand
our defeat better if a superior side had beaten us and on a level playing
field, but with two players sent off, goals disallowed, and poor referee
decisions, there could only be one winner, and it was never going to be us.
Yes, Mauricio
Pochettino made a winning return to Tottenham with his
Humpty-Dumpty-Chelsea-laugh-a-minute team as we were reduced to nine men on a
night of chaos and controversy. There were five goals, a further five
disallowed, two red cards, and a hatful of VAR decisions in one of the Premier
League's most frenetic ever games.
We started
brilliantly against a poor Pochettino laugh-a-minute team. We deservedly went
ahead when Dejan Kulusevski's sixth-minute shot deflected in off Chelsea
defender Levi Colwill before Son had an effort narrowly ruled out for offside
as we looked to exploit our early dominance.
Chelsea had two goals
of their own disallowed, one each from Raheem Sterling and Moises Caicedo; they
were ruled out for handball and offside, respectively. Nevertheless, after that
VAR joke was sorted, another VAR decision resulted in a penalty for a challenge
by Romero on his fellow compatriot Enzo Fernandez, and then he was sent off in
the aftermath.
Cole Palmer scored
the resulting spot-kick to level the match before we were also further
handicapped by what looked like a serious hamstring injury for Micky van de
Ven. Then, an ankle problem for James Maddison added to our calamitous night.
Both players were substituted before the interval.
Destiny Udogie was
sent off ten minutes after the break for a tackle on Sterling, which brought a
second yellow card from referee Michael Oliver.
If all that wasn’t
bad enough, Ange Postecoglou also received a yellow card amid the mayhem that
was going on on the field.
Chelsea broke through
our high-line defence and finally broke our resistance with 15 minutes left;
Raheem Sterling broke clear to set up Nicolas Jackson to finish.
Still… we continued
to push forward, and we came close to securing a stunning draw as Eric Dier had
a superb finish ruled out for a narrow offside decision. Rodrigo Bentancur
headed just wide after beating Chelsea's defensive line at a late free-kick.
Chelsea’s Jackson
scored twice more in stoppage time to secure a late hat-trick and render the
scoreline far more comfortable than the evening had been for Pochettino’s team.
With seconds and
minutes ticking by, it was all over bar the shouting. We finally went down to
our first Premier League defeat of the season.
What started as hope
and expectations turned into a miserable evening. Even the ride home was
shitty, with most of the exits on the M25 closed.
Full credit to
Guglielmo Vicario, who ended up as our hero; he acted as an emergency sweeper
on several occasions, but just as Chelsea started to look frustrated, we were
finally broken, and Jackson cashed in.
Things to
come…
We now face long-term
consequences from the chaos, not just with suspensions for Romero and Udogie
but those injuries to Van de Ven and Maddison.
Saying all that… I am
actually looking forward to Saturday’s game against Wolves. Yes, our back four
has been decimated. However, our midfield is intact (hopefully, Maddison’s
problem was minor), and our striking force was unharmed. The question now is,
what can Ange Postecoglou do to resurrect us or at least our back four? If
Conte were still manager, my head would sink into my hands… but he has gone, and
we’ve got something better organising our team.
And
finally…
We are still second
in the Premier League, a point behind City and 2 points in front of Liverpool
and Arsenic and Old Lace; the scousers drew against Luton over the weekend,
while the Gooners were humiliated by Newcastle United.
This weekend, we face
Wolves away. While Arsenic face Burnley at home and Pochettino’s Cowboys face
City on their ground. Still all to play for.
It seems if teams
want to beat us, they must employ or get the referee to use unprincipled means.
The record books will show a 4-1 defeat, but those who were there or watched it
on TV will know what a fiasco the whole game turned into, thus allowing our
nemesis to sneak an unfair advantage.
COYS!
Glenn
With Paul Coyte "Up the Spurs!" |
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