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Tottenham Hotspur v Chelsea (2019-20)
HT:0–2
Report
EventPremier League 2019-20
DateSunday 22 December 2019
VenueTottenham Hotspur Stadium, London
Player of the MatchWillian
RefereeAnthony Taylor
Attendance61,104
Spurs - Wolves
Chelsea - Bournemouth
Spurs - Brighton
Chelsea - Southampton

Tottenham Hotspur v Chelsea was a match which took place at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium on Sunday 22 December 2019.

Chelsea manager Frank Lampard out-manouevred his one-time mentor Jose Mourinho - but a comfortable win at Tottenham was overshadowed by alleged racist behaviour aimed at visiting defender Antonio Rudiger.

Rudiger was involved in the second-half incident that saw Tottenham's Son Heung-min sent off.

The striker was dismissed, following a video assistant referee review, for raising his boot in a clash with the German centre-back near the touchline.

Shortly afterwards, Rudiger, 26, appeared to gesticulate that he had received racist abuse from Spurs fans.

Chelsea drew the incident to the attention of referee Anthony Taylor and three subsequent announcements were made over the public address system warning that racist behaviour among spectators was interfering with the game.

The match was also held up when objects were thrown towards Chelsea keeper Kepa Arrizabalaga, capping a miserable afternoon for Spurs and Mourinho against his former club.

It marred an outstanding Chelsea display that halted their recent slide, with the game effectively won inside the first 45 minutes courtesy of Willian's superb curling finish and a penalty from the Brazilian awarded by VAR after Spurs keeper Paulo Gazzaniga had flattened Marcos Alonso.

Chelsea's victory strengthened their grip on fourth place and left them four points above fifth-placed Sheffield United. Spurs remain in seventh place - six points adrift.

The attention should be on a superb performance from Chelsea and a tactical masterclass from Lampard, who completely flummoxed Mourinho on what was the Portuguese's worst day in charge since succeeding Mauricio Pochettino.

Sadly, the subject of players being subjected to racist abuse will once again top the agenda, casting a cloud over Chelsea's deserved celebrations at the final whistle.

Rudiger appeared to be the target after he was floored by Son's raised boot which earned the South Korea international a deserved red card just after the hour.

Tottenham fans reacted angrily to Rudiger, who they felt over-reacted, even though he was clearly fouled.

The Chelsea defender signalled to indicate what he had apparently been subjected to by sections of the home support.

Chelsea captain Cesar Azpilicueta immediately spoke to referee Taylor; the unsavoury episode concluded with a succession of warnings over the stadium loudspeaker.

Lampard's wild celebrations in front of Chelsea's supporters after the final whistle were a graphic illustration of what he saw as the significance of this victory.

The subplot to this game had been built around the meeting between managerial rookie Lampard, in his first season at Chelsea and only his second in management after a single campaign at Derby County, and Mourinho, the self-styled 'Special One'.

Mourinho had shared such glories alongside the former England midfield man during his time at Stamford Bridge, where they won two Premier League titles together.

On the pitch at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, there was only one winner: Chelsea were sharp and incisive while Spurs were ponderous and second best in all areas.

Mourinho and Spurs seemed totally unprepared for Chelsea's three-man defensive system while the deployment of Dele Alli in a variety of positions in the first half hinted at the home side's disarray.

The Tottenham manager introduced Christian Eriksen for Eric Dier at half-time, but Son's red card snuffed out slim hopes of a comeback.

Chelsea regained their air of superiority as they returned to form having lost four of their previous five league games.

Match[]

Details[]

22 December 2019
16:30 GMT
Tottenham Hotspur 0–2 Chelsea Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, London
Attendance: 61,104
Referee: Anthony Taylor
Son Heung-min Red card 62' HT:0–2
Report
Willian Goal 12'45+4'
Tottenham
Chelsea
22 Paulo Gazzaniga Booked
24 Serge Aurier
04 Toby Alderweireld Booked
06 Dávinson Sánchez
05 Jan Vertonghen Substituted off in the 74th minute 74'
15 Eric Dier Substituted off in the 45th minute 45'
17 Moussa Sissoko Booked
27 Lucas Moura Substituted off in the 74th minute 74'
20 Dele Alli Booked
10 Harry Kane
07 Son Heung-min Red card 62'
Substitutes:
03 Danny Rose Substituted on in the 74th minute 74'
08 Harry Winks
13 Michel Vorm
18 Giovani Lo Celso
21 Juan Foyth
23 Christian Eriksen Substituted on in the 45th minute 45'
28 Tanguy Ndombele Substituted on in the 74th minute 74'
Manager:
Flag of Portugal José Mourinho
01 Kepa Arrizabalaga
02 Antonio Rüdiger Booked
15 Kurt Zouma Booked
29 Fikayo Tomori
28 César Azpilicueta Substituted off in the 80th minute 80'
07 N'Golo Kanté
17 Mateo Kovačić Substituted off in the 68th minute 68' Booked
03 Marcos Alonso
19 Mason Mount
10 Willian
09 Tammy Abraham Substituted off in the 80th minute 80'
Substitutes:
04 Andreas Christensen
05 Jorginho Substituted on in the 68th minute 68'
13 Willy Caballero
20 Callum Hudson-Odoi
22 Christian Pulisic
23 Michy Batshuayi Substituted on in the 80th minute 80'
24 Reece James Substituted on in the 80th minute 80'
Manager:
Flag of England Frank Lampard

Man of the Match:
Willian

Assistant referees:
Gary Beswick
Adam Nunn
Fourth official:
Andre Marriner

Match rules

  • 90 minutes, no extra time or penalties.
  • Three points awarded to winner, none to loser.
  • One point awarded to each in the event of a draw.
  • Seven named substitutes
  • Maximum of three substitutions

Match Stats[]

Overall Tottenham Hotspur Chelsea
Goals scored 0 2
Total shots 5 13
Shots on target 1 3
Ball possession 45% 55%
Corner kicks 3 5
Fouls committed 9 11

See also[]

External links[]

Premier League 2019–20

Arsenal · Aston Villa · Bournemouth · Brighton & Hove Albion · Burnley · Chelsea · Crystal Palace · Everton · Leicester City · Liverpool · Manchester City · Manchester United · Newcastle United · Norwich City · Sheffield United · Southampton · Tottenham Hotspur · Watford · West Ham United · Wolverhampton Wanderers

Premier League match days 2019-20

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Tottenham Hotspur F.C. matches - 2019-20
2019-20 Premier League

Aston Villa (h) · Manchester City (a) · Arsenal (a) · Liverpool (a) · Chelsea (h) · Liverpool (h) · Manchester City (h) · Arsenal (h) · Crystal Palace (a)

2019-20 FA Cup
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Chelsea F.C. matches - 2019-20
2019-20 Premier League

Manchester United (a) · Liverpool (h) · Tottenham Hotspur (a) · Arsenal (a) · Arsenal (h) · Leicester City (a) · Everton (h) · Manchester City (h) · Wolverhampton Wanderers (h)

2019-20 FA Cup

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Grimsby Town (h) · Manchester United (h)

2019–20 UEFA Champions League

Valencia (h) · Lille (a) · Ajax (a) · Ajax (h) · Valencia (a) · Lille (h) · Bayern Munich (h) · Bayern Munich (a)

2019–20 UEFA Super Cup
Liverpool (n)