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Tottenham Hotspur v Everton (2018-19)
Report
EventPremier League 2018-19
DateSunday 12 May 2019
VenueTottenham Hotspur Stadium, London
Player of the MatchLucas Digne
RefereeAndre Marriner
Attendance60,124
Spurs -
Everton -
Spurs -
Everton -

Tottenham Hotspur v Everton was a match which took place at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium on Sunday 12 May 2019.

Champions League finalists Tottenham sealed a fourth-place finish in the Premier League as they ended their campaign with an entertaining draw with Everton.

Tottenham knew a point was enough to secure one of the Champions League places for a fourth successive season under manager Mauricio Pochettino, but Spurs missed the opportunity to record back-to-back third-place finishes as Chelsea were held by Leicester.

Eric Dier capitalised on poor Everton defending to open the scoring after just three minutes as he was given ample time and space to convert Erik Lamela's corner.

The visitors recovered well from their slow start but took until the 69th minute to level through Theo Walcott's fine finish.

Cenk Tosun put Everton ahead three minutes later, but Christian Eriksen's sublime free-kick after 75 minutes earned Spurs the point they required.

The result sees Everton match their eighth-place finish of the previous campaign in Marco Silva's first season in charge.

A fourth consecutive top-four finish in the Premier League is Tottenham's best run in the competition since 1964.

Add to that the possibility of European triumph and Mauricio Pochettino, manager of a club who spent no money on players this season, continues to achieve the miraculous.

Spurs players could have been forgiven on Sunday for being lost in "a dream" - the word used by Pochettino to describe the aftermath of his side's semi-final comeback against Ajax courtesy of Lucas Moura's hat-trick on Wednesday, completed in the 96th minute and delivering Tottenham's first ever Champions League final.

Man of the moment Moura was cheered by the home crowd with every touch, as Spurs seized the early initiative against a lukewarm Everton through Dier's close-range finish.

The Champions League final, against Liverpool, is still three weeks away and Spurs appeared determined to maintain their momentum at their new stadium having endured a terrible recent run in the league.

The hosts eased off, however, allowing Everton a route back into the game. It took two preventable goals in three minutes from the visitors for Spurs to refocus.

And it was Eriksen, absent for much of the game, who stepped up to deliver a moment of quality from his free-kick to ensure Tottenham would not depart for Madrid with defeat.

Manager Pochettino has said he would be "stupid" to stay at the club if he's expected to maintain his current levels of success without the club changing the way it operates, and this campaign - regardless of the outcome in three weeks' time - means Spurs must do whatever it takes to keep the Argentine at the club.

"I want to congratulate my players, they are superheroes," said Pochettino.

"I feel so proud but we have not finished our season. We have three weeks to prepare for the final, which will be one of the most important games in our history. The characteristic of this season is never giving up. The team's spirit has been fantastic."

A positive concluding chapter to Silva's first season with the Toffees ensured his side equalled their eighth place under Sam Allardyce following an unsettled 2017-18 campaign.

A bright start to life under the Portuguese filled many with optimism, however a striking mid-season lull reminiscent of Silva's previous Premier League season at Watford rightly drew concern among fans.

Yet their closing form has been inspired, with victories over Manchester United, Chelsea and Arsenal in a run that has seen them suffer just two defeats in their final 11 league games.

But Everton, unable to catch Wolves in seventh before kick-off, were punished for a lethargic opening 20 minutes at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium.

They survived persistent attacks from the hosts to remain in the contest until Bernard's testing low shot signalled a change in momentum.

Bernard and Lucas Digne linked up effortlessly down the left throughout but it was Walcott driving in from the opposite side that brought Everton level.

That was the start of a frantic period which saw Tosun eventually bundle the ball over the line before Eriksen left Jordan Pickford with little hope of keeping out Spurs' second.

Last year, it was a resolute Burnley that prevented Everton taking the 'best of the rest' spot outside the top six, while this year it is an inspired Wolves.

It's 34 Premier League away matches since Everton last defeated one of the established top-six sides so success next season must surely be judged on Silva's ability to close the gap with the league's heavy-hitters.

"To be a top six club in this country now is really tough," said Silva.

"We must be realistic for our team. We must work hard and do everything perfectly. We will try, our job is to work really hard every day and improve what we did the season before. I have no doubts we are a stronger team than at the start of the season."

Match[]

Details[]

Sunday 12 May 2019
15:00
Tottenham Tottenham Hotspur 2–2 Everton FC Everton Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, London
Attendance: 60,124
Referee: Andre Marriner
Dier Goal 3'
Eriksen Goal 75'
Report Walcott Goal 69'
Tosun Goal 72'
Tottenham
Everton
01 Hugo Lloris
16 Kyle Walker-Peters
04 Toby Alderweireld
15 Eric Dier
33 Ben Davies
17 Moussa Sissoko
23 Christian Eriksen
11 Erik Lamela Substituted off in the 77th minute 77'
27 Lucas Moura
20 Dele Alli Substituted off in the 45th minute 45'
18 Fernando Llorente Substituted off in the 77th minute 77'
Substitutes:
02 Kieran Trippier
09 Vincent Janssen Substituted on in the 77th minute 77'
12 Victor Wanyama Substituted on in the 45th minute 45'
22 Paulo Gazzaniga
24 Serge Aurier
47 George Marsh
52 Oliver Skipp Substituted on in the 77th minute 77'
Manager:
Flag of ? Mauricio Pochettino
01 Jordan Pickford
05 Kurt Zouma
04 Michael Keane
13 Yerry Mina
12 Lucas Digne Booked
18 Morgan Schneiderlin Booked
17 Idrissa Gueye Substituted off in the 65th minute 65'
11 Theo Walcott
10 Gylfi Sigurðsson
20 Bernard Substituted off in the 65th minute 65'
14 Cenk Tosun
Substitutes:
03 Leighton Baines
06 Phil Jagielka
08 André Gomes Substituted on in the 65th minute 65'
22 Maarten Stekelenburg
26 Tom Davies
31 Ademola Lookman Substituted on in the 65th minute 65'
43 Jonjoe Kenny
Manager:
Flag of Portugal Marco Silva

See also[]

Final League Table[]

Pos
Team
Pld
W
D
L
GF
GA
GD
Pts
Notes
1 Manchester City FC Manchester City  (C) 38 32 2 4 95 23 +72 98 Qualification for the Champions League group stage
2 Liverpool FC2 Liverpool 38 30 7 1 89 22 +67 97
3 Chelsea FC Chelsea 38 21 9 8 63 39 +24 72
4 Tottenham Hotspur Tottenham 38 23 2 13 67 39 +28 71
5 Arsenal FC Arsenal 38 21 7 10 73 51 +22 70 Qualification for the Europa League group stage
6 Manchester United FC Manchester Utd 38 19 9 10 67 52 +15 66
7 Wolverhampton Wanderers FC Wolves 38 16 9 13 47 46 +1 57 Qualification for the Europa League second qualifying round
8 Everton FC Everton 38 15 9 14 54 46 +8 54
9 Leicester City FC Leicester City 38 15 7 16 51 48 +3 52
10 West Ham United FC West Ham Utd 38 15 7 16 52 55 −3 52
11 Watford FC Watford 38 14 8 16 52 59 −7 50
12 Crystal Palace FC Crystal Palace 38 14 7 17 51 53 −2 49
13 Newcastle United FC Newcastle Utd 38 12 9 17 42 48 −6 45
14 AFC Bournemouth Bournemouth 38 13 6 19 56 70 −14 45
15 Burnley FC2 Burnley 38 11 7 20 45 68 −23 40
16 Southampton FC Southampton 38 9 12 17 45 65 −20 39
17 Brighton & Hove Albion FC Brighton 38 9 9 20 35 60 −25 36
18 Cardiff City FC Cardiff City  (R) 38 10 4 24 34 69 −35 34 Relegation to
EFL Championship
19 Fulham FC Fulham  (R) 38 7 5 26 34 81 −47 26
20 Huddersfield Town FC Huddersfield Town  (R) 38 3 7 28 22 76 −54 16
Source: Barclays Premier League
Rules for classification: 1st points; 2nd goal difference; 3rd number of goals scored.
(C) = Champion; (R) = Relegated; (P) = Promoted; (O) = Play-off winner; (A) = Advances to a further round; (Q) = Qualified to the phase of tournament

External links[]

Premier League 2018–19

Arsenal FC Arsenal · AFC Bournemouth Bournemouth · Brighton & Hove Albion Brighton & Hove Albion · Burnley FC Burnley · Cardiff City FC Cardiff City · Chelsea FC Chelsea · Crystal Palace FC Crystal Palace · Everton FC Everton · Fulham FC Fulham · Huddersfield Town FC Huddersfield Town · Leicester City FC Leicester City · Liverpool FC Liverpool · Manchester City FC Manchester City · Manchester United FC Manchester United · Newcastle United FC Newcastle United · Southampton FC Southampton · Tottenham Hotspur Tottenham Hotspur · Watford FC Watford · West Ham United FC West Ham United · Wolverhampton Wanderers Wolverhampton Wanderers

Premier League match days 2018-19

Match day 01 | Match day 02 | Match day 03 | Match day 04 | Match day 05 | Match day 06 | Match day 07 | Match day 08 | Match day 09 | Match day 10 | Match day 11 | Match day 12 | Match day 13 | Match day 14 | Match day 15 | Match day 16 | Match day 17 | Match day 18 | Match day 19 | Match day 20 | Match day 21 | Match day 22 | Match day 23 | Match day 24 | Match day 25 | Match day 26 | Match day 27 | Match day 28 | Match day 29 | Match day 30 | Match day 31 | Match day 32 | Match day 33 | Match day 34 | Match day 35 | Match day 36 | Match day 37 | Match day 38 

Tottenham Hotspur F.C. matches - 2018-19
2018-19 Premier League
Newcastle United (a) · Fulham (h) · Manchester Utd (a) · Watford (a) · Liverpool (h) · Brighton (a) · Huddersfield Town (a) · Cardiff City (h) · West Ham United (a) · Manchester City (h) · Arsenal (a) · Arsenal (h) · Liverpool (a) · Manchester City (a) · Bournemouth (a) · Everton (h)
2018-19 FA Cup
2018-19 EFL Cup
Watford (h) · West Ham United (a) · Arsenal (a) · Chelsea (h) · Chelsea (a)
2018-19 Champions League
Internazionale (a) · Barcelona (h) · PSV Eindhoven (a) · PSV Eindhoven (h) · Internazionale (h) · Barcelona (a) · Borussia Dortmund (h) · Borussia Dortmund (a) · Manchester City (h) · Manchester City (a) · Ajax (h) · Ajax (a) · Liverpool (n)
Everton F.C. matches - 2018-19
2018-19 Premier League

Wolverhampton Wanderers (a) · Southampton (h) · Arsenal (a) · Fulham (h) · Manchester United (a) · Chelsea (a) · Liverpool (a) · Liverpool (h) · Arsenal (h) · Tottenham Hotspur (a)

2018-19 FA Cup
2018-19 EFL Cup