Teddy Sheringham was sensationally and mysteriously sent off as Tottenham
suffered an unexpected pre-Christmas setback, losing to Ipswich substitute Alun
Armstrong's 87th-minute winner.
Referee Mike Riley who angered the home crowd with a string of strange
decisions, waved the red card at the veteran England striker eight minutes into
the second half after a confusing scene in the Ipswich goalmouth finished with
several players on the floor.
Skipper Sheringham, 35, a revelation at White Hart Lane in his first season
back after a trophy-laden four-year sojourn at Manchester United, looked
startled by the Leeds' official's action and clearly went to him to seek an
explanation before trudging off.
When he passed manager Glenn Hoddle on his way down the tunnel he mimed a
pushing motion to the stunned Tottenham boss.
Spurs had taken an 11th minute lead through rising star Simon Davies in their
first genuine attack and it looked a formality that they would canter to victory
and leave the visitors even deeper in the relegation mire.
But Ipswich took advantage of Tottenham's apparent desire to ease through the
match in second gear and grabbed a deserved equaliser with an acrobatic effort
by Finidi George seven minutes before half-time.
Although Spurs then hit a post through Darren Anderton and should have taken
two easy chances at the start of the second half it was only after Sheringham's
dismissal that they played with passion and real commitment.
Somehow Ipswich survived a siege built of adrenaline and a sense of injustice
before Armstrong, on in place of Jim Magilton, knocked in George's cross with
three minutes to go post only their second Premiership win in 18 matches this
season.
Ipswich deserved much of their good fortune though for the kind of plucky
display they are still going to need nearly every week now in their fight for
Premiership survival.
They were a goal down in just 11 minutes from Tottenham's first real attack
which was expertly finished by Davies for his fifth of the season.
But if Spurs thought it was going to be a stroll after that, the rest of the
first half forced them to change their minds.
Ipswich, patient and accurate with their passing, looked the far more
impressive side for long spells even though their finishing betrayed a lack of
cutting edge without the still-injured Marcus Stewart.
With clever Irishman Magilton dictating the flow of the midfield play and
twice firing shots just off target, the struggling East Anglians grew steadily
in confidence after conceding a bad early goal when Davies was left unattended
to expertly poke home Sergei Rebrov's angled delivery.
Martijn Reuser, meanwhile, was engaged in a furious row with a linesman,
possibly suggesting there should have been an offside flag in the build-up which
had been started by Sheringham's crossfield pass.
Referee Riley raced to the Dutchman like an Olympic sprinter and although he
only lectured him rather than flourishing a yellow card, the thought occurred
that here was the beginning of another Ipswich story.
Not so. They set about repairing the damage with craft and determination and
it was no surprise when it paid off with George's spectacular equaliser as Spurs
central defenders Chris Perry, Dean Richards and Ledley King - so impressive
this season - began to look increasingly insecure.
When big Hermann Hreidarsson outjumped all challengers to nod down a corner,
nimble Nigerian ace George had his back to goal but acrobatically hooked the
ball over his shoulder and past the rooted Neil Sullivan.
In fact, Perry was replaced by youngster Anthony Gardner at the start of the
second half and Spurs should have had the game sewn within six minutes of the
restart, with the newcomer failing to beat Matteo Sereni from 10 yards after
Christian Ziege somehow managed to volley Rebrov's cross against the bar from a
position virtually underneath it.
Then came Sheringham's shock dismissal and, apart from anything else, it fired
up Spurs at last.
They tore at the Ipswich rearguard with Anderton and Rebrov just failing to
hit the target before Hoddle called for the heavy artillery of veterans Les
Ferdinand and Gus Poyet whom he had intended resting on the bench.
The Spurs boss went through a full range of frustrated emotions on the
touchline as chance after chance was manufactured and missed - Ferdinand denied
by Sereni from 20 yards and then the agile Italian goalkeeper seeing Anderton's
curling effort drift just wide.
The home crowd roared their wrath at Riley in a growing tumult of noise but
Armstrong's opportunist strike late on was their final anguish.
Teams:
Tottenham: Sullivan, Perry (Gardner 45), King, Richards,
Taricco, Davies (Poyet 75), Freund, Anderton, Ziege,
Sheringham, Rebrov (Ferdinand 67).
Subs Not Used: Keller, Sherwood.
Sent Off: Sheringham (54).
Booked: Anderton.
Goals: Davies 12.
Ipswich: Sereni, Makin, McGreal (Bramble 83), Hreidarsson,
Venus, Magilton (Armstrong 71), Holland, Wright, Reuser,
George, Marcus Bent (Naylor 76).
Subs Not Used: Branagan, Clapham.
Booked: Wright, McGreal.
Goals: George 40, Armstrong 88.
Att: 36,040
Ref: M Riley (Leeds).