Tottenham used their heads at Maine Road on Monday and stretched their unbeaten
run to five matches at the expense of Manchester City.
Outplayed for much of the first half and trailing to Steve Howey's opener,
Spurs converted a trio of close-range headers to seal victory.
Chris Perry levelled with his opening goal of the campaign, the excellent
Simon Davies put Spurs in front from Robbie Keane's cross shortly after the
break and Gus Poyet finished them off by converting Christian Ziege's corner
late on.
Ziege spoiled his own night by getting himself sent off five minutes from time
and though Ali Benarbia pulled one back during stoppage time, City boss Kevin
Keegan will be asking accusing questions of a defence who seemed to go missing
every time Spurs launched a cross into their six-yard box.
City have continually flattered to deceive this season so the first half
should have been no surprise to their long-suffering fans.
Striding forward with considerable confidence, Keegan's men created enough
chances to have won two games before the half hour mark had even been reached.
The onslaught started in the second minute when Eyal Berkovic, who was to turn
into a constant menace for the visitors' defence, latched onto Howey's long ball
after outpacing Ledley King.
Fortunately for Spurs, Kasey Keller was aware of the danger and raced out to
pressurise the Israeli into lobbing over.
A Stephen Carr tackle prevented Danny Tiatto from causing severe damage as he
sprinted onto a Berkovic through ball and then, when Marc Vivien-Foe flicked on
a left-wing corner from the City danger man, both Shaun Goater and Nicolas
Anelka wasted excellent scoring chances.
The home strikers both forced Keller into saves with their next opportunities,
by which time Steffen Freund had been yellow-carded for trying to halt
Berkovic's influence with a vicious tackle from behind.
A second late challenge by the same man on the same player could have brought
a red card - instead it brought City's opener, although Keller will be
disappointed that Howey's relatively weak header was allowed to creep into the
far corner from Kevin Horlock's free-kick.
No doubt relieved that his team had turned their dominance into something more
tangible, Keegan then watched in horror as City capitulated in all too
predictable fashion.
At the time, only Carr looked even the remotest threat for Spurs but when
Ziege saw his speculative shot deflected wide, the German trotted across and
swung over a corner which exposed an alarming lack of defensive nous as Perry
nodded home inside the six-yard box.
City almost suffered the ultimate sucker punch when Ziege's curling effort was
turned round by Peter Schmeichel at full stretch.
If Keegan was thankful that one disaster had been avoided, his side were met
by another immediately after the re-start as Davies capped a fine performance by
putting Spurs in front after Robbie Keane had created space close to the
by-line.
The setback brought the worst out of Tiatto, who caught Darren Anderton with a
late lunge, reviving memories of his wicked tackle on Blackburn's David Thompson
earlier in the season.
On that occasion, the tactic provided City with much-needed inspiration, even
if it did bring Tiatto a red card. On Monday he escaped with a yellow and City's
response was equally lacking in severity.
It was not that the home side did not try, just that their increasing
desperation in attack left them wide open to a counter at the other end.
Iversen should have profited from Ziege's pinpoint left wing cross but drove
his shot across goal and just out of Davies' reach.
Then the German, named in the absence of knee injury victim Teddy Sheringham,
might have got his name onto the scoresheet in a more bizarre manner when he
charged down Schmeichel's attempted clearance close to the touchline and watched
as it arced dangerously towards the City goal before eventually bouncing just
wide.
Berkovic's threat was waning as Spurs' grip on the contest increased but the
Israeli still managed to strike a post when he met Ali Benarbia's lay-off with a
first-time shot.
Benarbia had failed to oust Horlock from the City line-up despite his
impressive performance from the bench at Charlton last week.
The veteran Algerian had an impact again but by the time he curled a
stunning 20-yard effort over Keller, City were out of the game.
The clincher came from another substitute in Poyet, who had replaced the
misfiring Iversen and ensured Hoddle's decision turned into a correct one by
stooping to meet Ziege's corner and wrong-foot Schmeichel with a mis-timed
header.
Ziege had proved to be an inspiration for the visitors, yet he left them with
an uncomfortable last five minutes with an amazing act of folly.
Having already been booked for kicking the ball away by referee Jeff Winter,
the German proceeded to repeat the stupidity and found himself taking an early
bath.
It was the only thing Glenn Hoddle will have to moan about over his Christmas
dinner.
Teams:
Man City Schmeichel, Dunne, Howey, Distin,
Jihai (Benarbia 58), Foe, Horlock, Tiatto,
Goater (Huckerby 84), Anelka, Berkovic.
Subs Not Used: Nash, Jensen, Vuoso.
Booked: Tiatto, Foe.
Goals: Howey 29, Benarbia 90.
Tottenham Keller, Perry, Richards, King, Carr, Davies, Freund,
Anderton, Ziege, Keane, Iversen (Poyet 71).
Subs Not Used: Sullivan, Bunjevcevic, Thatcher, Clemence.
Sent Off: Ziege (86).
Booked: Freund, Ziege, Perry.
Goals: Perry 38, Davies 48, Poyet 84.
Att: 34,563
Ref: J Winter (Cleveland).