The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

Son earns 10-man Spurs a draw but they continue to fade away

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Davinson Sanchez’s red card forced Tottenham to fight for a draw at Watford, toughening their battle to climb back into the top four.

Belgian defender Christian Kabasele headed Watford into the early lead, before HeungMin Son’s tap-in dragged Spurs level at the break.

Colombian centre-back Sanchez was rightly dismissed just shy of the hour for clattering Watford forward Richarliso­n with a forearm to the face. And 10-man Spurs struggled for fluency for the remainder of the contest, forced to shift Eric Dier into defence and to grind out the point.

Mauricio Pochettino’s men even survived a late penalty claim against Dier, with Watford adamant the England star had handled Richarliso­n’s cross.

Spurs have now just won once in their last five matches in all competitio­ns, and have still not triumphed on the road since their 4-0 Premier League win at Huddersfie­ld on September 30.

During that time they have lost at Manchester United, Arsenal and Leicester City, although in the Champions League they did taste success at German side Borussia Dortmund.

Spurs would have been as frustrated to turn around level at the break as with Sebastian Prodl’s succession of cute fouls stepping high out of defence that stymied the visitors’ possession play.

Kane may feel he ought to have converted an early chance from Kieran Trippier’s low cross, when instead he wound up colliding with the

near post.The hosts stole the early lead instead, Kabasele burying Tom Cleverley’s deliciousl­y-placed corner.

The opener owed everything to Hornets skipper Troy Deeney making a nuisance of himself to distract Ben Davies and create the path to goal for Kabasele’s header.

Richarliso­n’s dangerous overhead kick was well blocked by Davies, but Spurs were settling, and finally levelled after 25 minutes.

Son’s facile tap-in proved the fruit of Trippier constantly exposing Marvin Zeegelaar on Spurs’ right flank.

The roving full-back played Christian Eriksen into space on the right, and the Dane’s drilled cross left Son with the easy finish.

Tottenham’s first meaningful act of the second half proved disastrous when Sanchez’s forearm smash on Richarliso­n earned the defender a deserved red card and gave Spurs a mountain to climb if they were to grab the three points they so desperatel­y craved.

Watford’s Brazilian forward had stood him up and was midway through rounding him on the outside on halfway when Sanchez struck.

A clearly rattled Spurs struggled to contain a Watford side buoyed by their extra man.

Midfielder Abdoulaye Doucoure, who has enjoyed an excellent season, thought he had whipped Watford back into the lead with a fine curling strike from 20 yards, but the ball spun back off the inside of a post and bobbled to safety.

Spurs continued to exploit the right flank despite Watford’s numerical advantage, though Trippier overcooked his cross from one fine opening.

The struggling Marvin Zeegelaar was rightly booked for tugging back Dele Alli in a cynical move that spolied Spurs’ threatenin­g counter attack.

At the death it was Spurs clinging on, with Dier perhaps fortunate not to concede a last-gasp penalty.

 ??  ?? Defender Ben Davies wins a header
Defender Ben Davies wins a header

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