Barry Glendenning 

Tottenham 1-2 Newcastle: Premier League – as it happened

First-half goals from Anthony Gordon and Alexander Isak earned victory as Newcastle held off Tottenham’s late fightback.
  
  

Newcastle United's Alexander Isak (second right) scuffs the ball home from close range to put the visitors ahead at Spurs.
Newcastle United's Alexander Isak (second right) scuffs the ball home from close range to put the visitors ahead at Spurs. Photograph: John Walton/PA

Ange: "Things weren't equal and balanced"

“On the balance of play, any balance you want with all things being equal we would have won today,” says Tottenham’s head coach in an interview with the BBC.

“Outstanding. I couldn’t be prouder of the players. I couldn’t ask any more. It’s a game we would have won if all things were equal. If all things were equal and balanced we would have won today. Things weren’t equal and balanced.”

Asked if he’s talking about Newcastle’s contentious opener, he says: “You can talk about whatever you want. You want my opionion - if all things were equal and balanced we would have won.

“We had plenty of chances. Our football was outstanding considering everything we’re going through. If it was an even playing field we’d have won.”

On keeper Brandon Austin: “Really good. The moments we are going through are putting big asks on players and they’re rising to the occasion. The performance deserved a victory.”

He’s not happy with the officials, is he?

Eddie Howe: "It was a tough win"

“We had to dig deep today,” says the Newcastle manager in an interview with TNT Sports. “It was a tough win but a massive one. There’s no denying the ball hit Joe’s hand or arm [for the first goal] but I’m not sure of the rules.”

On Alexander Isak’s goal: “He was in the right place at the right time. That’s an art. Another good cross from Jacob. He’ll be disappointed with the one he didn’t take. He’s on a hot streak, long may that continue.

“Confidence has definitely shifted, it natutrally does when you win games. It was something we were building to. Performances were good. We’re a very good team with good players. I’d like to think we can keep it going.”

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Tottenham Hotspur 1-2 Newcastle United

Premier League match report: Jonathan Wilson reports from the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, where Spurs’ familiar shortcomings helped Newcastle take a half-time lead that proved enough to earn them all three points with their sixth win on the spin.

An email: “You asked who could replace Big Ange at Spurs,” writes Owen Rodgers. “This fella up at Forest seems to be doing an outstanding job—why couldn’t Spurs give him a go?” Honk!

An email: “Not sure I see how Ange is the problem here,” writes Ron Stack. “He has to play the hand he’s dealt. Yes, his inflexibility is maddening but that’s hardly a sackable offense. The team played hard today despite the mismatched pieces Ange had to put out there. And I think he used subs very well, with a strong if unlucky second half.”

An email: “Ange changes tactics more than people recognise,” writes Brendan Murray, a Spurs fan. “The full backs aren’t inverted anything like as much this year amongst other tweaks. He’s talking about philosophy not changing.

“I’m not there today but when I do go the general sense to me is of him being backed. Before these catastrophic injuries the underlying numbers were very good and we were in the middle of a huge turnover of players and playing style. I’m starting to doubt he’ll be given the time to finish though.”

Tottenham Hotspur: While their more entitled fans may disagree, I thought Spurs played fairly well in that game, all things including injuries and illness considered.

Their goalkeeper was making his debut and had not played a game of senior football for four years and in Archie Gray they had an 18-year-old right-footed midfielder playing on the left side of the central defence.

Rarely first choice at the best of times, Radu Dragusin was playing through illness and replaced at half-time by Sergio Reguilon, a full-back who is not wanted by the club and was making only his fourth appearance of the season. At left-back, Djed Spence has only just been given his opportunity to force his way into the first team reckoning after over two years at the club.

Full time: Tottenham Hotspur 1-2 Newcastle

An entertaining game ends with Newcastle taking all three points against a make-do-and-mend Tottenham Hotspur side who didn’t have quite enough cutting edge to rescue anything from this game despite dominating proceedings throughout the second half.

Anthony Gordon and Alexander Isak got the goals that won it for a Newcastle side that was forced to come from behind after Dominic Solanke had opened the scoring for Spurs after just four minutes.

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90+13 min: Newcastle win another free-kick, halfway inside their own half with their players wondering why referee Andy Madley hasn’t yet blown the final whistle. He does so now and Newcastle celebrate victory in their sixth consecutive match in all competitions.

90+12 min: Newcastle win another throw-in, just inside the Spurs half. It finds its way to Archie Gray, who launches it forward.

90+11 min: Newcastle assistant coach Jason Tindall badgers the fourth official on the touchline, pointing to his watch as Newcastle go on the attack again.

90+10 min: Newcastle have a throw-in deep in Spurs territory and are in no great rush to take it, for obvious reasons.

90+9 min: Reguilon is booked for a foul on Tonali.

90+8 min: Solanke connects with another splendid Porro cross into the Newcastle penalty area but his header from 10 yards is steered straight at Dubravka.

96+5 min: Newcastle corner. Bruno Guimaraers and Joelinton take the shortest corner you’ll ever see in a bid to keep the ball by the corner flag for the next – minute-by-minute reporter checks clock – four minutes. It’s an ambitious plan that doesn’t quite come off, due in no small part to James Maddison’s intervention.

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90+5 min: Brandon Austin saves a shot from the outside of the left boot of Harvey Barnes from close range at his near post.

90+4 min: Tottenham continue to turn the screw and a teasing ball from Kulsevski into the penalty area is headed on to the roof of the net by Dominic Solanke.

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90+3 min: Kelly rises to clear a Djed Spence delivery into the Newcastle penalty area.

90+1 min: playing his first game for Newcastle since last March, Botman goes down in the centre-circle and will have to be replaced. He’s feeling his calf and hopefully it’s nothing more serious than cramp. Lloyd Kelly comes on in his place.

89 min: At the end of his first week in the job, England manager Thomas Tuchel has left White Hart Lane and is apparently now on his way to watch Brighton v Arsenal. He’ll miss 10 minutes of added time.

88 min: Livaramento gets his head to a long diagonal pass played from deep towards Son. Good defending.

85 min: Newcastle double-substitution: Sean Longstaff and Joe Willock are on for Alexander Isak and Jacob Murphy. Looking shocked to be taken off, Isak dawdles and is booked for timewasting. Or was it for a little shove on Archie Gray? The former, I think.

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84 min: Play is paused as Dan Burn goes to ground in the Spurs penalty area after a collision with Brandon Austin, who clattered him as he came to punch a cross into the Spurs box clear.

82 min: Through Johnson and then Reguilon, Spurs whip two balls in a matter of seconds across the face of the Newcastle goal after good work by Son, but there’s nobody in a white shirt on hand to steer either cross into the back of the net!

81 min: Spurs play the corner short to the unmarked Maddison, who creates an angle and tries to whip the ball inside the far post. It whistles wide but not by much.

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80 min: Maddison’s whipped free-kick is headed out for a corner by Livramento.

79 min: Spurs win a free-kick on the edge of the Newcastle box, well left of centre. Maddison was obstructed by Botman after releasing the ball and the Newcastle defender gets booked for his troubles, despite his fairly reasonable protests that he couldn’t get out of the way.

78 min: Newcastle substitution: Harvey Barnes comes on for Anthony Gordon, who still has blood trickling from a cut on the bridge of his nose following that shoulder in the face he took from Kulusevski.

77 min: Joelinton goes down injured, possibly suffering from the after effects of that robust challenge by Bissouma a few minutes ago.

76 min: It’s all Spurs as a Maddison cross towards Solanke at the far post is crucially cut out by the head of Dan Burn.

75 min: Joelinton tries to charge forward with the ball at his feet after receiving a pass in midfield from deep with an exquisite touch but is dispossessed by an excellent challenge from Bissouma.

73 min: Isak is fouled by Djed Spence right on the halfway line and Newcastle have a free-kick. Moments later, Joelinton is booked for a foul on Son, the latest in a long series of minor transgressions by the Newcastle midfielder and the straw that breaks the disciplinary camel’s back.

72 min: Joelinton robs Kulsevski of possession near the halfway line with a meaty tackle, taking the sting out of a Spurs attack.

71 min: Bissouma charges forward and plays the ball wide to Kulsevski. His cross into the Newcastle penalty area is too close to Dubravka.

69 min: Brennan Johnson plays a lovely ball inside to Kulusevski from the right but the Swede is unable to take the ball in his stride and get a shot away. Newcastle clear. Spurs still trail but are currently looking the better of the two sides in this second half.

68 min: Play resumes with a drop ball for Austin, who is fit to continue.

66 min: A Newcastle free-kick from deep aimed at Dan Burn is gathered by Brandon Austin. He needs two attempts make sure the ball is his and is now winded and flat on his back.

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64 min: Another Pedro Porro cross into the Newcastle penalty area is hacked clear by Sven Botman, who is having a good game in his first appearance for Newcastle in nine months.

63 min: Anthony Gordon is back on the pitch with a sore nose and a clean shirt and shorts.

61 min: Tottenham triple-substitution: Son, Maddison and Bissouma come on for Werner, Bergvall and Sarr. The Tottenham supporters don’t seem pleased to see Bergvall go off as the teenager has been playing very well.

59 min: Play is stopped because Anthony Gordon is bleeding from his nose after shipping an accidental shoulder to the face from Kulusevski.

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58 min: Gordon smacks an effort high over the bar on the follow-up after Sandro Tonali had cut inside and had a shot blocked by Archie Gray. If Gordon had rolled the ball across the face of goal instead, Isak was on hand to tap home.

57 min: A Reguilon cross into the Newcastle box is headed clear by Joelinton.

55 min: Oof! Brennan Johnson hits the upright with a shot from an apparently impossible angle on the byline after Dubravka had got down to parry a low Pape Sarr shot from distance away to his left.

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55 min: Burn blocks a Kulusevski cross after good work by Lucas Bergvall to keep an apparently lost cause of a ball in play.

54 min: Spurs corner. Kulusevski takes it short to Porro and Gordon blocks his attempted cross.

52 min: Spence slides into block an attempted ball across the face of goal from Lewis Hall as he ran on to a through ball from Gordon. Hall takes the corner, the ball is a mite too high for Dan Burn and Spurs clear their lines.

51 min: Solanke chases a ball from deep into the Newcastle box but is crowded off it by the combined forces of Botman and Livramento. Good defending by the Geordie duo.

50 min: Dubravka is back on his feet after receiving treatment following that foul by Solanke.

47 min: Newcastle fail to clear another excellent cross from Porro and there’s a potential handball in the Newcastle penalty area as one defender kicks the ball on to the hand of another. Dubravka comes to gather the ball as it spirals up in the air and is fouled by Solanke. There’s a VAR check for a potential penalty for the (completely accidental) handball but none is given.

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Second half: Tottenham 1-2 Newcastle

46 min: Play resumes with Sergio Reguilon on for Spurs in place of Radu Dragusin. He moves to left-back, Djed Spence moves into central defence alongside Archie Gray and Pedro Porro stays at right-back. On TNT Sports they’re saying that rumours around White Hart Lane this morning suggested Dragusin and Archie Gray are both ill.

An email: “Ange Postecoglou has to get sacked,” writes A. “We’re in relegation form and there’s no prospect of that changing because he won’t change his tactics, and the tactics are fundamentally flawed.

“The ironic thing is that Levy has finally decided to back a manager (with time if not money), but it’s the wrong one. AP is seriously out of his depth. Tactics and system not working, haven’t for a long time (before the injuries, which are also obviously caused by the style of play).

“He has zero idea of or inclination for a plan b. Levy is a joke - he’ll sack him anyway, but wait for Liverpool to pump us out the milk cup first.”

Sacked by replaced by who?

Newcastle’s opener: While I don’t think Joelinton’s “handball” should have been punished, given the current shambolic state of the handball laws I would not have been in the least bit surprised if it had been.

However, it seems that the match officials have decided his arms were not in an “unatural position”, which will come as heartwarming news to anyone out there with arms who has ever walked, jogged or run.

Tottenham Hotspur 1-2 Newcastle

Half-time: The players troop off for the break, with Newcastle well worth their 2-1 lead, despite going behind to an early Dominic Solanke opener after 4 minutes. Anthony Gordon equalised within 40 seconds with a goal shrouded in controversy, before Alexander Isak converted Jacob Murphy’s cross to put the visitors ahead.

45+4 min: It’s half-time.

45+3 min: Porro sends a decent cross towards the back post, trying to pick out Timo Werner’s run. Livramento pokes the ball out for a corner, which Isak heads clear.

45+2 min: A Murphy cross into the Tottenham penalty area is headed clear by Dragusin. Moments later, Joelinton tries to run on to a ball around the corner from Isak but is unable to get a shot away. Austin tidies up at the back for Spurs.

45 min: We’ll have four additional minutes before a half-time break that cannot come quickly enough for Tottenham Hotspur. They are currently being completely overrun in midfield and it’s a problem Ange Postecoglou and his staff need to sort out.

44 min: An off-balance Joelinton shoots wide from a tight angle after being played in behind by a weighted pass from Anthony Gordon.

42 min: Djed Spence tries to shepherd a slowly trundling ball out of play over the byline under pressure from Livramento. The ball hits the Spurs defender’s ankle on its way out but the referee doesn’t spot it and awards a goal-kick instead of a corner.

40 min: Newcastle advance again, a goal to the good, a spring in their collective step, looking far more settled and confident than their hosts.

GOAL! Tottenham, 1-2 Newcastle (Isak 38)

Newcastle lead! It’s another soft one for Spurs to concede as Jacob Murphy, given all the time in the world, whips a low ball across the face of the Spurs goal from the right side of the penalty area after being picked out by Tonali. Isak gets the crucial touch despite Dragusin being stuck to him like a barnacle.

Newcastle United’s Alexander Isak (second right) scuffs the ball home from close range to put the visitors ahead at Spurs.
Newcastle United’s Alexander Isak (second right) scuffs the ball home to put the visitors ahead. Photograph: John Walton/PA

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36 min: Another Newcastle corner is aimed towards Botman but Lucas Bergvall manages to half-clear before Austin tidies up for Spurs.

34 min: Anthony Gordon swings a corner towards the far post, where Brandon Austin is forced to punch clear under extreme pressure from Dan Burn and Sven Botman. Burn ends up entangled in the back of the net and has a go at the Spurs goalkeeper as if it’s somehow his fault.

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32 min: After good work by Bruno Guimaraes, Jacob Murphy sends a low ball acrossd the face of the Tottenham goal, where Alexander Isak makes contact but steers the ball wide on the stretch. At the far post, Anthony Gordon screams in frustration as he was unmarked and would almost certainly have had a tap-in if Isak had left the ball.

30 min: Djed Spence pokes the ball out for a corner off the toe of Tino Livramento. Sandro Tonali, Alexander Isak and Dan Burn Burn try to crowd around Tottenham’s inexperienced goalkeeper, but Kulusevski and Dragusin immediately move into a position to help Brandon Austin. Nothing comes of the set-piece.

27 min: Regarding Newcastle’s equaliser and the potential Joelinton handball, the Premier League have posted the following on X: “The referee’s call of goal was confirmed by VAR, who checked for a potential handball by Joelinton in the build-up and deemed that his arm was by his side, in a natural position and the contact was accidental.”

I’d need to see it again but I don’t remember Joelinton’s arm being by his side. He was, however, completely oblivious to the ball travelling towards what I recall being an outstretched arm.

25 min: Already on a yellow card, Dan Burn spreads his arms wide and blocks a Dejan Kulusevski pass with his right one. He avoids a second booking and might consider himself lucky to do so.

23 min: An Anthony Gordon free-kick from deep is cleared, but the ball finds its way out to Jacob Murphy on the right flank. There’s nobody in a Newcastle shirt on hand to convert his tantalising ball across the face of the Tottenham Hotspur goal.

21 min: Tottenham goalkeeper Brandon Austin does well to get down and save from Anthony Gordon as the Newcastle winger tried to score from the exact same spot from where Newcastle’s opener came from.

19 min: Spurs sweep upfield and Kulusevski has a cross from the right put out for a corner. Pedro Porro swings the ball into the Newcastle penalty area but fails to beat Isak at the near post. The Swedish striker heads clear.

18 min: Dan Burn gets booked for taking out Dejan Kulusevski as the Tottenham midfielder tried to maraud upfield on the break.

17 min: Lewis Hall sends a cross from deep into the Tottenham penalty area, where Brandon Austin claims it comfortably before chuking the ball long to Kulusevski on the left flank.

15 min: Joelinton appears to catch Bergvall with a raised accidental-on-purpose elbow into the side of the head but gets away with it.

12 min: Radu Dragusin gets himself into all sorts of bother while trying to play the ball out from the back but just about gets away with it. Whatever your thoughs on Joelinton’s “handball”, it’s worth noting that a similarly ill-advised foray out from the back from Spurs led to the Newcastle equaliser.

11 min: Sven Botman makes a brilliant block in his own penalty area to deny Dominic Solanke his second goal of the afternoon.

8 min: Debate will rage over whether that goal should have stood as an attempted pass upfield by Lucas Bergvall hit the outstretched arm of Joelinton, who was complewtely oblivious to what was going on. Despite this, his intervention allowed Newcastle to win possession not far outside the Spurs penalty area.

Gordon was slipped in behind and made no mistake with his finish. I say debate will rage and there’s also a certain Australian on the tuchline who is beside himself with anger.

GOAL! Tottenham 1-1 Newcastle (Gordon 6)

Newcastle equalise! Anthony Gordon scores with a low shot into the bottom right-hand corner after Spurs get caught trying to play the ball out from the back.

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5 min: That’s an excellent start for Tottenham and a good finish from Solanke, in front of the watching England manager, Thomas Tuchel.

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GOAL! Tottenham 1-0 Newcastle (Solanke 4)

Spurs lead! Pedro Porro swings an early cross into the Newcastle penalty area from the right and Dominic Solanke gets on Sven’s Botman’s blind side to power a header past Martin Dubravka.

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2 min: Play resumes with Livramento fit to continue and a drop-ball for Newcastle, whose players are wearing maroon and blue striped shirts, white shorts and maroon socks.

1 min: There’s a break in play as Newcastle right-back Tino Livramento goes to ground in apparent agony and receives treatment after an early collision with Lucas Bergvall.

Tottenham Hotspur v Newcastle is go ...

1 min: Tottenham get the ball rolling and immediately play a long diagonal towards Timo Werner on the left touchline.

Not long now: Led by referee Andy Madley and his team of match officials, the players of both teams march out on to the pitch for the last of the pre-match formalities on a bitterly cold afternoon in London. Dejan Kulusevski and Bruno Guimaraes wear the captains’ armbands.

I think I read somewhere this morning that there’s been at least one goal in each of the past 59 games played between these sides and I will hardly be alone in being gobsmacked if we don’t get several more today. Kick-off is just a few minutes away …

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An email: “G’day Barry,” writes Chris Paraskevas, who I’m guessing might be in Australia. “The lads and I (three grown men with actual resoonsibilities in life) have tempted fate and assembled to watch the game together.

“In the past this has always resulted in disaster. To top things off, we are all wearing a variation of this season’s Newcastle strip. Given Tottenham have had to call up Ledley King at centre-back, surely even our me̶n̶’̶s̶ ̶c̶l̶u̶b̶ supporters club evil eye/curse won’t help Ange tonight.”

Transfer news: It is being reported that Tottenham Hotspur are on the verge of signing Slavia Prague goalkeeper Antonin Kinsky, who is reported to be in London undergoing a medical. A fee of £12.5m plus add-ons is being mentioned for the Czech Republic U-21 international who has made 29 appearances for Slavia Prague this season and kept 14 clean sheets.

Eddie Howe on the chatter linking Alexander Isak with a January move away from St James’ Park: “Our players are loved by us and wanted by us,” he told reporters. “Their focus can only be on the here and now. I don’t see it being an issue for us, especially in this transfer window. The players are very focused.”

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Ange Postecoglou on Tottenham’s transfer window plans: “The club is working hard to get some help for the playing group,” he told reporters. “We need to bolster up our numbers a little bit. January is obviously not an easy time to bring players in quickly and we still want to do what’s best for us rather than panic.”

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Today’s match officials

  • Referee: Andy Madley.

  • Assistants: Nick Hopton and Craig Taylor.

  • Fourth official: Lewis Smith.

  • VAR: Chris Kavanagh.

  • Assistant VAR: Sian Massey-Ellis.

Those teams: As expected, third choice goalkeeper Brandon Austin starts for Spurs and the 25-year-old from Hemel Hemstead will make his first senior appearance in English football following short loan spells in Denmark and the USA. The most recent of those, with Orlando, was in 2021.

Elsewhere in the side, Timo Werner starts ahead of Son Heung-min, while James Maddison is on the bench. Djed Spence gets another start, in place of the injured Destiny Udogie. Lucas Bergvall comes in for the suspended Rodrigo Bentancur.

Sven Botman is welcomed straight into the heart of Newcastle’s defence on his return from nine months on the sidelines with a knee injury, while Tino Livramento starts at full-back in place of Kieran Trippier, who drops to the bench.

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Tottenham Hotspur v Newcastle line-ups

Tottenham Hotspur: Austin; Porro, Dragusin, Gray, Spence; Bergvall, Sarr; Johnson, Kulusevski, Werner; Solanke.

Subs: Whiteman, Reguilon, Dorrington, Hardy, Bissouma, Maddison, Olusesi, Son, Lankshear.

Newcastle United: Dubravka; Livramento, Botman, Burn, Hall; Tonali, Guimaraes, Joelinton; Murphy, Isak, Gordon.

Subs: Vlachodimos, Trippier, Barnes, Osula, Almiron, Kelly, Willock, Longstaff, Miley

Early team news

With Fraser Forster out sick after catching a bug that’s infilitrated the Tottenham camp, Ange Postecoglou is expected to give 25-year-old goalkeeper Brandon Austin his first senior start in English football after five years at the club and 78 games spent on the bench as an unused substitute. Good luck to him.

A glum Ange revealed yesterday that Destiny Udogie is expected to be out for at least six weeks with a hamstring injury and the Spurs full-back joins a long list of lame and halt in the Tottenham treatment room.

The names of Guglielmo Vicario, Mikey Moore, Richarlison, Micky van de Ven, Ben Davies, Cristian Romero and Wilson Odobert all currently feature on it. Djed Spence is available again but Rodrigo Bentancur misses out today through suspension.

Newcastle are without Fabian Schar, who joins Bentancur on the Naughty Step, while Nick Pope, Callum Wilson, Jamaal Lascelles and Emil Krafth all remain sidelined with injury. Sven Botman is expected to undergo a late fitness test and could make his first appearance for Newcastle since last March after recovering from a serious knee injury.

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Premier League: Tottenham v Newcastle

Riding high in fifth place on the back of four consecutive Premier League wins, Newcastle arrive in London as the favourites to make it five on the spin against out-of-sorts hosts who have a lengthy injury list and are without a win in their past three games, two of which have been lost.

Tottenham Hotspur drew with Wolves last time out, while Newcastle’s most recent outing saw them humble Manchester United on their own turf at Old Trafford as they kept their fourth consecutive clean sheet in the top flight. Kick-off in North London is at 12.30pm (GMT) but stay tuned in the meantime for team news and build-up.

 

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