Tottenham Hotspur 2 Brighton & Hove Albion 2: Simons screamer not enough after late Rutter goal
Tottenham remain in the relegation zone after Georginio Rutter scored a goal in stoppage time to earn Brighton and Hove Albion a 2-2 draw.
Roberto De Zerbi, in his second game in charge, oversaw an improved display from his side, with Pedro Porro giving Spurs the lead in the first half, heading home a lovely clipped Xavi Simons ball into the penalty box.
However, Karou Mitoma equalised just before half-time with a rocket of a volley from an acute angle to bring Brighton back into it. Xavi Simons looked to have won the game with a thunderbolt of a strike from outside the penalty area with less than 15 minutes left. But Rutter had other ideas. The Frenchman fired home in the 96th minute after the home side failed to clear the ball.
Earlier in the day, Leeds United had pulled further clear of the bottom three with a 2-0 win over Wolverhampton Wanderers, giving them an eight-point gap to Tottenham in 18th. West Ham, who face Crystal Palace on Monday to make up their game in hand, are a point ahead of Spurs, while Nottingham Forest, who face fellow strugglers Burnley tomorrow, are a further point ahead.
Here, our writers break down the key talking points of the game.
Simons shows value
All season, Xavi Simons has been waiting for a big moment to prove his value at Spurs, but even he may not have dreamed of a moment as dramatic as this, with a brilliant goal and a celebration that blew the roof off the stadium.
More often than he would have wanted, he has found himself on the bench, unable to help. But today, De Zerbi brought him back into the starting XI for the first time in the Premier League since March 1. And Simons repaid his new manager’s faith with a brilliant first-half assist.
Spurs’ opener came from Dominic Solanke keeping the ball alive down the left wing and then playing it back to Simons, just outside the box. He looked up and chipped in a perfect cross, which Porro met on the run and headed past a stranded Bart Verbruggen. It was precisely the sort of high-quality moment Simons was bought for and a reminder that he can unpick locks unlike anyone else at Spurs.
The frustration was that straight after that, Simons had a chance to make it 2-0 after more good work by Solanke down the left. His low shot beat Verbruggen but hit the post. Mitoma made it 1-1 minutes later.
While Simons — who appeared to be limping towards the end of the game — produced a moment of magic, nailing a finish he has been trying to do all season, it was not quite enough. While he proved that he can make a crucial difference in the huge games coming up, Rutter stole his thunder.
Jack Lang
Injury that changed the game
Brighton’s midfielder Diego Gomez had to be substituted in the 20th minute after landing awkwardly. It was an innocuous moment that had unintended consequences for Spurs. Yankuba Minteh moved to the right wing to allow Kaoru Mitoma, Gomez’s replacement, to operate in his preferred position on the left.
Minteh, who is left-footed, presented Destiny Udogie with a different problem than Gomez. The Gambia international is a mazy dribbler capable of drawing multiple defenders towards him and creating space for others. He kept darting in between Udogie and Yves Bissouma before cutting inside.
In the 34th minute, Minteh created a chance that Brighton somehow failed to score from. The 21-year-old’s inswinging delivery was headed back across goal by Jack Hinshelwood. Micky van de Ven thrust a leg out to prevent Danny Welbeck from prodding the ball over the line. Van de Ven’s unorthodox clearance hit the post and then bounced off his back, but somehow did not drop into the net. It was a lucky escape, but it was a lesson they failed to learn from.
After Pedro Porro opened the scoring, Udogie was marking Minteh, which left Pascal Gross in acres of space. Gross had time to whip a cross into the box and Mitoma fired a first-time left-footed volley into the roof of the net. Antonin Kinsky was powerless to stop the ferocious effort, but Xavi should have closed down Gross.
Mitoma went off injured in the second half, which prompted Minteh to switch back to his original position on the left. He caused more damage in stoppage time by running away from Porro and drilling a cross into the box, which led to Georginio Rutter’s gut-wrenching equaliser.
Jay Harris
What’s the mood now?
Tottenham got all the way to the 94th minute believing they were on the brink of what could have been a decisive win, a crucial turning point in their season. They were 2-1 up and clinging on, four minutes away from their first league win since 28 December.
If they had held on, this could have been a transformative moment, not just moving them up the table but re-igniting their hope and belief, after a long spell when they had appeared to lose both. De Zerbi has spoken since he arrived that Spurs’ biggest problem is not technical but psychological. That is what happens when you go that long without winning.
When Spurs were 2-1 up, it felt like this game could be that win, that moment. It was certainly their best performance for months, maybe even of the season.
Spurs were not perfect, but they looked more competent, organised and committed than they have done for some time. They ran hard all game. They had an effective game plan they stuck to. And they scored at the right moments.
But they were running out of steam at the end of the game, with Simons cramping up and Spurs getting penned in. When Rutter made it 2-2 deep into added time, the Spurs players looked devastated. They will know how close they were to what could have been a turning point.
Jack Lang
What did De Zerbi say?
We will bring you this after he has spoken at the post-match press conference.
What next for Tottenham?
Saturday, April 25: Wolverhampton Wanderers, Premier League, 3pm
Sunday, May 3: Aston Villa, Premier League, 7pm
Monday, May 11: Leeds United, Premier League, 8pm
Sunday, May 17: Chelsea, Premier League, 3pm