Tottenham's first
top-flight title challenge in a generation gathered further momentum with a
landmark 2-1 win at Manchester City in the Premier League on Sunday, with
Christian Eriksen scoring a late winner on his birthday.
Associated
Press report continues:
Spurs'
vibrant, young team celebrated its fifth straight victory — and first away
against a high-profile opponent — by throwing their jerseys into the away end
at Etihad Stadium, before manager Mauricio Pochettino shook his fists to loud
cheers from fans.
With
Tottenham just two points off the lead held by Leicester with 12 games left, an
underachieving club is starting to believe.
"It
is important to start to feel that you can come to a stadium like Man City
against a big, big team and you can win," Pochettino said. "It is
true our supporters can dream."
Spurs
went ahead in the 53rd minute through a penalty by Harry Kane that was
controversially awarded, with Raheem Sterling adjudged to have handled as he
turned his back to a cross from Danny Rose. The ball may have struck the
winger's back.
Substitute
Kelechi Iheanacho equalized in the 74th with the first clear-cut chance created
by City, only for Eriksen to race onto Erik Lamela's through-ball and slip a
low finish past goalkeeper Joe Hart. It was the perfect way for the Denmark
midfielder to celebrate his 24th birthday.
City
scored a total of 10 goals in its last two home games against Tottenham, but
Spurs' 2015-16 crop are a different prospect entirely and may be some pundits'
favorite — despite their unfamiliarity with this lofty position. The club's
last league title came in 1961, and it was last this high in the league at this
stage of the season in 1985.
The
mobility of Tottenham's midfield caused City problems all game and led to the
winning goal, after Yaya Toure was robbed by Lamela. The Argentina forward
surged through and his pass was expertly controlled and finished by Eriksen.
"I
think it was an important victory for the future," said Pochettino, who is
surely thinking more about the present now.
As
for City, a second straight home loss — after last weekend's 3-1 defeat to
Leicester — kept the team six points off the lead. A squad reeling from
midfield injuries is looking stretched as it goes for trophies on four fronts.
The
midfield lacked balance here, with playmaker David Silva out of position on the
right — to accommodate Toure in the No. 10 role — and forced into lots of
defensive work. Sergio Aguero was isolated and frustrated up front until
Iheanacho came on just after the hour mark.
Pellegrini
complained about the penalty decision but was just as concerned about City's
recent form. The team hasn't won any of its eight matches against teams in the
top six this season.
"The
first problem is our team," said Pellegrini, who gave Captain Vincent Kompany
his first start since November after injury. "We need to improve in a lot
of things."
Neither
goalkeeper was seriously tested before Kane converted his penalty down the
middle, while a raging sense of injustice was sweeping around the Etihad.
Sterling, who had been moved to the right wing for the second half, turned his
back in a bid to block Rose's cross but referee Mark Clattenburg adjudged
Sterling to have deliberately handled the ball.
"It
was decisive for the game," Pellegrini said.
The
decision seemed to fire up City and its fans, and Toure struck the crossbar
with a free kick three minutes later.
Iheanacho
came on for Fernando to give City and equalized within 13 minutes. It was a
composed finish from the 19-year-old Nigeria forward, stroking a sidefooted
shot high into the net from Gael Clichy's cut-back.
Eriksen had the final say,
though, to complete a successful day for the north London clubs after Arsenal
beat Leicester earlier Sunday. It wrapped up a miserable weekend for the
Manchester giants after United's loss at relegation-threatened Sunderland on
Saturday.
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