Palace takes Spurs out of FFA Cup
Tottenham Hotspur have suffered their second defeat in English knockout football in a matter of days.
Tottenham Hotspur suffered their second defeat in English knockout football in a matter of days after losing 2-0 to Crystal Palace in the fourth round of the FA Cup.
Connor Wickham gave the unfancied Eagles — 29 points adrift of Spurs in the Premier League — a ninth-minute lead before a penalty by former Tottenham winger Andros Townsend made it 2-0.
Spurs’ Kieran Trippier missed with a penalty before halftime as Tottenham suffered more spot-kick woe following Thursday’s shootout defeat by Chelsea in a League Cup semi-final.
FA Cup-holders Chelsea had no such problems later on Sunday as they marked Argentina striker Gonzalo Higuain’s club debut with a 3-0 win at home to Championship side Sheffield Wednesday.
Willian scored twice either side of a goal from highly rated English teenager Callum Hudson-Odoi, linked with a transfer window move to German giants Bayern Munich.
Earlier, Tottenham’s reverse left Mauricio Pochettino still searching for his first trophy as their manager since the Argentinian joined from Southampton in 2014, with Spurs’ last piece of silverware the 2008 League Cup.
It is also bound to intensify the debate over whether Spurs need to change their transfer strategy and spend big in the closing days of the January window.
Spurs were without injured England stars Harry Kane and Dele Alli, while the in-form Son Heung-Min had still to return from international duty with South Korea at the Asian Cup. But Pochettino, however, decided to omit Christian Eriksen, with the influential playmaker not even among Spurs’ substitutes at Selhurst Park.
The Champions League is now Tottenham’s only real hope of a title this season, with Spurs playing Borussia Dortmund in the last 16.
“It was so painful to lose the game like this,” Pochettino told BT Sport. “There were some key moments, like the (missed penalty), which would have changed everything … We cannot complain and just try in the two competitions to give our best.”
It took Palace a mere nine minutes to open the scoring, Wickham following up after a Jeff Schlupp shot was blocked by Spurs goalkeeper Paulo Gazzaniga.
Palace then made the most of a bizarre incident when Spurs’ Kyle Walker-Peters handled a cross into the box.
It was a clear penalty and Townsend made no mistake from the spot, slamming the ball into the middle of the goal.
But at the other end, after Patrick van Aanholt brought down Juan Foyth, Trippier blasted a penalty well wide of the post.
AFP
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