Tottenham 0 Crystal Palace 2: Spurs drop to 17th in Premier League table and suffer yet more injury woes

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ANGE POSTECOGLOU’S Tottenham revved up for the Europa League Final in record-breaking fashion – as they crashed to an all-time-low 20th Premier League defeat of the season.

In the process, they showed exactly why – whatever happens in that final against Manchester United in Bilbao on May 21 – they will surely not be Postecoglou’s Tottenham next season.

EPACrystal Palace were dominant as they beat London rivals Tottenham 2-0[/caption]

GettyAnge Postecoglou’s side were dismal and now sit in 17th in the league[/caption]

AlamyDejan Kulusevski was taken off injured in the first half, handing a huge blow to Spurs’ Europa League hopes too[/caption]

This was a truly pitiful performance from Spurs – not so much a case of poor defending but of vast institutional negligence, as Palace ran riot, the scoreline never reflecting their dominance.

And an early knee injury to Dejan Kulusevski – one of only three players retained from Thursday’s semi-final victory at Bodo/Glimt – was further cause for misery.

An Eberechi Eze double either side of half-time gave Oliver Glasner’s side the perfect pep-up before Saturday’s FA Cup Final against Manchester City

Palace also had two first-half goals ruled out and twice struck the crossbar as they outclassed their hosts, who now sit just one place above the relegation places before they contest what – in terms of league positions – is the worst Europa League Final of all time.

Spurs may yet lift their first trophy in 17 years in the Basque country next week – after all, they have defeated United three times this season – but this dog’s breakfast of a league campaign must surely spell the end of their Australian manager’s reign.

With those Cup finals on the horizon, it threatened to be a case of players spending 90 minutes trying to avoid injury.

Yet Palace were at full pelt in their final run-out before next weekend’s Wembley final.

After returning from the semi-final trip to northern Norway at 4.30am on Friday, Postecoglou made eight changes to his starting line-up but this was still a team of experienced pros and the display they bordered on disgraceful.

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GettyEbere Eze scored both of Palace’s goals[/caption]

The England star was dominant throughout the clashGetty

Djed Spence – at left-back, according to the teamsheet – gave one of the worst individual performances of the season.

Glasner selected his first team, minus the injured Adam Wharton, the Eagles still eyeing a top-half finish.

And within nine minutes, Palace thought they had the lead after a sweeping crossfield move – Eze to Jean-Philipe Mateta to a marauding Daniel Munoz on the right.

When the full-back centred low to the back stick, Ismaila Sarr darted to the back post for a tap-in – yet Mateta had been marginally offside in the build-up because his shoulder was leaning across the halfway line – another triumph for VAR.

Soon, Tottenham’s back-up keeper Antonin Kinsky almost chucked a weakly-struck Munoz volley into his own net.

And then came the moment Postecoglou had been dreading even more than a Palace goal, as Marc Guehi’s challenge sent Kulusevski up into the air, the Swede hurting his right knee as he fell.

Kulusevski, who’d briefly been acting as a false nine, was replaced by Mikey Moore.

And then came one of those familiar passages in a match during which Tottenham simply stopped trying to defend.

Kinsky made a point-blank save from Mateta, whose angled pass soon found Munoz for a shot which was drilled against the crossbar.

Spurs seemed to have decided that, under no circumstances, would they mark Munoz, who was soon given acres of space for a shot on goal, yet mishit a pass to Mateta instead.

Soon after, from a corner, a Chris Richards header was pushed against the bar by Kinsky.

ReutersTottenham have now lost 20 Premier League games this season[/caption]

The atmosphere was funereal and the defending comedic – but somehow Palace were not in front.

Next, Eze had a long-range shot deflected narrowly wide and from the resulting corner, there was another disallowed goal – Maxence Lacroix’s header cannoning in off the out-stretched arm of Guehi.

Then, after a lengthy VAR check, an actual goal.

Munoz, who must have been feeling as though he was part of a one-man Covid lockdown, careered down the right in blissful isolation once more and centred for Eze to tap home.

Yves Bissouma arrived as a half-time sub and was booked within 90 seconds for kicking Will Hughes in the head.

And then it was 2-0, Eze locating Sarr who sprinted down the right and cut back a return ball for Eze – unmarked, as you may have guessed – to drill past Kinsky.

Mateta then ploughed forward and had a shot saved and from a long throw-in, Kevin Danso almost headed into his own net, Kinsky pushing wide.

Then, in a shock twist to a rather repetitive plot, Spurs almost scored – Pedro Porro’s cross to the back post met by a flying header from Pape Matar Sarr, which fell wide.

Glasner made a triple substitution, showing mercy to his hosts, who eased up a little while continuing to dominate.

Throughout it all, Postecoglou stood by the edge of his technical area, largely motionless. He will be moving soon enough.

Match Stats

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