Match Report |
Saturday, 7th February 1998
Edwood Park
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Blackburn Rovers | 0 | VS | 3 | Tottenham Hotspur | ![]() |
Flowers, Kenna, Sherwood, Hendry, Ripley, Sutton, Wilcox, McKinlay (Bohinen, 82), Croft (Dahlin, 62), Henchoz, Duff. | Attendance 30,388 Referee G P Barber |
Baardsen, Howells, Fox, Nielsen (Clemence, 67), Ferdinand (Armstrong, 70), Carr, Ginola, Vega, Wilson (Brady, 71), Campbell, Berti. | ||||
Subs not used: Flitcroft, Broomes, Fettis. | Subs not used: Grodas, Calderwood. | |||||
Booked: McKinlay. | Booked: Vega, Nielsen, Carr. | |||||
Goal Scorer: Sturridge 25, Wanchope 77 | Goal Scorer: Berti 37, Armstrong 89, Fox 90 |
Nicola Berti returned
to haunt his former boss Roy Hodgson as he played a major
role in Spurs' stunning 3-0 FA Carling Premiership
victory at Ewood Park. The free transfer from Inter Milan gave struggling Tottenham a 36th minute lead when he took advantage of a defensive mix up between Colin Hendry and Stephane Henchoz. And then in the penultimate minute he found acres of space to cross to substitute Chris Armstrong who made it 2-0. Winger Ruel Fox completed the scoring three minutes into injury time to give coach Christian Gross a desperately-needed boost. |
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From the outset Blackburn had
appeared to be red-hot favourites to take the three
points and increase the pressure on Manchester United at
the top of the Premier League. But Spurs did not read the script and eventually ran out easy winners, despite losing both Les Ferdinand and Clive Wilson to second half injuries. Gross had recalled David Howells to the first team and moved Frenchman David Ginola forward to partner Ferdinand in the Spurs' attack, Armstrong starting on the bench. Blackburn were without 16-goal striker Kevin Gallacher and Hodgson recalled teenager Damien Duff. |
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Rovers also welcomed
back long-term injury victim Martin Dahlin, who was one
of the substitutes. The early stages of the game were dominated by Rovers fans' support for Chris Sutton's decision to withdraw from the England B squad. The 24-year-old was cheered with his every touch and was greeted by chants of ``Sutton for England''. In the second minute he almost rewarded their loyalty with an early assist. A Hendry free-kick was headed on by the 15-goal striker into the path of new partner Duff. But Sol Campbell - one man always sure of an England A place - was swift to snuff out the threat. |
Three minutes later
Sutton was again involved when he charged forward on to
Stuart Ripley's excellent long pass. But this time it was
Ramon Vega who was first to the ball. Berti should have given the visitors an eighth minute lead but he lashed Allan Nielsen's pass across goal. It wasn't until the 24th minute when Sutton finally lost his marker Campbell. Henchoz's through-ball was perfect but the former Norwich striker was judged to be in an offside position. Twelve minutes later and very much against the run of play, Spurs snatched the breakthrough. Fox raced to the by-line and put over a cross which both Hendry and Henchoz somehow managed to avoid. |
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The ball dropped on to Nielsen's
heel and that deflection gave Berti just enough time to
fire under Tim Flowers. Rovers almost snatched an early second half equaliser. Ripley beat off the challenge of Wilson to cross into the six-yard area. Duff waited but Stephen Carr appeared from nowhere to clear the ball off the toe of the young Irishman. Six minutes later the home side should have restored parity. Ripley jinked between Nielsen and Wilson before crossing to the head of Sutton. The striker nodded back across goal but Tim Sherwood's header was pushed over the bar by the impressive Espen Baardsen. Hendry almost played Gary Croft into trouble just inside his own half with a poor 54th minute header. But the former Grimsby defender remained cool and steered the ball away from the incoming Fox. |
On the hour a Ripley
cross was met by Sutton. The striker turned Vega
beautifully inside the area but midfielder Sherwood could
not connect with his colleague's pass and Campbell easily
cleared the danger. It was that miss which spurred Hodgson into bringing on Swedish international Dahlin for Croft. Jason Wilcox switched to left back allowing teenager Duff his favoured role of left winger. The result was almost instantaneous. |
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Dahlin's presence in the area for
Duff's 63rd minute corner baffled the Spurs' backline,
Sherwood was all alone but could only direct his header
wide. In the 68th minute Spurs suffered a double blow. Ferdinand left the field after appearing to fall awkwardly and at the same time Wilson was stretchered off after a seemingly-innocuous challenge. |
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In the 79th minute
Howells had to clear Sherwood's six-yard header from
under his own cross-bar - it was a similar effort to Alan
Shearer's first goal for Newcastle v Stevenage on
Wednesday but this one was not given and questions are
sure to be asked. Six minutes later Berti wrapped up the three points when he dashed down the right flank and placed a perfect cross to the feet of Armstrong. The striker - whose season has been devastated by an ankle injury - controlled the ball then lashed it beyond Flowers' outstretched right hand. But Tottenham were not finished. Three minutes into injury time Fox danced around Jeff Kenna on the right of the area and fired home a spectacular drive across Flowers to give Spurs their biggest victory of the season - and maybe their most important. |
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See the goal... | Berti 37' | |
Armstrong 89' | |||
Fox 90' | |||
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Hear the goal... |