
Mathys Tel produced the kind of moment that makes managers grin and then grind their teeth in frustration, as he curled superb finish into the top corner to put Spurs ahead early in the second half. The goal looked like it might settle a nervy night at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium.
However, twenty minutes later, the same player attempted an overhead kick defensive clearance which struck Ethan Ampadu. After a VAR review, Leeds were awarded a penalty that Dominic Calvert-Lewin converted to level the game.
Tottenham’s attacking intent was clear: they probed, they recycled possession, and they created some openings. But, the match underlined a recurring problem this season. Few moments of quality are too often followed by lapses in concentration. That oscillation between brilliance and error has left Spurs in a precarious position with only two games to go.
Spurs last minute drama
The penalty decision was the games fulcrum, referee Jarred Gillett initially waved played on, but a lengthy VAR check and a pitchside monitor review overturned that call. The sequence summed up modern football’s reliance on replay technology, a single frame can change the course of a relegation battle.
There was more drama, in a chaotic 13 minutes of added time, Sean Longstaff thought he had a late winner only for Spurs goalkeeper Antonin Kinsky produce a spectacular save, pushing the effort onto the crossbar. That stop was arguably the difference between a home defeat and a point that keeps Tottenham marginally above the drop zone.
Kinsky’s was the standout player for Spurs; he made several important saves and was later named player of the match, a rare positive in a game where Spurs form at home remains a concern. The club have now won just once in their last ten matches at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, a run that has amplified pressure on Roberto De Zerbi and his players as the season reaches its climax.
De Zerbi’s side showed fight and flashes of the tactical shape he’s trying to instil, but the manager will be frustrated by the inability to close out a match they controlled for long periods. He was forced to make attacking substitutions late on, including bringing on James Maddison, but even those changes couldn’t force the decisive breakthrough.
Leeds are safe
For Leeds, the draw was a valuable point and a sign of composure and maturity. They defended with discipline, stayed compact when needed, and took their chance from the spot. Crucially, Leeds top flight status for next season was already secured after West Ham’s defeat to Arsenal, meaning they could play with less pressure and more clarity in north London. That freedom showed in their organisation and willingness to see out the result.
Leeds’ manager will take encouragement from the way his team handled the occasion, the Whites were not there to make up the numbers, they came with a plan and executed it well enough to leave Spurs with a solid point.
Spurs future uncertain
The draw leaves Tottenham two points clear of the relegation zone with two games remaining, but the margin is fragile. West Ham sit just behind and can leapfrog Spurs if they beat Newcastle, a result that would dramatically reshape the final week of the season.
Spurs now head to Chelsea on May 19 before a final-day home fixture against Everton, West Ham’s remaining fixtures include a showdown with Leeds. The permutations are simple: any slip and Spurs could be dragged into a last-day scrap for survival.
This is not the script Spurs expected when the season began. Instead of a comfortable finish, they face a tense run-in where every decision, substitution, and VAR check carries outsized weight. De Zerbi has repeatedly asked for calm and consistency. What he will get is a fortnight of high stakes football where margins will be measured in inches and seconds.
Final word
A night of mixed emotions for Tottenham, a moment of individual brilliance, a costly error, and a goalkeeper who kept them alive. For Leeds, a tidy away point and the luxury of safety already secured, the relegation picture has tilted again, not dramatically, but enough to ensure the final two fixtures will be watched with the kind of intensity usually reserved for cup finals.
Featured image via the Canary
By Faz Ali
From Canary via This RSS Feed.


