Alexander Isak scores again as Newcastle edge Tottenham

2:26

Did Postecoglou make a mistake dropping Son and Maddison?

ESPN's Mark Donaldson and Janusz Michallik give their immediate reaction to Tottenham's 2-1 defeat to Newcastle United.


Newcastle United striker Alexander Isak continued his rich vein of form with another goal on Saturday to help his side beat injury-hit Tottenham 2-1 in the Premier League. 

Isak scored eight league goals in December and struck again just before halftime to give Newcastle the lead after they had fallen behind to a Dominic Solanke header in the fourth minute.

Solanke's goal had lifted the mood among disgruntled home fans on a freezing day in north London, but Tottenham's lead was quickly snuffed out when Anthony Gordon fired home an equaliser.

Tottenham were the better side after the break with Brennan Johnson hitting the post and James Maddison going close, but Newcastle hung on through 10 minutes of stoppage time for a fifth successive Premier League win.

Eddie Howe's side moved level on 35 points with fourth-placed Chelsea who play at Crystal Palace later on Saturday while struggling Tottenham stay 11th with 24 points.

"We had to dig deep today. It was a tough win but a massive one," Howe said. "[Isak] was in the right place at the right time. That's an art. He's on a hot streak, long may that continue."

The respective form of the two sides could not have been more different heading into the new year with Newcastle on a four-match winning streak and Tottenham having managed only one win in their previous seven Premier League games.

Injury-ravaged Tottenham also began the game with third-choice keeper Brandon Austin making his debut after illness ruled out Fraser Forster, while captain Son Heung-min and James Maddison started amongst the substitutes.

Alexander Isak scored his 13th Premier League goal of the season on Saturday.
Crystal Pix/MB Media/Getty Images

Spurs manager Ange Postecoglou revealed that injury and sickness had left him with only 11 fit players on Thursday, but despite their problems Tottenham took the lead after four minutes.

Teenager  Lucas Bergvall, making only his second Premier League start, drove forward and fed Pedro Porro whose cross was met with a diving header by Solanke that gave visiting keeper Martin Dubvravka no chance.

Tottenham's lead lasted only two minutes though as they were punished for playing out from the back. Bergvall's pass was intercepted by Joelinton's arm and he released Gordon to dispatch a left-foot shot past Austin.

The under-pressure Postecoglou vented his anger that the goal had not been disallowed for handball and the Australian was still seething after the final whistle.

"I'm angry that football wasn't what denied us getting the rewards we deserved today," he told reporters.

Newcastle looked the slicker side going forward in the first half and Isak should have put them ahead when he glanced an effort wide from in front of goal.

But the Swede made amends in the 38th minute as Jacob Murphy crossed low into the area and the ball brushed off Spurs defender Radu Dragusin before Isak applied the finishing touch.

Tottenham were forced into a halftime defensive reshuffle with a sick Dragusin, their only fit centre back, going off and being replaced by full back Sergio Reguilón with Djed Spence moving across alongside youngster Archie Gray, another player who had been ill all week.

The hosts showed plenty of spirit in the second half though and Brennan Johnson struck the post from a tight angle after Dubravka had parried a shot by Pape Matar Sarr.

Postecoglou rolled the dice just past the hour mark with a triple substitution -- Son, Maddison and Yves Bissouma all coming on.

Maddison curled a delightful effort agonisingly wide and deep into stoppage time Solanke looked poised to equalise but headed an inviting Porro cross straight at Dubravka.