Premier League

March 13, 2010

Full-time

Tottenham

3 - 1

Blackburn

Premier League

12:45 GMT, March 13, 2010

White Hart Lane, England

Referee: Howard Webb

Roman rules as Spurs defeat Rovers

Scoring Summary

Tottenham Hotspur Blackburn Rovers
Jermain Defoe (45')Christopher Samba (80')
Roman Pavlyuchenko (55') 
Roman Pavlyuchenko (85') 

Tottenham striker Roman Pavlyuchenko was on target again to help defeat Blackburn at White Hart Lane and maintain his side's hopes of a top-four finish in the Premier League.

• Redknapp sets challenge for Pav

Pavlyuchenko had been unsettled for most of the season and looked set to leave during the January transfer window but stayed at the club and has now played a big part in Spurs' push for Champions League qualification.

Jermain Defoe opened the scoring against Sam Allardyce's men, then Pavlyuchenko doubled the lead before Christopher Samba pulled one back.

Hopes of a Blackburn comeback were dashed when Pavlyuchenko scored his eighth in his last six games and even Spurs boss Harry Redknapp, who has been at loggerheads with the Russian at times during the campaign, was up celebrating.

Before the weekend, Redknapp set his side the target of 19 points to finish in fourth position this season, with Blackburn designated as a must-win fixture given a run-in that includes Manchester United, Manchester City, Arsenal and Chelsea.

The odds were with them too because Allardyce's side have only recorded one league victory away from Ewood Park during the campaign, with only their home form getting them within sight of safety.

Despite their woeful record on the road, Rovers showed early attacking intent, largely due to David Dunn returning from a calf injury and making his first start since January.

His 50-yard box-to-box run required Spurs midfielder Wilson Palacios to track back into his own penalty area, then he could have earned a penalty for the visitors.

Dunn carried the ball into the area and Palacios won the ball fairly but Vedran Corluka cut across the midfielder at the same time, although World Cup referee Howard Webb decided to wave play on.

Spurs' first chances came to Pavlyuchenko, preferred to Peter Crouch as Defoe returned from a tight hamstring.

Pavlyuchenko's first effort was stabbed into the ground and over after Benoit Assou-Ekotto burst into the area, then Gareth Bale crossed and he fired wide.

It meant Paul Robinson, granted a warm welcome from his former club, was not forced into a save before he was taken off with an injury to his left leg.

Jason Brown came off the bench to deputise and was nearly beaten shortly afterwards when Bale, who had the beating of Michel Salgado for pace, dashed around the Spanish veteran but fired wide.

Brown saved at full stretch before the break when Assou-Ekotto's early cross from the left angled towards the bottom corner, then he parried a Defoe effort after Luka Modric sent him through.

But Defoe was on target in stoppage-time of the first half. Niko Kranjcar's corner was flicked on by Corluka, who climbed above Martin Olsson, and Defoe was at the far post to tap home. It was his 23rd of the season.

Nikola Kalinic mis-controlled when he had sight of goal just after the break - and Spurs then punished Rovers in the 55th minute with the second goal.

Spurs were defending a corner when the move started, with Modric carrying the ball forward and finding Defoe. Defoe resisted the temptation to shoot and laid on Pavlyuchenko, whose finish went through Brown.

Modric could have added another when Sebastien Bassong carried the ball out of defence and found his team-mate - but the Croatia playmaker dragged his finish wide.

Bale felt he should have had a penalty when Salgado challenged but Webb pointed for a goalkick and did not book the Wales international.

Webb turned down another appeal when Bale went over a challenge by Morten Gamst Pedersen, with Samba then setting up a nervous finish when he headed home from Pedersen's cross.

Pavlyuchenko, however, grabbed his second five minutes before the end when he clipped home Bale's cross. He was denied a hat-trick when Samba cleared off the line, then Kalinic had an effort chalked off for handball.

  • Redknapp sets challenge for Pav

    After the match Tottenham boss Harry Redknapp challenged Roman Pavlyuchenko to fire the club into the Champions League.

    Redknapp said: "It's amazing. He's scoring goals and technically he is a fantastic player and a terrific player. He has the appetite for the game - the transfer window came and went and he realised he wasn't going back to Russia. He knuckled down and is in top form.

    "From the way he was playing and training, he wanted to go back to Russia, that was the message I was getting getting, but we didn't want to sell him.

    "He's got his chance and is in the team. It's given me a nice problem. The amount of goals he's scored is fantastic for us. If he can continue to score it gives us every chance.

    "He's working harder and putting a shift in. That's all I've ever asked of him."

    Defoe opened the scoring against Rovers before Pavlyuchenko doubled the lead, then the Russia international sealed the win after Christopher Samba pulled a goal back.

    Despite Pavlyuchenko's goals, Gareth Bale was given the man-of-the-match award for giving Spanish veteran Michel Salgado problems on the left flank.

    "He's learning the game and growing up. He came here with a lot of hype and he's still young," Redknapp said.

    "He's defended better at left-back and now he's moved to left midfield and has been equally good for me there. He has a fantastic future in front of him. He's top drawer."

    Blackburn boss Sam Allardyce was upset with Howard Webb for not awarding a penalty for Vedran Corluka's trip on David Dunn when the game was goalless.

    Allardyce, who had to take off Paul Robinson with a torn calf muscle, said: "The David Dunn incident was a blatant penalty for me and at that time, with the game lying at 0-0, it would have made a whole different game.

    "It's an easy decision because his right leg goes across him and there is no contact with the ball.

    "It would have put pressure on Tottenham to come out and would have given us a real boost and something to hang onto. It was a big major decision that went against us."

    Allardyce also felt Samba could have been awarded a penalty when Sebastien Bassong climbed on Samba, then he was puzzled why Nikola Kalinic had a goal chalked off.

    Then Spurs had a penalty shout turned down when Bale appeared to be tripped by Salgado.

    "He made contact, I went down and it should have been a penalty, but the referee thought otherwise," Bale said.

    Redknapp added: "I don't seem to have any luck with Howard Webb. He's given decisions that have cost us games.

    "He's rated as one of our best referees but I don't seem to get him on a good day."