It was a goal to make history and to achieve the seemingly impossible – thrill across both sides of the north London divide.
Harry Kane got it early on and, in doing so, he became Tottenham’s all-time record scorer, moving to 267 – one clear of the legendary Jimmy Greaves. Spurs had been desperate for something to spark their season, a first victory against a member of the so-called big six after so many frustrations, and they got it – deservedly, against a curiously off-colour Manchester City. And how it would be celebrated down the road at Arsenal, whose lead over City at the top of the Premier League has not been damaged by their surprise defeat at Everton on Saturday.
Spurs had Cristian Romero sent off towards the end for a second bookable offence – a trip on Jack Grealish – and there were the inevitable nerves during five minutes of stoppage-time. And yet the goal that City needed to bail them out never looked on.
Pep Guardiola’s players had roared back from 2-0 down to beat Spurs 4-2 at the Etihad Stadium on 19 January – an evening when the manager called City a “happy flowers team”, questioning their hunger. He could make a more legitimate case for the description here. Something is missing in the defending champions, whose misery at this stadium goes on. It is now five matches, five defeats and no goals scored.
Kane’s goal took him to 200 in the Premier League – only Alan Shearer and Wayne Rooney have previously reached the mark – and it was the prompt for some high-grade Spurs content after the full-time whistle. Kane would be interviewed on the pitch, essentially asked to lay it on in front of his teammates and a group of supporters that serenaded him, which he duly did. He used the word “surreal” more than once, which probably summed it up best.
Spurs had it all pre-prepared. When the goal went in, there was a message on the big screen in gold block lettering – “Congratulations, Harry” – although it was possible to wonder whether the post-match show would have been rolled out as it was had City fought back to win.
What an achievement it is for Kane because, as anybody above a certain age will tell you, Greaves truly was the best. And if the goal was a horror show from a City point of view, nobody in Tottenham colours was complaining.
By then, Guardiola had introduced Kevin De Bruyne, having surprisingly started him among the substitutes. De Bruyne teed up Álvarez, who whistled high via a deflection off Dier, and Álvarez would also be just off target on 68 minutes. But it was not a game in which City knocked too loudly on the door and it was Spurs who went closer to the next goal. Ederson blocked from Kane while he also pushed away a Son shot from distance.