Story of the Match
Spurs 6-2 Leicester City

Team news

Four changes for Spurs
Antonio Conte made four changes from the midweek defeat to Sporting CP in Lisbon as Davinson Sanchez, Clement Lenglet, Ryan Sessegnon and Dejan Kulusevski came in for Cristian Romero, Ben Davies, Emerson Royal and Heung-Min Son. Ivan Perisic switched to the right.

Three in for the Foxes
Brendan Rodgers made three changes to the team that lost against Brighton last time out. Debutant Wout Faes, Timothy Castagne and Kiernan Desbury Hall came in for Luke Thomas, Boubakary Soumare and Kelechi Iheanacho, all on the bench.
The report
Heung-Min Son stepped off the bench to fire a 13-minute hat-trick and cap another goal-filled Premier League win against Leicester City at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium on Saturday evening.
Yet to score this season before this encounter and among the substitutes for the first time this campaign, the South Korean international forward exploded off the mark in some style, curling home two exquisite efforts before tucking home his third amid glorious celebrations among our fans. It came seven years to the day since the front man's first goal for us against Qarabag in the Europa League.
It was 3-2 in our favour when Son stepped onto the pitch after Youri Tielemans had given the visitors an early lead with a twice-taken penalty, before goals from Harry Kane and Eric Dier put us in front, only for James Maddison to level it up at the break. Rodrigo Bentancur then scored his first Spurs goal since his January arrival from Juventus for 3-2, before Son’s superb cameo.
There was a poignant backdrop to the events as both clubs and their respective sets of fans paid tribute to Her Majesty, Queen Elizabeth II following her sad passing last Thursday.
The Foxes were ahead on five minutes after Davinson Sanchez tripped James Justin right on the edge of the area. Hugo Lloris saved Tielemans first spot-kick but was adjudged to have moved off his line too early and so a retake was enforced by referee Simon Hooper, Tielemans this time making no mistake.
But three minutes later we were level, Dejan Kulusevski’s back-post cross headed home by Kane, his 20th goal against the Foxes. And, in the 21st minute, it was 2-1 - Ivan Perisic whipping in a corner to the near post where Dier glanced home a header. Then, Sanchez climbed high to head the ball into the net five minutes later, but the referee decided the Colombian international had fouled goalkeeper Ward in the process and disallowed the goal.
Leicester levelled it up four minutes before the break when Timothy Castagne cut a cross back and James Maddison scooped a half-volley up and over Lloris into the top corner. Ward then made a stunning save to tip Sanchez’s header onto the crossbar before Lloris saved with his legs to deny Maddison his second from close range as a crazy half came to an end. Not that the second period started any differently!
Just two minutes in, Bentancur dispossessed Wilfred Ndidi 30 yards from goal, strode forward and coolly slotted past Ward to put us 3-2 ahead. Lloris denied Daka with a wonderful diving save just before the hour mark but we finally put daylight between ourselves and the Foxes with Son’s first goal, the substitute curling right-footed from 25 yards out into the top corner for his first of the season in the 73rd minute.
He repeated the feat soon after but this time with his left foot, another superb strike, but the biggest cheer of the night was saved for his hat-trick, coming in the 86th minute when he slid the ball past Ward with a VAR check confirming he wasn’t offside in the build up, after the goal had initially been disallowed.




The key moment
Having gone 3-2 up early in the second half, Lloris made a superb diving save to keep out Daka’s header and preserve our lead, but it was the introduction of Son that changed the course of the game.
There was a sense of anticipation even when he came onto the pitch in the 59th minute to replace Richarlison, and he didn’t disappoint with two superb curling efforts before completing his treble just 25 minutes after coming on!

Goal of the game
Heung-Min Son (84) | Spurs 5-2 Leicester City

Match data
Spurs (3-4-3): Lloris (c), Sanchez (Romero 59), Dier, Lenglet, Perisic (Royal 55), Bentancur, Hojbjerg, Sessegnon, Kulusevski (Bissouma 70), Kane, Richarlison (Son 59). Substitutes (not used): Forster, Doherty, Tanganga, Skipp, Bryan.
Leicester (4-1-4-1): Ward, Castagne, Faes, Evans (c), Justin, Ndidi (Soumare 85), Maddison, Tielemans, Dewsbury-Hall (Iheanacho 74), Barnes, Daka (Vardy 74). Substitutes (not used): Iversen, Amartey, Thomas, Praet, Albrighton, Perez.
Goals: Spurs - Kane 8, Dier 21, Bentancur 47, Son 73, 84. 86; Leicester - Tielemans (pen) 5, Maddison 41.
Yellow cards: Spurs - Perisic; Leicester - Ndidi, Daka.
Referee: Simon Hooper.
Attendance: 61,450.
Weather: Sunny, gentle breeze, 16 degrees.
Star of the show -
Heung-Min Son
There was a case for making Hugo Lloris our star on the night, as he made big saves to deny James Maddison, twice, and Patson Daka at key points in the game, but a 13-minute hat-trick off the bench will always put you in contention for man of the match and that’s why Son gets the nod. He became the first Spurs player to score a Premier League treble after coming on as a substitute and helped us to secure three points in the process.

Stats a fact

Fourth treble for Sonny
Heung-Min Son scored the fourth hat-trick of his Spurs career on Saturday evening. His other three came against Millwall (FA Cup, March 2017), Southampton (scoring four in September 2020) and Aston Villa (April 2022). His treble also came seven years to the day of his first Spurs goals, in the Europa League against Qarabag.

Seventh heaven in N17
This was our seventh home win on the spin in the Premier League and we are now unbeaten in 13 Premier League games (W9 D4), since a 1-0 home defeat against Brighton on 16 April. Our longest unbeaten run in the competition is 14 - from August to December 2015 and again from December 2017 to April 2018.
Conte's comment
"In the second half, we have seen another game, we played with confidence, with great energy. I’m happy because we played a good game and it was important for my players, because after a loss in the Champions League… and, honestly, I was disappointed with this loss in the Champions League, when you play a game and you deserve to lose, I’m first to recognise that. Honestly, we didn’t deserve to lose this game, and, for this reason, I was very disappointed. I spoke with my players, I said after a defeat that a good team, a team that wants to think to go to another level, has to have a good reaction, quickly and I’m happy, in the second half, under difficulty, I saw a great reaction from everybody."

What it means
This fixture is now the highest-scoring contest in the Premier League since Leicester’s return to the competition in 2014. The eight goals means the fixture has seen 71 goals, at an average of just over four goals a game! As for the league table, we’re up to second after this win, level on 17 points with leaders Manchester City and remain unbeaten in the PL this season.
Next up...
We’re now into an international break, so it’s a couple of weeks before our next fixture - and it’s a big one! Arsenal are our next opponents as we make the short trip across north London to face the Gunners at the Emirates in the Premier League on Saturday, 1 October, kick-off 12.30pm.
