What Tottenham must do defensively to stop Crystal Palace

WOLVERHAMPTON, ENGLAND - AUGUST 22: Dele Alli of Tottenham Hotspur is fouled by Jose Sa of Wolverhampton Wanderers resulting in a penalty during the Premier League match between Wolverhampton Wanderers and Tottenham Hotspur at Molineux on August 22, 2021 in Wolverhampton, England. (Photo by Marc Atkins/Getty Images)
WOLVERHAMPTON, ENGLAND - AUGUST 22: Dele Alli of Tottenham Hotspur is fouled by Jose Sa of Wolverhampton Wanderers resulting in a penalty during the Premier League match between Wolverhampton Wanderers and Tottenham Hotspur at Molineux on August 22, 2021 in Wolverhampton, England. (Photo by Marc Atkins/Getty Images) /
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Connor Gallagher of Chelsea face Tottenham Saturday while on loan at Crystal Palace
STEVENAGE, ENGLAND – MARCH 01: Connor Gallagher of Chelsea in action with Paris Maghoma of Tottenham Hotspur during the Premier League 2 match between Tottenham Hotspur and Chelsea at The Lamex Stadium on March 01, 2019, in Stevenage, England. (Photo by Marc Atkins/Getty Images) /

Defensive Point 2: Tottenham Must Control Possession

One of the best ways to beat a team in football is to limit the opposition’s touches on the ball. Crystal Palace has struggled to get out of their own end at times this season and Tottenham needs to take advantage of that.

Knowing that the crowd is going to be hostile and that Palace needs the win, there is no better way to take the wind out of Palace’s sails and quiet the crowd than by controlling possession.

If Tottenham can dominate possession and keep Palace pinned in defensively, even if Spurs struggle to break down the organized Eagle’s defense, it should lead to turnovers in the middle of the park and transitional opportunities for the Spurs in the attack.

Palace wants and needs a win, after two draws and finally scoring some goals, they are gaining some confidence. Tottenham needs to stifle that confidence from the kickoff by trying to simply dominate Palace in all phases of the game.

Defensive Point 3: Spurs better have someone running with Connor

One of the biggest differences between the lackluster performance on opening day for Crystal Palace and two decent matches in the weeks after was Connor Gallagher. On loan from Chelsea, so ineligible for opening day, Gallagher has been the most consistent attacking threat for Palace springing up from the midfield.

Against Brentford, Gallagher was able to combine and get into the box crushing the ball off the woodwork and just missing out on taking all three points. Against West, Ham Gallagher was able to pop up twice in the box to gather possession and put the ball in the net.

In all of those instances, Gallagher was running in from the midfield adding an extra body into the attack. This is particularly effective when he plays off and around Zaha who can draw an extra defender. If Dele Alli and Oliver Skipp (or Harry Winks) drift too much to the side to help on Zaha, Gallagher is going to drift into those spaces they vacate and cause havoc for the Spurs defensively.

Tottenham is going to have to work to keep a body on Gallagher and prevent him from picking up the ball in the box where he is most dangerous.

If Tottenham can manage to hold the lion’s share of the possession, maintain their shape and discipline defensively, and do not lose sight of Connor Gallagher in the defensive third, they should be able to keep the Eagles down and come away with their fourth straight clean sheet. However, if Tottenham does not work to control the tempo and possession, gets pulled out from in front of the goal, and forgets to track back on Gallagher, Palace will end the Spurs winning run.

Ultimately, this is a match about discipline defensively, which seems to be something Nuno Espirito Santo is instilling in this team. We will see just how well that work is going Saturday afternoon in south London.

Next. Offensive keys to Spurs beating Palace. dark