Spurs hot on Blues' heels, City third
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Dortmund players fight back tears
Leipzig UCL dream comes true
Mueller fumes at Bayern's 'fatal' misses
Gero plays role in Östersunds' Cup win
Mauricio Pochettino's
side are hot on Chelsea's heels as the title race enters the final
furlong and their dominant display at White Hart Lane keeps them in with
a chance of being crowned champions for the first time since 1961.
Mousa Dembele opened
the scoring with a
close-range strike in the 16th minute and Son
Heung-Min's cool finish doubled Tottenham's lead three minutes later.
Harry Kane, making his
first start since suffering an ankle injury five weeks ago, scored his
20th league goal this season with a predatory 48th minute effort.
Vincent Janssen bagged
a rare goal in second-half stoppage time as Tottenham chalked up seven
successive league wins for the first time since 1967.
Kane is the first
Tottenham player to score at least 20 league goals in three successive
seasons since Jimmy Greaves in the 1960s.
Chelsea responded last
weekend after Tottenham had trimmed their lead, beating Bournemouth
3-1, but Antonio Conte's men face a far more testing trip to Manchester
United on Sunday.
"I am proud of our players after that performance. We have to wait to see what happens," Pochettino said.
"At the end of the season when everyone is tired, we need everyone to have the right mental attitude and happiness helps.
"The three points are very important to keep our dream."
At St Mary's, City
captain Vincent Kompany was given only his fourth league start of an
injury-plagued campaign and he made up for lost time in the 55th minute.
The Belgian defender
scored for the first time since August 2015 as his header from David
Silva's corner evaded a weak attempted save by Fraser Forster.
Leroy Sane finished a
flowing move to make it two in the 77th minute and Sergio Aguero headed
home three minutes later as City moved one point above Liverpool, who
travel to West Bromwich Albion on Sunday.
Everton improved their
prospects of qualifying for Europe as they rose above Arsenal and
United into fifth place after a 3-1 win against Burnley.
Phil Jagielka broke
the deadlock in the 49th minute before Sam Vokes equalised from the
penalty spot for Burnley three minutes later.
Ross Barkley started
for Everton amid the controversy over a British tabloid columnist's
unsavoury criticism of the England midfielder and it was his shot that
deflected off Ben Mee for a 71st minute own goal.
Everton striker Romelu Lukaku struck three minutes later for his 24th league goal this season.
FIGHTBACK
Leicester suffered a
dispiriting warm-up for their decisive Champions League quarter-final
clash as they squandered a two-goal lead in a 2-2 draw at Crystal
Palace.
Craig Shakespeare made
only two changes ahead of Tuesday's home second leg with Atletico
Madrid, when Leicester will try to overturn a 1-0 deficit.
Beaten by a
controversial penalty from Antoine Griezmann in Madrid, the Foxes took
the lead in the less glamourous surroundings of Selhurst Park thanks to a
Robert Huth header in the sixth minute.
Jamie Vardy doubled Leicester's advantage in the 52nd minute.
But Palace had enjoyed
shock wins over Arsenal and Chelsea recently and they got one back
through Yohan Cabaye two minutes later before Christian Benteke capped
the fightback with a 70th minute header.
Hull's hopes of avoiding relegation suffered a blow as they lost 3-1 at Stoke.
Marko Arnautovic put Stoke in front in the sixth minute before Hull drew level through Harry Maguire in the 51st minute.
Peter Crouch nodded
Stoke back ahead in the 66th minute and Xherdan Shaqiri sealed the
points in the 80th minute to leave fourth bottom Hull only two points
above the relegation zone.
Third bottom Swansea
were unable to take advantage of Hull's slip as they lost 1-0 at Watford
after Etienne Capoue netted in the 42nd minute.
Sunderland remain on the brink of relegation despite salvaging a 2-2 draw against West Ham at the Stadium of Light.
Andre Ayew put West Ham ahead in the fifth minute before Wahbi Khazri equalised in the 26th minute.
James Collins restored
West Ham's lead two minutes after half time, but Fabio Borini rescued a
90th-minute equaliser before Hammers defender Sam Byram was sent off in
stoppage time.
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