Fulhamish

The romantic tale of Ryan Sessegnon’s Fulham return

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Let me tell you a story, a story that starts on 8 August 2019. (Of course, it really started long before that.) The club confirmed that Ryan Sessegnon was leaving Fulham following our relegation to the Championship, and he would be making a big-money move to Tottenham Hotspur. He was one of our own, a Fulham fan, and nobody begrudged him the move. We knew he deserved to play in the top flight.

Ryan’s career at Spurs has been well-documented. Watching it from the outside was painful, to be honest – despite bright flashes. He scored in the Champions League against Bayern Munich, and netted Spurs’ first goal of the 2022/23 season. I kept a keen eye on his career, hoping that I’d somehow be able to will him towards success (by contrast, I unfollowed Harvey Elliot on Instagram as soon as he jumped to Liverpool). But my praying never seemed to work. When the news broke that Spurs released him last summer, I dared to dream for a moment that one of my favourite players may play for his boyhood club – our club – again. Then, we heard the rumours that he was training with Crystal Palace.

We all remember where we were at 9:55am on 25 July 2024. I was in the office – and by myself, thank goodness, because I was about to bounce around the room and burst into tears. Sessegnon’s return to Fulham had been announced by Fabrizio Romano. Sess was back! There was an aura of concern around the transfer, of course. Sessegnon’s injury record since leaving the club in 2019 was hugely worrying, plus he was our first signing that summer, and everyone was getting nervous about the state of the squad.

I could say now that the rest is history, but it’s not really. When we first saw Sessegnon play in early cup games against Birmingham and Preston, he looked nervous, like he was worried that running around too hard would re-aggravate the injuries that had defined his career away from Fulham. It would be too neat to say that Spurs Away in early December is when we saw a shift, a shift where we saw him begin to play with freedom at long last, even in a tiny, bit-part role off the bench. He was on the pitch as we scored emotional late winners against Newcastle and Chelsea, a true part of those celebrations.

Wolves away on a Tuesday night in February is not necessarily the most appealing fixture. Nonetheless, I was tempted up, and when the line-up dropped at 6:15pm, I realised it was all worth the trip – our starboy, the lad on the back of my shirt this season, had earned his first Premier League start. I can’t really describe the euphoria of the first minute, as Andreas Pereira passed to Ryan Sessegnon and he was straight through on goal – he was making the back of the net ripple. I was both incredibly present and having this insane out-of-body experience as my friends clutched me and I (of course) burst into tears.

We’ve spoken and written a lot on Fulhamish about our inconsistency this season – how dropping points at home to Manchester United, Southampton, Ipswich, Wolves has taken the shine off the campaign, but that’s not what football’s about for me. I can forget them. After Sessegnon’s opener, I confidently told everyone around me that I didn’t care if we lost 10-1, because we’d all experienced this moment together.

At Sunday’s game against Tottenham Hotspur, the lad next to me and I tried some pie-in-the-sky, dream-big thinking before kick-off. What would be the best possible outcome of this game? We agreed: Ryan Sessegnon comes on late on, and scores the winner at the Hammersmith end. A girl can dream, eh? When the board went up for number 30, we caught eyes and shared a joke about it.

Well, you know the rest – a hopeful, looping pass from Bernd Leno lands at the feet of Ben Davies and Ryan Sessegnon. Our starboy shrugs off the Spurs defender. He slides over as he curls the ball into the top corner and the ground erupts. He doesn’t celebrate but it doesn’t matter because Rodrigo Muniz leapfrogs over his shoulders – oh, and we celebrate enough for him in the stands.

Welcome home.

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Player Ratings: Fulham 2-0 Tottenham Hotspur

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Fulham showed once again why they are arguably the most inconsistent side in the Premier League this season in terms of results and performances by bouncing back from a late defeat at the AMEX last week to comfortably beat Spurs at the Cottage. The three points leave the Whites in a provisional UEFA Conference League spot going into the international break with just nine games to play and an FA Cup Quarter Final in the offing, quite the exciting final two months of the season to come…

Bernd Leno

Considering Leno kept an impressive clean sheet against a generally exciting, attacking Postecoglu side, it’s weird how little praise I’m going to give him here. Bar a decent diving save to prevent Mathys Tel in the second half, Leno had very little to do in the game. His distribution looked shaky at best throughout, signified by a very poor pass accuracy and most of his long balls finding a Tottenham man. 6/10.

Timothy Castagne

Thought in general Castagne was our best full back at both ends of the pitch today, something you can very rarely say about the Belgian when playing alongside Robinson. His attacking input was far more encouraging that normal, even if a guilt edge chance that fell to him on 34 minutes did end up comfortably in the hands of Vicario. Was rather impressed at how tight he stayed to Son in the second half to keep the Korean quiet for the most part. 7/10.

Joachim Andersen

Probably as impressed as I’ve been in an all-round Andersen performance for a while as the Dane quietly went about playing a big part in a vital clean sheet. Unlike plenty of times this season, he showed the ball-playing abilities we know he’s capable of, playing the ball into midfield brilliantly throughout. Defensively, his five clearances and two blocked shots were the best of any Fulham player over the 90. 7.5/10.

Calvin Bassey

Considering Bassey plays so on the limit at times, and the fact that he plays the ball so progressively out of defence, it’s incredibly impressive that he finds his passing percentage over 90% here. Did incredibly well at frequently stepping into duels and winning second balls over and over again in place of any other Fulham or Spurs man. 7/10.

Antonee Robinson

Jedi having the most completed tackles of any Fulham player looks good on paper, but it was a reflection on the number of times he had to recover from having Johnson or Spence go past him on the right. Admittedly, it shows good resilience, but it felt like an off day in general. His on the ball play looked so flaky in the first half especially, and his crossing throughout was really poor for his standards this season. 5.5/10.

Sander Berge

Solid if not spectacular. Describing a standard Sander Berge performance at this point feels like what we would say about Harrison Reed for the past half a decade in that, even if you don’t notice him much in the middle of the park, he never really dips below a seven out of ten. Provided great support and balance alongside two midfielders who struggled to gel in earlier parts of the season. 7/10.

Andreas Pereira

After struggling so often to play the deeper number eight role this season, Pereira really excelled in this one. Normally his positional discipline in this role is poor, but today there was great balance in his game. Sometimes he found himself in dangerous areas going forward, like four minutes in when he flashed a strike across goal. In other times, he conducted play superbly from deep whilst simultaneously putting the hard yards in alongside Berge and getting stuck into a number of tackles. 8.5/10 – Man of the match.

Alex Iwobi

Really struggled to get into the game at all. Drifted inside looking to find space in attacking areas but had such little joy. Dispossessed on multiple occasions which is very rare for Iwobi. He completed the second least passes of any outfield player, with the lowest pass accuracy of the lot. That included four misplaced crosses from five, which contributed to how little creative threat he posed. Not surprised he came off early in the second half. 5/10.

Emile Smith Rowe

Just at a bit of a loss with Smith Rowe really, forget the fee, he’s just the ultimate ‘luxury player’ that a Marco Silva Fulham team, made of misfits giving 110% for each other, cannot afford to have. Every pass to Willian or first touch on the half turn may have looked good, but it was all so simple under zero pressure. When asked to do anything under pressure from the opposition, or when prompted to do anything instinctively, his talent just does not shine through. He wants too long on the ball to show any ability in the final third, and it shows week after week. So frustrating once again. 5/10.

Willian

Meh, okay I guess. There were so many times when Willian received the ball on the left, and from memory of what he was capable of, I’m sat expecting him to manipulate space at speed in dangerous areas. But he doesn’t do that anymore. Bar one decent curled effort in the second half that whistled past the post, everything Willian did that was good was oh so basic, and a sign of the age he’s reached. He’ll be okay to fill in for another couple of months, but we simply must move on from this type of signing if this club wants to evolve at all into next season. 6/10.

Raul Jimenez

As per usual with Raul, you really cannot fault the effort that goes into his game. He runs the channels well, puts his body about to win fouls in dangerous areas and does his best to link play with those around him. Ultimately, most of the service came after Raul came on, which probably justifies the frustration he showed when he came off just after the hour mark. 6.5/10.

Substitutes

Adama Traore (63’ for Iwobi)

Didn’t really bark up many trees against a tiring Tottenham Hotspur defence in the final half an hour. His first touch seemed constantly off and his decision making was particularly poor, especially on a couple of occasions when Pereira was running past him into space down the right. 5.5/10.

Rodrigo Muniz (63’ for Jimenez)

An absolutely wonderful cameo from the Brazilian, topped off with a beautifully composed goal that ended up being decisive in the tie. Muniz bullied the Spurs defenders in the air and held play up technically better than Jimenez had before him and made the most of the service afforded to him. 8.5/10.

Tom Cairney (72’ for Smith Rowe)

Added superb control to Fulham’s build up play just as the game had started to open up and turn into an end-to-end affair, which normally would suit how Postecoglu wants to play football. The balance he added gave extra freedom for Andreas to venture forward and help create chances to win the game. 7.5/10.

Ryan Sessegnon (87 for Willian) came on too late to be fairly assessed but obviously deserves credit for a phenomenally taken goal that capped off a huge win.

Manager

Marco Silva

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Positives & Negatives: Fulham 2-0 Tottenham Hotspur

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Jack Stroudley looks back at our final match before the international break.

What a way to sign off that was! Fulham ran out 2-0 winners over Tottenham Hotspur on Sunday to climb up to eighth and continue to make the latter stages of the season interesting. Late goals from Rodrigo Muniz and Ryan Sessegnon were the difference in SW6 with Fulham now three games unbeaten against Spurs. I’m sure I’m not the only one with a smile on my face and a spring in my step, but what are the main talking points from Sunday?

Positives

Silva’s super subs

Fulham were in control for large portions of the game but as the clock continued to run down it felt like it was going to be another game that would get away from us. Marco Silva’s shown on multiple occasions this season his ability to be proactive and use our bench to swing the pendulum in our favour – we saw another example of that on Sunday. Rodrigo Muniz will receive many of the plaudits for being his usual bullish self, throwing himself about, providing an option and rounding off a fantastic cameo with the opening goal.

But one man we have to talk about is Ryan Sessegnon, a tear shed as Sess rolled back the years scoring at the Hammy End. Just seconds after coming on, Sess showed such desire to win the ball off Ben Davies and once again demonstrated clinical nature in front of goal to seal the game. Sessegnon has shown in recent weeks his composure in the final third and will give Silva a major selection headache. Tom Cairney also deserves credit for keeping things ticking and adding a well needed spark in attack. Marco Silva got it spot on.

Astute Andreas

In terms of a standout individual performance I think that Andreas Pereira deserves immense credit for his performance on Sunday. I kept finding myself at the AMEX saying to those around me that we were missing Sasa Lukic, this wasn’t the case on the Thames. Seeming to win the ball back on numerous occasion, keep things ticking and round off a brilliant performance with an assist for Muniz’s goal.

The main question is will he keep his place when Lukic returns from suspension? For me the answer is yes, but not in Lukic’s position. Emile Smith Rowe was once again largely ineffective and I think a spell out of the team could be good for our record signing, with Pereira playing further forward.

A professional performance

As I alluded to earlier, for large portions of the game it felt like it wasn’t going to be our day and two goals late on really showcased what Fulham deserved from this game. Tottenham were poor throughout, second to every ball and on the back foot throughout. Fulham were defensively sound with Calvin Bassey a brick wall at the back, limiting Ange Postecoglou’s side time and time again.

I’ve already spoke about Andreas Pereira’s performance but Sander Berge once again deserves immense credit for continuing to showcase that his transfer fee is looking more and more like a steal. Fulham now move to eighth and will go into a seismic FA Cup Quarter Final game against Crystal Palace with confidence in abundance, come on Fulham!

Negatives

If we hadn’t had won today then I’d have spoke about our toothless opening seventy minutes but that point is now redundant so nothing to report from me – onto Crystal Palace!

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Even if this is a “what if?” season, let’s enjoy it

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The relief when that final whistle went on Sunday was wonderful. A properly dogged, resolute last 15 minutes, where we kept Spurs at arm’s length, sparked lovely scenes in the away end. It was one of those moments where you feel the stress evaporate and you can finally breathe.

However, it wasn’t long until that annoying voice popped into my brain saying, “We should’ve won that”. It was the same voice that piped up after Everton, Aston Villa, Manchester City, West Ham, and Manchester United. It’s a troublingly long list of games when you realise we’ve only just touched December.

I’m confident that this is the best team we’ve had under Marco Silva, which means it’s the best side we’ve had in well over a decade. I just have this unfortunate niggly feeling that we won’t do as well as we deserve. That this season will leave us all asking, “what if?”.

Some of the football that we played at the creatively-named Tottenham Hotspur Stadium was stunning. There were passages of play that just made me smile. The move that saw Iwobi hit the crossbar in the first half was near perfection; a sequence of passes that the best of the best would be proud to show highlights of. Yet what do we have to show for it? A point. It’s not fair, but it’s also very on brand.

This is my worry with this era of Fulham. We’re in danger of becoming the nearly men. We play superb football, we bloody some noses, but we just don’t have that knockout blow. Ultimately, it’s that characteristic that means we will probably underachieve this season.

But do you know what? I think I’m OK with that. With a couple of notable exceptions, I’m just really enjoying watching us play football. I’m looking forward to every game and there’s a really nice atmosphere in the fanbase; a sense of pride. We might not reach our desired destination, but I think the journey is going to be fun. So, let’s lean into it, let’s accept that this is the season of “what if?” and allow ourselves to fully enjoy Silva’s silky Whites.

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Player ratings: Tottenham Hotspur 1-1 Fulham

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Fulham came away with a highly credible point after a wonderfully entertaining game of Premier League football at the Tottenham Hotspur stadium. Marco Silva may be left ruing missed chances from the boys in red and black earlier in the game, but ultimately to see out the contest with 10 men and get a positive result can only be viewed as a positive.

Bernd Leno

Forced into action almost instantly as a misplaced Bassey pass in the opening seconds gave Son a gilt-edged chance, which Leno saved well with his feet from close range. Later in the first half, he was forced into an acrobatic save to deny a Dragusin header from a Tottenham corner. Kicking was solid throughout in tricky weather conditions and helped wind the clock down in the final stages after going down to ten men. 7.5/10

Kenny Tete

Quality, quality performance at both ends of the pitch from Tete. Some of his deliveries in the first half especially helped to create our most dangerous chances, including one to Jimenez, which should’ve resulted in an assist for the Dutchman. At the other end, it was his sliding intervention at the very last moment at Leon’s back post that stopped Werner from having an easy chance at putting Spurs ahead. As often happens when the right-back manages to stay fit, his performances are going from strength to strength. 8/10

Issa Diop

While everyone has raved about the return of Joachim Andersen to Fulham this season, Diop has calmly slotted in on a number of occasions now and rarely puts in a Diop-style mistake. This was arguably his best performance in a Fulham shirt. Looked so composed on the ball, frequently moving Fulham out of a tight spot when playing out from the back. Made a couple of superb sliding tackles in both halves to prevent Spurs from getting shots away from dangerous positions. This sort of form may make it harder for Silva to place Andersen straight back into the XI when he returns to fitness. 9/10 – Man of the match

Calvin Bassey

Nearly had another moment to forget at Tottenham just seconds into this tie. An almost blind pass across his own box found Son rather than a teammate and were it not for the intervention of Leno, Fulham could’ve been on the back foot from the off. Calmed down after that and was solid enough in possession. Also caused carnage at set pieces, manipulating Tottenham’s defenders to create space for the ball to fall to a Fulham man. 6.5/10

Antonee Robinson

Our left-back, like Bassey, also almost had a proper moment of madness that could’ve put Fulham in a load of bother. An under-hit back pass also ended up at the feet of Son, who should’ve really scored but instead tried rounding Leno who dutifully collected the loose ball. Bar that, Robinson was really good. Made several interceptions really high up the pitch that set us up nicely in transition, and through some wonderful combinations with Nelson, helped to create a number of chances. Frustratingly it felt like every cross of his fell at the feet of a Tottenham man. 7/10

Sasa Lukic

Absolute Rolls Royce in the middle of the pitch, slightly incredible how seamlessly he’s walked straight back into this side in the form he started the season in before his injury. Realised today that the Serb is actually really quick, which helped him to be our main man in terms of winning second balls in the middle of the park, but also helped him as a ball progressing machine in the transition. Often took our corners, and it was nice to see a difference in our deliveries and to see them actually result in Fulham opportunities for once. Incredible how much of an important cog he’s become in such a short amount of time at the club, long may it continue. 8/10

Sander Berge

Along with Lukic, the two formed a brilliant pivot that Tottenham struggled to get through for large spells of the game. Berge often sat the deeper of the two in transition to allow Lukic to join attacks, something which worked really well. It felt like anything Spurs tried through the middle in the first half just led to frequent interceptions from the Norwegian, who is another player getting better and better in white. Berge frequently moved the ball quickly out of his feet when being pressed by Spurs, which I thought was particularly impressive. Seeing how well balanced this midfield was with Berge and Lukic side by side, it’ll be interesting to see if it’s a system utilised going forward by Silva once Lukic returns from suspension. 8/10

Emile Smith Rowe

He was absolutely superb for large spells of the game and really showed how this Fulham side can benefit from the England international in a more advanced role, rather than as one of the duel eights. The role allowed ESR to press higher up the pitch, which he did excellently, forcing several Tottenham errors, which Fulham looked to capitalise from in transition. His combination play with Reiss Nelson was there as it always seems to be, with the two constantly targeting Porro and Dragusin with the ball at their feet. 7.5/10

Alex Iwobi

The Nigerian midfielder is surely playing the best football of his career right now, which is reflected in the confidence he’s showing on and off the pitch. While off it he’s lively in interviews and creating music, on the pitch he’s gladly gliding past any player who comes within five yards of him, trying moves that only a player at the top of their game can. Showed a lovely composure in a tight space to create Tom Cairney’s goal and combined well on countless occasions with Wilson after he came onto the pitch. As many have said in and outside of the club, Iwobi is looking to be our player of the season right now. 8/10

Reiss Nelson

This was Nelson’s best performance of the ones that he’s started in in the Premier League. Pedro Porro would hardly have known how to spell his own name during the first half, Nelson had him in that much of a spin. It’s so beautiful to watch a player who from minute one to the final seconds he’s on the pitch, constantly pick the ball up and run at his man with zero hesitation and get such joy from it. It doesn’t always work, but when he does best his man, he’s easily one of our greatest creative threats in the final third. Looks to be forming a nice relationship with Robinson down the left side too. 7.5/10

Raul Jimenez

Can’t his effort but he was ultimately left frustrated in North London. An early headed effort sailed over the bar but ultimately Raul’s best chance would come later in the first half when his close-range effort forced an unbelievable save from Fraser Forster, who was superb all day in the Tottenham goal. As the second half wore on, Raul cut a frustrated figure as decisions went against him and he got a bit leggy in difficult game and weather conditions. Not a poor performance by any means, but he’ll be gutted not to have got on the scoresheet here. 6.5/10

Substitutions

Tom Cairney (62’ for Lukic)

Honestly what a crazy cameo from the skipper. Really liked how he set himself up in the middle of the park and just played the perfect forward pass to help move on every Fulham attack. His finish for the equaliser was beyond sublime and gave me flashbacks to the Championship days under Slavisa Jokanovic when he’d score a beauty most weeks. Absolutely abysmal tackle to get sent off but we’ll just say he slipped and forgive him. Shame he’s out for three games now though. 7/10

Harry Wilson (62’ for Nelson)

My goodness me, similar to Iwobi, you can tell when a player’s confidence and form are sky high. Wilson looked unbelievable off the bench. Every counter-attack seemed to be a product of him refusing to go sideways or backwards, he just wanted the ball in Tottenham’s box as soon as he could. Some of the cross field passes to Iwobi were sensational in that second half. 8/10

Rodrigo Muniz (77’ for Jimenez)

Genuinely must’ve set a record for most headed duels won in a 20-ish minute cameo after coming on. Muniz absolutely bullied Tottenham’s defenders in the air and his ball control to bring others into play was superb. You feel one chance in the air in the box and we may have had a winner. Good to see his head hasn’t dropped after recent time spent on the bench. 7/10

Timothy Castagne and Ryan Sessegnon (87’ for Smith Rowe and Iwobi)

Both came on too late to be fairly assessed, but I thought Sess put his foot in everywhere to stop Spurs putting crosses in, and to see the reception he received at full time with his song being sung and the badge being patted genuinely nearly bought me to tears. Good on him.

Manager

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Positives and Negatives: Tottenham Hotspur 1-1 Fulham

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Jack Stroudley looks back at our point on the road in North London.

Fulham started December and a tricky run of fixtures with a solid point on the road away at Tottenham. It felt like one of those days until Tom Cairney slotted in the leveller with a little more than 20 minutes to go. That, followed by a resolute defensive performance to see the game out, ensured we’d return to SW6 with a deserved point, but what are the talking points from the game?

Positives

Bounced back well

Following last weekend’s result at home to Wolves, today felt like we needed to make amends going into a tough run and we did just that. Bossing Spurs for periods of the game and having chance after chance which on another day go in. Our transition was magnificent with quick, intricate and precise passing alongside slick and technical dribbling – we had Spurs on the ropes for large portions of the match.

When Brennan Johnson scored it felt like one of those days but we continued to stick to our guns and were rewarded by a scintillating strike. After the red card, we showed magnificent game management to run the clock down, frustrate Spurs and ultimately limit the number of chances they could create. The performance was a reminder of our quality and just how good we can be, last weekend was just a slight bump in the road.

Subs paid off

Now obviously it isn’t ideal that one of said subs got sent off (I’ll get onto that later) but he did also score! The remainder of the subs I thought were fantastic in North London. Harry Wilson was his usual dazzling self with darting run after darting run and caused a disjointed Spurs defence lots of problems. Rodrigo Muniz did exactly what he needed to (even more so when we went down to ten) and held the ball up well, drew fouls and slowed the game down.

Seeing Sess back for Fulham in the Premier League was quite a moment but he and Castagne both did their jobs when coming on late in the day (that moment at the end when Sess tapped the badge and clapped the fans could be hung in the Louvre). Fulham have smartly built a squad over the last few windows and we’re now reaping the rewards of that.

Negatives

Oh captain, my captain

Look, it was obviously accidental, you can see Tom Cairney visibly tell the referee he didn’t mean to do it, but ultimately he did and had to be sent off. A nasty challenge which as a result sees TC suspended leaving us with a big midfield dilemma for Brighton.

Sasa Lukic’s yellow card also means he will be suspended for Thursday nights fixture, add TC, Reed and the exile of Andreas Pereira and we are down to our bare bones. That being said Fulham do have quality in depth and players who can play numerous positions. As a result of this I can see Iwobi dropping into midfield alongside Berge and Smith-Rowe with Wilson getting a much deserved start. A bit of a dampener on an enjoyable trip down the Seven Sisters Road.

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Before The Whistle: Tottenham Hotspur v Fulham

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Hopefully we’ve dusted ourselves off, licked our Wolves-inflicted wounds and we’re ready to go again.

For all the doom and gloom of Sunday, pull off a surprise against Spurs and we’ll leapfrog Big Ange’s side. But after their 4-0 gubbing of free-falling Man City on the weekend, we know it’ll be a tough ask.

The question on everyone’s lips this week was: will Joachim Andersen be fit? Marco Silva answered that – and it wasn’t what we wanted to hear. The great Dane will be out for “some games”. Quite how many is anyone’s guess, but, as when Joa saw red earlier this campaign, Issa Diop has a chance to deputise and impress

Sasa Lukic came straight back into the XI last weekend with Sander Berge falling out the squad due to illness. It’ll be interesting to see how the midfield three looks come kick-off now the Norwegian has recovered.

This game sparks a tricky run of festive fixtures, so let’s hope on a day that many will be putting up their trees, the boys bag tree more points on the road. You Whites.

ℹ️ MATCH DETAILS

Kick-Off: Sunday, 1.30PM

Stadium: Tottenham Hotspur Stadium

Competition: Premier League

TV Channel (UK): None

🚦 LEAGUE FORM

Spurs: ❌ ✅ ❌ ✅ ❌ ✅

Fulham: ❌ ❌ ⬜ ✅ ✅ ❌

⚖️ MATCH PROBABILITY

Spurs: 54.6%

Draw: 21.8%

Fulham: 23.6%

🥊 MOST RECENT MATCHES

Mar 24: Fulham 3-0 Spurs

Oct 23: Spurs 2-0 Fulham

Aug 23: Fulham 1-1 Spurs

Jan 22: Fulham 0-1 Spurs

🎙 NEW PODCAST: Spursy or Fulhamish?

We have the last word on Wolves, before turning our attentions to this weekend’s visit to North London to face Spurs

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Positives and negatives: Fulham 3-0 Tottenham Hotspur | Fulhamish

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How, how are we still bloody 12th!? Admit it, you never saw this victory coming and as Ange Postecoglou avoids eye contact in his post-match pressers, Cam’s staring three points square in the face and his words for Marco Silva’s heroes are gushing. Have some of that, mate!

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