Leicester City on Sunday humbled Tottenham Hotspur in the Premier League title challenge.
City inflicted 2-0 away win over high flying Jose Mourinho’s men.
Nigeria’s Wilfred Ndidi was handed a starting role in the EPL encounter, after being out of action since September when he suffered a groin injury against Burnley.
Jamie Vardy’s penalty and a Toby Alderweireld own goal moved the Foxes to within four points of leaders Liverpool as Spurs for once could not rely on Harry Kane and Son Heung-min to dig them out of trouble.
Tottenham were top of the table until a last-minute winner for Liverpool gave the champions a 2-1 win on Wednesday but back-to-back defeats could see them drop out of the top four come the end of the weekend should Manchester United or Chelsea win their games in hand.
Liverpool boss Jurgen Klopp described Spurs as a “counter-attacking monster” but their deficiencies when not allowed the ability to break were exposed by Leicester’s clever game plan. The Foxes did not leave themselves exposed and posed the greater threat in transition.
A cagey first-half of precious few chances saw James Maddison’s long-range shot well held by Hugo Lloris, while Kane headed over Son’s corner.
But Tottenham were undone by a moment of madness by Serge Aurier with virtually the last action of the opening period when he barged into Wesley Fofana just inside the area.
A VAR review was needed before referee Craig Pawson pointed to the spot and Vardy drilled home his sixth spot-kick of the season to give Brendan Rodgers’s men the lead.
Mourinho saw enough in the first 45 minutes to throw on Gareth Bale for the second-half for his first Premier League minutes in six games.
But in keeping with the Welshman’s second spell in North London since rejoining on loan from Real Madrid, Bale struggled to make any sort of impact.
Only a few millimetres denied Leicester a second in a bright start to the second-half for the visitors as Maddison latched onto a ball over the top from James Justin and fired beyond Lloris, only for a VAR review to rule the goal out for offside.
Mourinho had sacrificed Tanguy Ndombele to bring on Bale and then lost his other midfield creator, Giovani Lo Celso, to a hamstring injury.
Lucas Moura replaced the Argentine to form a front four alongside Kane, Son and Bale, but Spurs became disjointed by the changes and were easily picked off by the Leicester counter-attack.