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Chelsea F.C.–Tottenham Hotspur F.C. rivalry

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Rivalry between two English football clubs
Chelsea v Tottenham Hotspur
Chelsea and Tottenham Hotspur contesting the2015 Football League Cup final.
LocationLondon
Teams
First meeting18 December 1909
First Division
Chelsea 2–1 Tottenham Hotspur
Latest meeting1 November 2025
Premier League
Tottenham Hotspur 0–1 Chelsea
Next meeting17 May 2026
Premier League
Chelsea v Tottenham Hotspur
StadiumsStamford Bridge (Chelsea)
Tottenham Hotspur Stadium (Tottenham Hotspur)
Statistics
Meetings total180
Most winsChelsea (82)
Top scorerJimmy Floyd Hasselbaink (12)[1]
All-time seriesChelsea: 82
Drawn: 43
Tottenham Hotspur: 55
Largest victoryTottenham Hotspur 5–0 Chelsea
First Division
(9 October 1920)
Tottenham Hotspur 1–6Chelsea
FA Premier League
(6 December 1997)
Chelsea F.C.–Tottenham Hotspur F.C. rivalry is located in Greater London
Chelsea
Chelsea
Tottenham Hotspur
Tottenham Hotspur

TheChelsea F.C.–Tottenham Hotspur F.C. rivalry is a rivalry between London-based professionalassociation football clubsChelsea andTottenham Hotspur. Chelsea play their home games atStamford Bridge, while Tottenham Hotspur play their home games at theTottenham Hotspur Stadium. As of November 2025[update], 180 games have been played between the two teams, 82 of which were won by Chelsea and 55 by Spurs.

Although both teams have played against each other since the early 20th century, the rivalry between Chelsea and Tottenham did not begin until the1967 FA Cup final, the first all-London FA Cup final. Chelsea fans consider Tottenham to be one of their rivals alongsideArsenal,Fulham andLeeds United, while Tottenham fans consider their rivalry with Chelsea to be secondary to that withArsenal. Many encounters between the two teams have been highly intense, notable matches played between them include the 'Battle of the Bridge' in 2016.

Background

[edit]

While Chelsea and Tottenham Hotspur never considered each other primary rivals, there has always been strong needle between the fans dating back to the1967 FA Cup final. Matches between the two teams would often attract large attendances and would sometimes end up inviolent clashes between supporters.

A 2012 survey has shown that Chelsea fans consider Tottenham to be their main rival, aboveArsenal andManchester United. In the same survey, it is shown that Tottenham fans still consider Chelsea their second rival, below Arsenal.[2] The 2004 filmThe Football Factory depicted scenes of the two teams' fans violently clashing.[3]

History

[edit]

Early matches

[edit]

The first league meeting between the two teams took place on 18 December 1909 atStamford Bridge as Tottenham only joined the Football League in 1908 and won promotion to theFootball League First Division in 1909. The match was won by Chelsea 2–1.[4] Both teams however struggled in the1909–10 season, and they met again atWhite Hart Lane on 30 April 1910 in the final match of season, with both fighting for survival in Division One. Spurs beat Chelsea 2–1, sending Chelsea down, with the winning goal scored by former Chelsea playerPercy Humphreys.[5]

Start of rivalry

[edit]

The rivalry between the two teams dates back to the1967 FA Cup final, which was the competition's first final to be contested between two teams from London, and is thus often dubbed the "Cockney Cup Final". Tottenham won the game 2–1 with over 100,000 people in attendance.[6]

The rivalry was further ignited during the1974–75 season, one in which Tottenham and Chelsea fought out a bitter battle against relegation from the First Division. Before the match, Tottenham were in the relegation zone and Chelsea were one point ahead of them. The tension of the match led to fans invading and fighting on the pitch before the game started.[7] After a delayed start, Tottenham won the game 2–0.[8] Chelsea failed to win either of their remaining two games and were ultimately relegated from the First Division with Tottenham staying up via a solitary point.[9]

1990–2015

[edit]

Chelsea became dominant in the meetings with Tottenham in the 1990s; starting from September 1990 they were unbeaten by their rivals for over a decade, including a 6–1 win at White Hart Lane in the 1997–98 season.[10] On 5 November 2006, Tottenham beat Chelsea 2–1 at White Hart Lane, ending a 16-year period without victory against the Blues in the league.[11] Spurs did, however, beat Chelsea in 2002 during a 5–1 win in the second leg of the league cup after a 2–1 defeat at Stamford Bridge, resulting in an aggregate score of 6–3.[12]

On 11 March 2007, Chelsea and Tottenham met in the FA Cup quarter-finals, with Chelsea coming to 3–3 down from 1–3 and earning a replay. The next day, hooligans of Tottenham and Chelsea clashed in the streets of London, a fight in which 10 fans were knifed.[13] Chelsea eventually won the replay by 2–1, progressing in the semi-finals. In the next season, the two sides met in the2008 Football League Cup final, with Tottenham winning the trophy after a 2–1 victory.[14]

Prior to signing for Chelsea in 2013,Willian had attracted interest from Tottenham. He completed a medical at Tottenham before meeting with Chelsea, which caused confusion as to which club he would sign for. Willian claims Chelsea was his first preference and he would have only signed with Tottenham if the deal with Chelsea fell through.[15][16] It is alleged that duringRoman Abramovich's tenure as Chelsea owner, he refused to do any business with Tottenham.[17]

On 1 March 2015, Chelsea won the2015 Football League Cup final 2–0 against Tottenham, with goals provided byJohn Terry andDiego Costa. Chelsea fans made headlines for racist and anti-Semitic chants onthe Underground after the match.[18] After this final, Chelsea surpassed Tottenham in number of trophies won.[citation needed]

2016: 'Battle of the Bridge'

[edit]
Scuffling between players at the match between Chelsea and Spurs dubbed the 'Battle of Stamford Bridge' on 2 May 2016.

In the2015–16 season, Tottenham's league performance improved under their managerMauricio Pochettino, and they were a contender for the title. Chelsea on the other hand had theirworst season in 20 years which saw their managerJosé Mourinho sacked after a bad start to the season.[19] Tottenham headed into the match against Chelsea at Stamford Bridge on 2 May 2016, a match that Tottenham needed to win to have a chance at winning the league. The encounter proved to be an ill-tempered match, which would later be called the 'Battle of Stamford Bridge' or 'Battle of the Bridge'.[19][20][21]

Tottenham took the lead with two goals scored byHarry Kane andSon Heung-min. In the second half,Gary Cahill andEden Hazard scored the two goals for Chelsea. It ended as a 2–2 draw which automatically gaveLeicester City their first ever Premier League title.[22][23] This was arguably the closest Tottenham had come to winning the league since their last title in 1961 and since their last third-place finish in 1990. The match saw many altercations between players and benches on and off the field, especially after Hazard scored the equalising and final goal.[24]Mark Clattenburg, who refereed the game, subsequently stated that he could have "sent three players off from Tottenham" but chose instead to allow them to play on, giving the team a total of nineyellow cards (a Premier League record for any team), so as to allow them to "self destruct" and have no one else to blame but themselves.[25][26] There were also three yellow cards for Chelsea, andMousa Dembélé received a six-match suspension for violent conduct.[27] As a result, both clubs had to face three FA charges and they were fined for failing to control their players.[28]

2017–present

[edit]
Chelsea and Tottenham players before the FA Cup semi-final in 2017.

On 4 January 2017, Tottenham beat Chelsea 2–0 at White Hart Lane, ending Chelsea's record 13-game winning streak in the Premier League.[29] It brought Tottenham to within five points of Chelsea, who were leading the Premier League. Tottenham and Chelsea then went on to be the two title rivals in what was a two-horse race for the title, in which Chelsea eventually prevailed with 93 points to Tottenham's 86 points.[30] Tottenham also lost to Chelsea in the FA Cupsemi-final in the same season.[31]

On 20 August 2017, Tottenham and Chelsea met early in the2017–18 Premier League season, with Tottenham playing their first-ever home Premier League match atWembley Stadium. Chelsea won the match 2–1 with two goals scored byMarcos Alonso, ending Tottenham's 19-game home Premier League unbeaten run.[32] In the same season on 1 April 2018, Tottenham won away to Chelsea 3–1, with goals fromDele Alli andChristian Eriksen. This was Tottenham's first win in 28 years at Stamford Bridge.[33]

On 22 December 2019, Chelsea played their first match at Tottenham'snew stadium.[34] The match, which Chelsea won 2–0 with a brace by Willian, received wide media coverage due to alleged racist behaviour by Tottenham fans, aimed at Chelsea's defenderAntonio Rüdiger.[35][36][37] A Chelsea supporter was also arrested for alleged racist abuse against Spurs playerSon Heung-min, who was sent off for kicking Rüdiger after he fouled Son.[38] It led to a call for government action on racism in football.[39] However, no evidence of racist abuse against Rüdiger was found after a police investigation.[40]

On 5 January 2022, Chelsea took on Tottenham in theLeague Cup semi-final first leg at Stamford Bridge, and won the match 2–0.[41] A week later, Chelsea again beat Tottenham 1–0 in the second leg, booking a spot at Wembley for thefinal.[42] On 23 January, Chelsea faced Tottenham again in a 2–0 win in the Premier League.[43] The win meant that Chelsea had beaten Tottenham three times in the space of a month—the last Premier League team to achieve this feat wasAston Villa againstBlackburn Rovers in January 2010.[44]

A Premier League match at Stamford Bridge on 14 August 2022 was notable for having both Chelsea's managerThomas Tuchel and Spurs managerAntonio Conte, who previously managed Chelsea, sent off. This followed multiple altercations between them on the touchline, initially when Conte celebrated in front of Tuchel following a Spurs equaliser, and later when both managers clashed whilst shaking hands after the final whistle.[45] The match resulted in a 2–2 draw following a 96th minute equaliser from Spurs striker Kane.[46]

The Premier League clash between the two teams that took place on 6 November 2023 has been described as "chaotic",[47][48] "madness",[49] and one of the "wildest", "most frenetic and mesmeric" games in Premier League history.[50][51] The match saw the return of former Tottenham manager Pochettino to Tottenham Stadium as manager of Chelsea, and there were five disallowed goals (four in one half), six yellow cards (Tottenham's managerAnge Postecoglou received one), two Tottenham players sent off, and 11 majorVAR checks, which added 21 minutes to the game in stoppage time.[47][49] It ended in 4–1 home defeat for Tottenham withNicolas Jackson scoring a hat-trick, but the home team and manager Postecoglou still received a standing ovation from their fans at the end.[49]

Players who have played for or managed both teams

[edit]

Below are the players and managers who played for or managed both clubs.[52][53][54]

Chelsea then Tottenham

[edit]
  • EnglandTed Birnie(as player: Chelsea 1906–1909; Tottenham 1910)
  • EnglandPercy Humphreys(as player: Chelsea 1907–1909; Tottenham 1909–1911)
  • EnglandBilly Brawn(as player: Chelsea 1907–1911; Tottenham 1918)
  • EnglandBill Cartwright(as player: Chelsea 1908–1912; Tottenham 1913)
  • EnglandBuchanan Sharp(as player: Chelsea 1919–1923; Tottenham 1923–1925)
  • EnglandHarry Wilding(as player: Chelsea 1919–1928; Tottenham 1928)
  • EnglandJimmy Armstrong(as player: Chelsea 1922–1925; Tottenham 1927–1929)
  • EnglandBobby Smith(as player: Chelsea 1950–1955; Tottenham 1955–1964)
  • EnglandLes Allen(as player: Chelsea 1954–1959; Tottenham 1959–1965)
  • EnglandJimmy Greaves(as player: Chelsea 1957–1961; Tottenham 1961–1970)
  • EnglandTerry Venables(as player: Chelsea 1960–1966; Tottenham 1966–1969; as manager: Tottenham 1987–1991)
  • ScotlandGeorge Graham(as player: Chelsea 1964–1966; as manager: Tottenham 1998–2001)
  • ScotlandGordon Durie(as player: Chelsea 1986–1991; Tottenham 1991–1993)
  • EnglandClive Wilson(as player: Chelsea 1987–1990; Tottenham 1995–1999)
  • EnglandJason Cundy(as player: Chelsea 1988–1992; Tottenham 1992–1996)
  • EnglandDave Beasant(as player: Chelsea 1989–1993; Tottenham 2001)
  • EnglandClive Allen(as player: Chelsea 1991–1992; as manager: Tottenham 2007, 2008)
  • NorwayFrode Grodås(as player: Chelsea 1996–1998; Tottenham 1998)
  • UruguayGus Poyet(as player: Chelsea 1997–2001; Tottenham 2001–2004)
  • ItalyCarlo Cudicini(as player: Chelsea 1999–2009; Tottenham 2009–2012)
  • IcelandEiður Guðjohnsen(as player: Chelsea 2000–2006; Tottenham 2010)
  • FranceWilliam Gallas(as player: Chelsea 2001–2006; Tottenham 2010–2013)
  • EnglandScott Parker(as player: Chelsea 2004–2005; Tottenham 2011–2013)
  • PortugalJosé Mourinho(as manager: Chelsea 2004–2007, 2013–2015; Tottenham 2019–2021)
  • PortugalAndré Villas-Boas(as manager: Chelsea 2011–2012; Tottenham 2012–2013)
  • ItalyAntonio Conte(as manager: Chelsea 2016–2018; Tottenham 2022–2023)
  • GermanyTimo Werner(as player: Chelsea 2020–2022; Tottenham 2024–2025)
  • EnglandDominic Solanke(as player: Chelsea 2014–2017; Tottenham 2024–present)

Tottenham then Chelsea

[edit]
  • EnglandDavid Copeland(as player: Tottenham 1899–1905; Chelsea 1905–1906)
  • EnglandJack Kirwan(as player: Tottenham 1899–1905; Chelsea 1905–1908)
  • EnglandVivian Woodward(as player: Tottenham 1901–1909; Chelsea 1909–1915)
  • EnglandSid Castle(as player: Tottenham 1919–1920; Chelsea 1923–1924)
  • EnglandDick Foss(as player: Tottenham 1932–1933; Chelsea 1936–1948)
  • EnglandJohn Harris(as player: Tottenham 1939; Chelsea 1945–1956)
  • EnglandSid Tickridge(as player: Tottenham 1946–1951; Chelsea 1951–1952)
  • EnglandTommy Harmer(as player: Tottenham 1951–1960; Chelsea 1962–1963)
  • EnglandJohnny Brooks(as player: Tottenham 1953–1959; Chelsea 1959–1961)
  • Northern IrelandDanny Blanchflower(as player: Tottenham 1954–1965; as manager: Chelsea 1978–1979)
  • EnglandKeith Weller(as player: Tottenham 1964–1967; Chelsea 1970–1971)
  • EnglandGlenn Hoddle(as player: Tottenham 1975–1987; Chelsea 1993–1995; as manager: Chelsea 1993–1996; Tottenham 2001–2003)
  • EnglandColin Lee(as player: Tottenham 1977–1980; Chelsea 1980–1987)
  • EnglandMicky Hazard(as player: Tottenham 1978–1985; Chelsea 1985–1990)
  • EnglandMark Falco(as player: Tottenham 1978–1986; Chelsea 1982)
  • EnglandGraham Roberts(as player: Tottenham 1980–1986; Chelsea 1988–1990)
  • ArgentinaMauricio Pochettino(as manager: Tottenham 2014–2019; Chelsea 2023–2024)

Head-to-head record

[edit]
As of 1 November 2025[55]
CompetitionMatchesChelsea winsDrawsTottenham wins
League155693848
FA Cup12624
League Cup13733
Total180824355

Honours

[edit]
As of 13 July 2025[56][57]
International competitionsChelseaTottenham Hotspur
UEFA Champions League20
UEFA Cup / UEFA Europa League23
UEFA Cup Winners' Cup21
UEFA Conference League10
UEFA Super Cup20
FIFA Club World Cup20
National competitionsChelseaTottenham Hotspur
First Division /Premier League62
FA Cup88
League Cup54
FA Community Shield47
Total3425

Highest attendances

[edit]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Nair, Varun (21 November 2018)."Top 7 goalscorers in the Tottenham v Chelsea London derby".sportskeeda.com. Retrieved24 October 2020.
  2. ^"Football Rivalries: The Survey".The Daisy Cutter. 14 September 2012. Retrieved14 September 2012.
  3. ^Kelso, Paul (4 May 2004)."Just when football needed it least, films revive the spectre of hooligan gangs".The Guardian. Retrieved16 March 2024.
  4. ^"Chelsea v Tottenham Hotspur, 18 December 1909".11v11.com. Retrieved28 November 2020.
  5. ^Welch, Julie (7 September 2015). "Chapter 5: The Human Chain of Lightning".The Biography of Tottenham Hotspur. Vision Sports Publishing.ISBN 9781909534506.
  6. ^Davies, Matt (20 May 2020)."'The Cockney Cup Final' – When Tottenham and Chelsea's fierce rivalry began".Evening Standard. Retrieved28 November 2020.
  7. ^Hackett, Robin (22 December 2011)."Spurs v Chelsea crackers".ESPN. Retrieved28 November 2020.
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  11. ^McCarra, Kevin (6 November 2006)."Terry sees red as Lennon ends Tottenham's 16-year hoodoo".The Guardian. Retrieved28 November 2020.
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  18. ^"Footage of Chelsea fans singing 'racist' songs emerges".ITV News. 6 March 2015. Retrieved22 January 2021.
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  22. ^Lewis, Aimee (2 May 2016)."Chelsea 2–2 Tottenham Hotspur".BBC Sport. Retrieved27 November 2016.
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  26. ^"Mark Clattenburg took a 'gamble too far' - Dermot Gallagher".BBC Sport. 5 December 2017. Retrieved17 October 2025.
  27. ^"Mousa Dembele: Tottenham midfielder gets six-game ban for violent conduct".BBC Sport. 6 May 2016. Retrieved28 November 2020.
  28. ^Wilson, Jeremy (16 May 2016)."Chelsea and Tottenham fined total of £600,000 by FA after Stamford Bridge chaos".The Telegraph. Retrieved21 August 2017.
  29. ^McNulty, Phil (4 January 2017)."Tottenham Hotspur 2–0 Chelsea".BBC Sport. Retrieved29 May 2018.
  30. ^"2016–17 Premier League table". Soccerway. Retrieved29 May 2018.
  31. ^McNulty, Phil (22 April 2017)."Chelsea 4–2 Tottenham Hotspur".BBC Sport. Retrieved29 May 2018.
  32. ^McNulty, Phil (20 August 2017)."Tottenham Hotspur 1–2 Chelsea".BBC Sport. Retrieved21 August 2017.
  33. ^Rosser, Jack (1 April 2018)."Mauricio Pochettino praises 'fighter' Dele Alli as Tottenham star states England case with Chelsea brace".Evening Standard. Retrieved28 November 2020.
  34. ^"Match report: Tottenham 0 Chelsea 2". Chelsea F.C. 22 December 2019. Retrieved23 December 2019.
  35. ^McNulty, Phil (22 December 2019)."Tottenham Hotspur 0–2 Chelsea".BBC Sport. Retrieved23 December 2019.
  36. ^"Chelsea win at Tottenham marred as Rudiger suffers racist abuse".ESPN. 22 December 2019. Retrieved23 December 2019.
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  38. ^Steinberg, Jacob (23 December 2019)."Chelsea supporter arrested for allegedly racially abusing Son Heung-min".The Guardian. Retrieved23 December 2019.
  39. ^"Government prepared to take 'further steps' over racism in football".BBC Sport. 23 December 2019. Retrieved24 December 2019.
  40. ^Aarons, Ed (6 January 2020)."Investigation finds 'no evidence' of alleged racism against Chelsea's Rüdiger".The Guardian. Retrieved6 January 2020.
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  42. ^McNulty, Phil (12 January 2022)."Carabao Cup semi-final second leg: Tottenham Hotspur 0–1 Chelsea (0–3 agg)".BBC Sport. Retrieved18 March 2022.
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