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Wigan 0 – 3 Tottenham

Tottenham's want-away frontman Roman Pavlyuchenko climbed off the bench to secure a hard-fought win over Wigan and lift his side back into fourth spot. The Russian, reportedly denied a move back to his homeland only this week, scored two in 10 minutes. The first was a neat finish from Luka Modric's pass and his second came in stoppage time from the angle. It added to Jermain Defoe's first-half tap-in, though he looked offside, as relegation-threatened Wigan fell away. The Latics remain just two points off the drop zone as a result of the defeat, and on this showing will need a turnaround in both form and fortune if they are to retain their top-flight status. For Tottenham, though, this was a welcome three points - only their second win of 2010 - and they had Pavlyuchenko's cameo to thank for settling the match after a series a missed opportunities earlier in the encounter. It will be interesting to see whether Harry Redknapp now gives the Russian a run in the side in place of Peter Crouch, who is without a goal in seven matches. But either way, it would appear that Pavlyuchenko has the full support of the Tottenham fans, who cheered his every touch from the terraces. Few could argue with the result, earned by the visitors on a pitch barely worthy of the name, the recent wet weather only serving to further tear at the uneven surface. That helped contribute to a distinct lack of quality passing and movement for much of the game, though with neither side going through their best form of the season perhaps the pitch could not be blamed entirely. As it was, the first half was made memorable almost solely for Defoe's controversial opener. The striker was clearly a yard offside when he tapped in Bale's pin-point centre, but the flag stayed down and the goal stood. It overshadowed a fine move, built on an excellent advantage played by referee Alan Wiley after a foul on David Bentley, with Crouch and Niko Kranjcar combining to feed Bale's excellent run down the left. And despite the controversial nature of the strike, it was probably just what the visitors had deserved after shading the opening 45 minutes. Still, Wigan had the odd half-chance, and Hugo Rodallega brought a fingertip save out of Heurelho Gomes from 20 yards out after exchanging passes with Marcelo Moreno on the edge of the penalty area. There were also arguments that Defoe was perhaps lucky to still be on the field to notch the opener after a frustrated lunge at Gary Caldwell 20 minutes in. Certainly, on second view, it looked a very nasty challenge. He escaped punishment, though, and was by far Tottenham's biggest threat until his substitution 73 minutes in. Twice he stung the palms of home keeper Chris Kirkland in the second half, first after collecting Kranjcar's pass, stepping around Scharner and firing goalwards from 18 yards, and then with a turn and left-footed shot. At the other end, the introduction of Victor Moses reinvigorated Wigan, the signing from Crystal Palace forcing a comfortable save from range before playing his part in a move that ended with Charles N'Zogbia curling high and wide. But the best chances were still falling to Spurs, who began to control proceedings in the closing stages. Crouch, set clear on goal by substitute Modric, wasted an excellent chance as his tame effort was saved by the sprawling Kirkland one-on-one, while only the woodwork kept Modric's sublime volley from extending Spurs' advantage. As it was it fell to Pavlyuchenko, brought on for Defoe, to add the finishing touches to the visitors' build-up play. His first was a fine clipped finish after fine work from the excellent Modric, and the second an opportunist strike from near the byline after Emmerson Boyce had failed to clear from his original saved header. Those goals proved enough to add to Wigan's relegation fears, and while the 3-0 result did not touch Tottenham's 9-1 home win over the Latics of earlier in the season, the 12-goal winning advantage did mark the biggest margin over two matches in Premier League history. Source: BBC

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DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.