11 Games Without a Win: Tottenham's Survival Battle Hits Rock Bottom After Palace Defeat

 The 2025/26 season has been nothing short of a nightmare for Tottenham Hotspur fans. What started with hopes of building on previous campaigns has descended into a full-blown crisis, with the club teetering on the edge of relegation from the Premier League for the first time in modern history.


Tottenham's latest setback came on March 5, 2026, in a humiliating 1-3 home defeat to Crystal Palace at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium. Spurs actually took the lead in the 34th minute through Dominic Solanke, who finished off a fine cross from Archie Gray. For a brief moment, it seemed like things might turn around under new manager Igor Tudor (who replaced Thomas Frank earlier in the year amid mounting pressure).

But the game imploded spectacularly. Defender Micky van de Ven received a straight red card around the 38th minute for denying a goalscoring opportunity by pulling down Ismaila Sarr in the box. Sarr converted the resulting penalty to level the score at 1-1. Crystal Palace then capitalized ruthlessly in first-half stoppage time: Jørgen Strand Larsen scored in the 45+1' minute, followed by Sarr grabbing his second (a brace) in the 45+7' to make it 3-1. The second half was damage limitation, but the damage was already done.

This loss extended Tottenham's dismal run to 11 consecutive Premier League games without a win (a club record in the PL era, with the last such streak dating back decades). In 2026 alone, they've gone winless across their league matches (multiple draws and now several heavy losses). The defeat was their fifth in a row and highlighted ongoing issues: defensive fragility (especially when reduced to 10 men), inability to hold leads, and a lack of cohesion under Tudor despite the managerial change.

As of early March 2026, Tottenham sit 16th in the Premier League table after 29 matches, with 7 wins, 8 draws, and 14 losses (29 points, goal difference -5 or similar). They're just one point above the relegation zone, making survival a real battle with only a handful of games left. Recent results show a pattern of struggles against both top and mid-table sides, including heavy losses to Arsenal and others

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