De Zerbi’s Spurs Struggles Deepen After Sunderland Defeat

A Disappointing Start for Roberto De Zerbi

Roberto De Zerbi’s first game as the manager of Tottenham ended in a disappointing defeat after they were beaten 1-0 by Sunderland at the Stadium of Light. The Italian took over from Igor Tudor, who left north London last month, and Spurs entered the match in the Premier League relegation zone following West Ham’s victory over Wolves on Friday.

The first half was an open affair with both teams creating chances. Tottenham had a penalty decision overturned in the 21st minute, and players such as Brian Brobbey, Richarlison, and Dominic Solanke came close to scoring. However, Sunderland took the lead 11 minutes into the second half through Nordi Mukiele’s deflected strike, which proved to be enough for Regis Le Bris’ side to secure back-to-back league wins.

This loss leaves Tottenham two points behind the drop zone with six games remaining, still searching for their first Premier League win of 2026.

Tactical Changes and New Challenges

De Zerbi made several changes to his starting lineup, including giving a start to goalkeeper Antonin Kinsky, who had not played since his 17-minute nightmare in the Champions League defeat to Atletico Madrid last month. This was one of five changes from Spurs’ last match against Nottingham Forest, but the former Brighton boss was unable to see immediate improvement.

Pedro Porro’s early effort was saved by Robin Roefs, and Spurs threatened again when Randal Kolo Muani played Richarlison in, but the forward’s meek shot was held by the Sunderland goalkeeper. On the other end, Cristian Romero made an important intervention from a Sunderland attack, and Granit Xhaka’s inswinging delivery was tipped over the crossbar by Kinsky from the resulting corner.

Kinsky made a brave stop to deny Brobbey after he had been found by Enzo Le Fee, and the Netherlands striker nodded over from his next opportunity. Spurs were awarded a penalty in the 21st minute when Kolo Muani was ruled to have been fouled in the area, but following a VAR consultation, referee Rob Jones overturned his original decision as Omar Alderete clearly won the ball.

A Series of Missed Opportunities

The chances continued to come as Solanke’s attempt was taken by Roefs before Mukiele nodded wide from a Le Fee free-kick. Xhaka’s vicious strike from the edge of the area whistled past the post. In first-half stoppage time, Brobbey – who Spurs felt should have seen red instead of a yellow for catching Porro with an elbow – was denied again by a solid save from Kinsky. Roefs made a crucial stop at the opposite end from Solanke.

Luke O’Nien made an important intervention to deny Richarlison early in the second half, and the Spurs forward then had a low effort held by Roefs. But Sunderland opened the scoring in the 61st minute when Mukiele weaved from the right flank towards the outside of the box and his strike deflected off Micky van de Ven’s foot, leaving the wrong-footed Kinsky with no chance.

Intense Moments and Substitutions

De Zerbi made a triple substitution with Mathys Tel, Joao Palhinha, and Pape Matar Sarr introduced just before a worrying moment saw Romero and Kinsky collide after the former appeared to be pushed by Brobbey. Following a lengthy stoppage, the Spurs goalkeeper had a bandage wrapped around his head and was able to continue, but a tearful Romero was replaced by Kevin Danso.

Spurs had 11 minutes of added time to salvage a point, but despite Porro being denied twice by Roefs – having both a free-kick and a vicious strike pushed over the bar – Spurs could not avoid a 16th league loss.

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