Tom Huddlestone adds to Tottenham’s injury problems

• Midfielder has damaged angle ligaments
• Spurs recall Livermore from Peterborough

Tom Huddlestone is relieved to have avoided serious injury, after being forced off in Tottenham’s home win over Everton on Sunday but the midfielder has suffered ankle ligament damage and he faces an anxious wait to learn whether he will be sidelined for a mere two weeks or a more demoralising five.

Huddlestone suffered the problem to his ankle and lower shin when he was challenged by John Heitinga as he shot at goal and he departed White Hart Lane on crutches and with his foot in a protective boot. He has since undergone scans which, happily for him, have revealed no break or fracture but there is ligament damage and Huddlestone must wait for the swelling to subside before he can consider a precise time frame for his comeback.

Harry Redknapp has problems elsewhere in midfield. Jermaine Jenas needs a groin operation while David Bentley and Aaron Lennon are out with injuries in the same area. Wilson Palacios, meanwhile, is on nine bookings; one more and he will be suspended for two games. This morning the club recalled Jake Livermore, a 20-year-old midfielder, from his loan at Peterborough.

A statement from Spurs said: “Scans have revealed that Tom Huddlestone has suffered damage to the ligaments in his right ankle. The England international sustained the injury during Sunday’s win over Everton and the player will now be seen by ankle specialists before deciding on the best course of rehabilitation.”

Tottenham HotspurPremier LeagueJames Callowguardian.co.uk

Tottenham give trial to young Spanish keeper Asier Riesgo

• Real Sociedad statement says Riesgo to train with Spurs
• Redknapp reluctant to look for cover for injured defenders

The Tottenham manager Harry Redknapp has handed a trial to Real Sociedad goalkeeper Asier Riesgo, the Spanish club have confirmed.

Riesgo, 26, was a Spain Under-21 international and spent last season on loan at Recreativo Huelva before returning to Segunda Division club Sociedad. Redknapp needs cover for first-choice goalkeeper Heurelho Gomes because Carlo Cudicini suffered injuries to his pelvis and wrists in a motorcycle accident and is expected to miss the rest of the campaign.

“Asier will train next week with Tottenham,” read a statement from Sociedad. Redknapp will be expected to make a decision on whether he wants to sign Riesgo but no fee has been agreed between the two clubs at the moment.

The Spurs manager is also in the market for a central midfielder to compete with Wilson Palacios, Jermaine Jenas and Tom Huddlestone for a starting place, with Brazilian prospect Sandro a target from Internacional. Redknapp is reluctant, however, to look for another centre-back despite injuries to Ledley King and Jonathan Woodgate.

“If Woody is fit and Ledley is fit we’re great there,” he said. “We’re in great shape if they’re fit but it’s a big if. When they played together last year they were a great partnership. But getting them out on the pitch at the same time has proved more difficult.”

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Arsenal expose Spurs’ defence and Keane’s pre-match bravado | Dominic Fifield

Despite Robbie Keane’s brave talk, Tottenham’s shambolic defending suggested they are a long way behind the big four

Suddenly, Robbie Keane’s bold claim that Tottenham Hotspur are “definitely on a par” with Arsenal seems rather misguided. A gut-wrenching 30-second period just before half-time, in which the hosts ignited and Spurs imploded, choked those aspirations and rendered the visitors a team shell shocked. Their game of catch-up thereafter always felt forlorn.

If Tottenham are vastly improved from the side that arrived here last term bottom of the table to pluck a staggering 4-4 draw from a helter-skelter derby, then certain flaws still clearly remain. Any argument that they had arrived here depleted by injury and suspension was countered by the reality that for 42 minutes they stifled the hosts’ midfield and induced sloppiness that had the home partisans chuntering up the aisles towards their half-time pies.

Then, mystifyingly, Spurs simply switched off as if their jobs were done. Ledley King may have appeared most culpable as Robin van Persie stabbed Bacary Sagna’s centre through Heurelho Gomes’ grasp at the near-post, the centre-half caught flat-footed as the Dutchman ghosted in on the inside, but why had Benoit Assou-Ekotto and Robbie Keane permitted Sagna and Cesc Fàbregas time at the key throw-in seconds earlier for the Frenchman to eke out the space to conjure the cross? Where, too, was Sebastien Bassong as the ball looped in on his side towards the near-post?

That inquest was still on-going, of course, when Spurs re-started the game, Wilson Palacios carelessly surrendering possession, via Van Persie’s touch, to Fabregas and then melting along with Tom Huddlestone and King as the Spaniard sprinted through the centre to side-foot a second beyond the exposed Gomes. The shambolic nature of the concession was hard to grasp, though this was rapidly turning into one of those tormented Tottenham days.

Panic had long since set in. The third on the hour-mark confirmed as much. Assou-Ekotto’s foul on Fabregas prompted players on both sides to stop with Mark Clattenburg bellowing to play on. Sagna did just that though, even so, his low centre should have been collected by either Gomes or King only for fragility to flare again. Amid the creaking limbs and muddled minds in the centre, the ball dribbled cruelly through goalkeeper and centre-half for Van Persie to tap in.

Doubts will be raised now, surely, over whether King can be expected to excel in games of this magnitude with little to no training behind him given his chronic knee problems. Yet he was not alone in being error-prone and ponderous here while Jonathan Woodgate and Michael Dawson – “themselves hampered by recent injuries” – watched on from the bench.

Spurs have now lost to Manchester United, Chelsea and Arsenal this season, conceding three times to each having been exposed ruthlessly as a work in progress at the back. Their victory over Liverpool on the opening day, which hinted at an imminent challenge to the top four, is starting to look like the exception that proves the rule. This side, on this display, does not appear ready.

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