Premier League: Tuesday night’s action – in pictures

All the best moments from Tuesday night’s games as the Premier League’s top four all took to the field

Steven Bloor

Chelsea’s André Villas-Boas hails John Terry’s display at Tottenham

• ‘Terry has grown in terms of performance,’ says manager
• Applauds captain for goalline clearance in added-time

André Villas-Boas hailed John Terry’s performance in Chelsea’s 1-1 draw against Tottenham Hotspur that included an added-time goalline clearance in his first game since the Crown Prosecution Service decided he has a case to answer for his alleged racial abuse of Anton Ferdinand.

Terry was constantly booed and had abusive chants directed at him during the match. After Daniel Sturridge’s 23rd-minute goal had cancelled out Emmanuel Adebayor’s earlier one, the Chelsea captain walked to the travelling fans at the end to offer thanks for their support, handing his shirt to a fan.

Villas-Boas claimed that Terry’s play has got better since the incident with Ferdinand which occurred on 23 October during Chelsea’s visit to Queens Park Rangers. The Portuguese said: “Since the situation he has improved. He has grown in terms of performance. He’s a reference point for this team. It shows his character and strength and personality – his effort for the collective is extraordinary.”

Asked how Terry’s mood had been since Wednesday when the CPS decided to press charges and if he had spoken with the 31-year-old, Villas-Boas said: “We speak all the time. What happened, his level of performance increased. His commitment and concentration increased as well. His performances have increased since the incident happened. His commitment, quality and talent are never in doubt. He’s completely focused to the cause of this football club.”

Adebayor appeared to have won the match for Spurs at the end but Terry raced back to clear the ball. “He anticipated the situation at the end,” Villas-Boas said of his captain’s intervention before praising his side’s display. “It was a big opportunity for Tottenham but we had massive opportunities before from the ball that hit the bar [by Didier Drogba], from the situations we had around their penalty box. Our second half was brilliant. Tottenham, on this run in this morale, are extremely difficult. For us to impose ourselves as we did is extremely gratifying.”

Chelsea are now 11 points behind Manchester City, the leaders. But Villas-Boas believes his club are still in the title race. “I think so. If we take the six points from the home fixtures, against Fulham [on Boxing Day] – a team that has revolted from this last result against United, and another emotional derby – and Aston Villa [on New Year's Eve], as we expect, we are pretty much in it.

“We came to Tottenham, a side who are title challengers, so it’s a good point to get. We’ve been in worse situations before and recovered to seven points. I’m sure we can shorten the distance.”

Villas-Boas called the draw a “moral victory” and added: “For me, it’s a day when the result really doesn’t matter. The performance was outstanding. Whatever the result, if a ball had gone into our net in the last minute, I would have left satisfied. It was an outstanding performance. We didn’t lose two points. Coming here with Tottenham with the form they’re showing in the league, to get a point is excellent. If you had said at the beginning of December that we’d go through these games with two wins and two draws, I’d have taken it running into the home fixtures.

“In terms of the title challenge, it keeps it alive. Today showed our character, personality, excellent levels of resilience and adaptation to circumstances. Our passing game exploded today to wonderful levels: it’s fantastic to watch this team play when they find each other in possession as they did and create opportunities. It’s remarkable. Outstanding. A fair result, it should have been a Chelsea win.”

While he will be without Branislav Ivanovic and John Obi Mikel when Fulham visit due to hamstring problems picked up in the game, Tottenham also lost Younès Kaboul and Rafael van der Vaart to the same injury with Harry Redknapp saying that the latter will miss the remainder of the festive programme.

Regarding his side’s champions aspirations the Spurs manager said: “Man City and United are red hot favourites, as they were at the start. Look at their results [on Wednesday]: United winning 5-0 at Fulham was incredible. City keep doing it [3-0 against Stoke City]. They’d have the squad for sure, the favourites. But United won’t be far behind them. But there’s another half of the season to go. Anything could happen, still. It’s very very close.

“For us to have 35 points at this stage after losing the first two games is incredible. It’s going to be tight. The top four will be very close.”

ChelseaTottenham HotspurJohn TerryPremier League 2011-12Premier LeagueJamie Jacksonguardian.co.uk

Never-say-die John Terry ignores brickbats and does what he does best

John Terry gave a good impression of the heroic captain as he left his off-field troubles behind him at White Hart Lane

The scene at the end was the perfectcliché of the never-say-die, heroic captain. One point in the bag and another seemingly made, John Terry sauntered towards the band of Blues, peeled off his shirt and waded bare-chested over the advertising hoardings to hand his Chelsea jersey to one of his disciples. As he walked away, he banged his fist on his heart.

In Planet Terry, the vignette represented how fond he is of a performance that reeks of his own determination to tackle adversity head on. But the problem with Planet Terry is that there is no place for the kind of subtlety that would better suit his current circumstances. As Liverpool discovered with their T-shirt idea, the rest of the world does not always appreciate bravado in times of controversy.

Mind you, keeping his head down has never been part of his approach during an eventful 13-year career. And besides, do the boos hurt? Do the chants cut deep? Does the microscope burn? It has never appeared that way, and few players are as efficient at erecting a force field that such stuff bounces off. What wounds John Terry is losing, conceding goals, straining to be half the player he was in his pomp.

Brickbats have seldom seemed to bother him half as much as his detractors would like. And there were many, here at White Hart Lane, many and varied.

Not for the first time Terry found himself under special scrutiny, with his on-pitch performance analysed for signs of any stress emanating from the unnattractive headlines he currently commands following the CPS announcement that he will stand trial for alleged racist abuse.

From the moment he emerged into the spotlight he did what he always does, presenting a devil-may-care attitude. He evidently wants the world to know that whatever happens outside the pitch stays on the other side of the white line and so he sprinted towards the Park Lane, puffed his chest out, patted his badge and saluted the Chelsea contingent. Of course, Terry was the subject of some toxic hostility. But he gave the unmistakable impression that his worst moment came when he was exposed for footballing, rather than any other, limitations.

Eight minutes into this compelling encounter he heard nothing but white noise. Terry was caught dawdling as Tottenham broke down the left. Emmanuel Adebayor was his man. Terry was in front of him. Yet as Gareth Bale’s cross skidded over, Chelsea’s captain slowed up just as Adebayor anticipated keenly. The difference in sharpness between the two men helped to give Spurs the lead.

Tellingly he recovered from that to put in the kind of performance that had his manager purring and reflecting how, perversely, Terry has increased his levels since “the incident”. His leadership was evident as he took charge of a reshuffled defence. Early in the second half his yen for goals in circumstances such as this rose again as he thumped a header on target.

In stoppage time he blocked what would have been an Adebayor match-winner. The scale of insults aimed at him fluctuated during the game from the kind of ordinary rudeness he might expect every week, via observations about his family’s misdemeanours to some inevitable insinuations concerning his upcoming court appearance. The idea of arming stewards with headcams to guard against the most unacceptable of behaviour in the stands was not entirely successful. But as an idea it makes one wonder whether some bright spark could come up with a tiny device that footballers themselves could wear, armband-cam, for example, which might clarify instances of abuse on the pitch for all to see.

The visiting support reacted to the Terry baiting with an array of supportive songs. Then they changed tack and decided to pick at Tottenham, pointing out in a none too complimentary way: “You stupid bastards, you burn your own town.”

But it was a measure of how Chelsea’s players responded that the Terry-ometer soon quietened down. Once his team drew level through Daniel Sturridge, both sections of the crowd felt compelled to acknowledge that a football match broke out. Terry has plenty of previous when it comes to getting on with the job while extra-curricular shenanigans shadow his every move. If anything, history shows he uses moments of adversity as fuel to his fire.

There were match-winning performances for Chelsea after revelations about his liaison with Wayne Bridge’s girlfriend, and after his father made tabloid headlines for selling cocaine in an Essex bar. There was a goal for his country after he missed a penalty in the Champions League final. There was a composed defensive performance and clean sheet after he was stripped of the England captaincy.

Not that it always works. A couple of months ago against Arsenal, in his first appearance after the allegations of racism against Anton Ferdinand were put under investigation, he ended up floored, as a calamitous mistake paved the way for a humiliating defeat.

And that is what appears to stick in his craw more than the worst from any loudmouth.

John TerryChelseaTottenham HotspurAmy Lawrenceguardian.co.uk