North London derby explained

North London derby
First Contested:4 December 1909
Football League First Division
Most Wins:Arsenal (82)
Most Player Appearances:David O'Leary (Arsenal)
(35)
Top Scorer:Harry Kane (Tottenham)
(14 goals)
Mostrecent:28 April 2024
Premier League
Nextmeeting:15 September 2024
Premier League
Stadiums:Emirates Stadium (Arsenal)
Tottenham Hotspur Stadium (Spurs)
Total:195
Series:Arsenal: 82
Drawn: 52
Spurs: 61
Largestvictory:
Football League First Division
(6 March 1935)

The North London derby is the meeting of the association football clubs Arsenal and Tottenham Hotspur, both of which are based in North London, England. Fans of both clubs consider the other to be their main rivals, and the derby is considered by many to be one of the fiercest derbies in the world.[1] Although the two teams first played each other in 1887, the rivalry did not begin until 1913 when Arsenal moved their ground to North London from Woolwich, south of the River Thames.

As of 28 April 2024, 195 games have been played between the two teams since their first game in the Football League in 1909, with 82 wins for Arsenal, 61 wins for Tottenham and 52 games drawn. When games played before both joined the Football League are included, 209 games have been played, with Arsenal winning 87, Tottenham 67, and 55 drawn.

Notable matches of the North London derby include the games in which Arsenal won the league at White Hart Lane in 1971 and their invincible campaign in 2004,[2] Tottenham beating Arsenal 5–0 at home in 1983 and Arsenal winning by the same score away in 1978, and Tottenham beating Arsenal 3–1 at the semi-final of the 1990–91 FA Cup, which they went on to win.[3] The highest-scoring game in the North London derby is the 5–4 win by Arsenal at White Hart Lane in November 2004.[4] The fixture's top scorer is Harry Kane with fourteen goals (seven from the penalty spot), having overtaken Bobby Smith and Emmanuel Adebayor, who have ten goals each.[5] [6]

Arsenal play their home games at the Emirates Stadium in Islington, while Tottenham Hotspur are based at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in the neighbouring borough of Haringey. The two stadiums are 4 miles (6.4 km) apart.

History

Early matches

The first meeting between the two teams was a friendly on 19 November 1887, when Arsenal were located in Plumstead (then part of Kent but now in Greater London), and known as Royal Arsenal. The match, played at Spurs' ground at Tottenham Marshes, was abandoned 15 minutes before it was due to end "owing to darkness" with Spurs won 2–1.[7] The first completed match between the two teams was held the following February in Plumstead; Tottenham could only field nine players, and were beaten 6–2.[8]

The two teams competed together in the United League starting in the 1896–97 season.[9] The first meeting in competition was on 2 November 1896. Arsenal won 2–1.

Another notable match was in 1898 played at the Spurs ground at Northumberland Park. The match with the then Woolwich Arsenal was attended by a record crowd of 15,000, and the refreshment stand collapsed when spectators climbed up onto its roof in the overcrowded ground, resulting in some injuries and prompting Spurs to start looking for a new ground. The next year the club moved a short distance to what would become known as the White Hart Lane ground.[10] The first League match between the clubs was in the First Division, on 4 December 1909; Arsenal won 1–0.[11]

Beginning of rivalry

However, a proper rivalry between the two teams did not begin until 1913, when Arsenal moved from the Manor Ground, Plumstead to Arsenal Stadium, Highbury, just four miles from Tottenham's White Hart Lane, a move resented and opposed by Tottenham as they considered Highbury their territory.[12] The move made Arsenal Tottenham's nearest neighbours and thus began a natural local rivalry. The two teams first faced each other as north London rivals in a War Relief Fund friendly on 22 August 1914 at White Hart Lane. Although Arsenal were in the Second Division and Tottenham in the First, Arsenal won 5–1.[13] They would go on to meet regularly during World War I in the London Combination, the regional wartime competition of the time.

The rivalry escalated in 1919 when, after World War I, the First Division was to be expanded by two teams, and the League held a meeting of the clubs to decide the two clubs by means of a vote. 19th-placed Chelsea, who would otherwise have been relegated, were allowed to stay and thus they took the first of the two spots. The second spot could have been awarded to 20th-placed Tottenham, or Barnsley, who had finished third in the Second Division, but Arsenal (along with four other clubs) also bid for the place, despite finishing sixth in Division Two (although an error in the calculation of goal average meant Arsenal had actually finished fifth, which was corrected by the Football League in 1980).[14]

After an endorsement by League president and chairman of Liverpool John McKenna on account of their longer membership of the League, Arsenal won the vote by eighteen votes to Spurs' eight (Barnsley got five, Wolves four, Nottingham Forest three, Birmingham two and Hull City one) and were thus elected to the First Division. The decision infuriated Tottenham and their supporters. It has been frequently alleged that Arsenal chairman Sir Henry Norris used underhand dealings in order to bring this about, although nothing has been proven.[15] Tottenham themselves had been elected to join the Football League Second Division eleven years prior after finishing 7th in the 1907–08 Southern League, but it involved entirely separate leagues that did not have automatic right to move between them.[16] Tottenham were initially unsuccessful in their attempt to join the Football League, and only narrowly won election to the Second Division after Stoke resigned from the league for financial reasons.[17]

Despite the setback, Tottenham were soon promoted back into the top flight after taking the 1919–20 Second Division title,[18] and the derby began to be regularly contested. The first fully competitive derby match after Arsenal's 1913 move to north London was a First Division match that finished 2–1 to Tottenham, on 15 January 1921 at White Hart Lane. The early matches between the two were noted for their bitterness - a particularly vicious match in September 1922 led to both clubs being censured by the Football Association and threatened with being forced to play behind closed doors.[19] [20]

Tottenham played in the Second Division between the periods of 1928 and 1933, as well as 1935 to 1950,[18] which naturally led to a drop in the number of matches between the two clubs in this period and a cooling of passions. In 1935 Arsenal registered its biggest ever win over Spurs in a 6–0 rout away at White Hart Lane. This 6-0 result remains the biggest win by any team wherein the derby.[21] [22] Relations between the two clubs improved somewhat after the Second World War, after Tottenham allowed Arsenal to play their home matches at White Hart Lane while Highbury was requisitioned as an ARP station and subsequently bombed. The two sides met in the FA Cup for the first time in the 1948–49 season, when Arsenal won a third round tie 3–0.

1950–present

Since 1950, there has only been one season (that of 1977–78[18]) where Tottenham and Arsenal have not been in the same division, meaning fixtures between the two are regular. This has maintained the rivalry to the present day and there have been many notable matches. Several times the course of a title or the journey to a cup final has relied upon the outcome of a derby match. As with any major football rivalry, gloating and banter between the two sets of fans, many of whom work and even live together, is commonplace. Players who transfer between the two teams receive a bad reception from their former fans; an example was defender Sol Campbell,[23] who was nicknamed "Judas" by Tottenham fans after he crossed the divide in 2001.Arsenal's Theo Walcott, after picking up a knee injury in the 83rd minute of a FA Cup third round tie against Tottenham in January 2014, was pelted with a hail of coins and plastic bottles whilst coming off the field on a stretcher by Tottenham fans at the Emirates Stadium. Walcott subsequently made a gesture on the stretcher to the Tottenham fans which reflected, at that point in time, the 2-0 scoreline of the game which it finished as eventually. An investigation was eventually made with regard to the perpetrators of the incident by the authorities.[24] [25]

On 30 April 2017, Tottenham beat Arsenal 2–0 in the final North London Derby at White Hart Lane.[26] This result guaranteed Tottenham finishing above Arsenal in the league for the first time in 22 seasons.[27] Tottenham would then achieve a streak of six consecutive finishes above their rivals (from 2016–17 to 2021–22).

On 15 January 2023, Arsenal beat Tottenham for the first time at the new Tottenham Hotspur Stadium 2–0 to win both league fixtures of the derby for the season. The Arsenal players dedicated the victory to Arsenal Women teammate, England international and UEFA Women's Euro 2022 winner Beth Mead and her mother June after Mrs Mead had died earlier in the week from ovarian cancer.[28]

Arsenal fans have a celebration day related to the north London rivalry called St. Totteringham's Day, which is the day in the season when Tottenham cannot mathematically finish above Arsenal on the league table.[29] [30] Tottenham fans had long before declared 14 April to be St. Hotspur day in honour of Tottenham's 3–1 win over Arsenal in the 1991 FA Cup semi-final. St. Hotspur Day was also celebrated on 14 April 2010, when Tottenham beat Arsenal 2–1.[31]

Fans

See main article: article, Arsenal F.C. supporters and Tottenham Hotspur F.C. supporters. Both Arsenal's and Tottenham's fan bases are multi-ethnic, due to the racial diversity in London. In 2002, Arsenal had 7.7% of their fans calling themselves non-white British, rising to 14% in 2008, the highest in the league in these fans surveys.[32] [33] Around 9% of Tottenham fans were non-White in 2008. Both clubs also have extensive fan bases throughout the UK and the rest of the world. Arsenal fans call themselves "Gooners", a term that is derived from the club's nickname "Gunners", which is itself a reference to Arsenal's origins as a munitions factory team.[34]

Tottenham fans call themselves "yids". Due to the historical support from the Jewish communities in North and East London, Tottenham once had a significant number of Jewish fans; it was estimated that around 10,000 or a third of the club's fans in the 1930s were Jewish. Due to this historical association, fans of many other clubs from the 1960s onwards have directed antisemitic chants at Spurs fans.[35] Tottenham no longer has a greater number of Jewish fans than other major London clubs such as Arsenal (Jewish support for Arsenal started to increase in the 1930s); an estimate put the number of Jewish fans at Tottenham as at most 5%, about the same number as Arsenal, but the antisemitic chants against Tottenham fans persisted.[35] In an attempt to draw the sting from these chants, Tottenham fans (whether Jewish or not) adopted the words "yid" and "yiddo" for themselves and thereby turned a pejorative into a term of pride and belonging. There is, however, still some controversy over the use of "yid" or "yiddo".[36] Tottenham are considered the club of North-East London in boroughs such as Haringey, Waltham Forest, Enfield and Hackney, whereas Arsenal are more representative of the North-West in Islington, Camden, Brent and Barnet.A 2003 online survey found that Arsenal supporters most dislike Tottenham, and that Tottenham fans see Arsenal as their main rival.[37]

Results

Premier League

Arsenal vs Tottenham Hotspur

VenueDateScoreHome goalscorersAway goalscorersAttendance
Highbury11 May 19931–3Dickov 52'Sheringham 39', Hendry 46', 78'26,393
6 December 19931–1Wright 65'Anderton 25'35,669
29 April 19951–1Wright 61', (pen.)Klinsmann 74'38,337
15 April 19960–038,273
24 November 19963–1Wright 28' (pen.), Adams 87', Bergkamp 89'Sinton 57'38,264
30 August 19970–038,102
14 November 19980–038,278
19 March 20002–1Armstrong 20' (o.g.), Henry 45' (pen.)Armstrong 3'38,131
31 March 20012–0Pires 70', Henry 87'38,121
6 April 20022–1Ljungberg 25', Lauren 86' (pen.)Sheringham 81' (pen.)38,186
16 November 20023–0Henry 13', Ljungberg 55', Wiltord 71'38,152
8 November 20032–1Pires 69', Ljungberg 79'Anderton 5'38,101
25 April 20051–0Reyes 22'38,147
22 April 20061–1Henry 84'Keane 66'38,326
Emirates Stadium2 December 20063–0Adebayor 20', Gilberto 42' (pen.), 72' (pen.)60,115
22 December 20072–1Adebayor 47', Bendtner 75'Berbatov 65' 60,087
29 October 20084–4Silvestre 37', Gallas 46, Adebayor 64', van Persie 68'Bentley 13', Bent 65', Jenas 89', Lennon 90+4'60,043
31 October 20093–0Van Persie 42', 60', Fàbregas 43'60,103
20 November 20102–3Nasri 9', Chamakh 27'Bale 50', Van der Vaart 67' (pen.), Kaboul 86'60,102
26 February 20125–2Sagna 40', Van Persie 43', Rosický 51', Walcott 65', 68'Saha 4', Adebayor 34' (pen.)60,106
17 November 20125–2Mertesacker 24', Podolski 42', Giroud 45+1', Cazorla 60', Walcott 90+1'Adebayor 10', Bale 71' 60,111
1 September 20131–0Giroud 23'60,071
27 September 20141–1Oxlade-Chamberlain 74'Chadli 56'59,900
8 November 20151–1Gibbs 77'Kane 32'60,060
6 November 20161–1Wimmer 42' (o.g.)Kane 51' (pen.)60,039
18 November 20172–0Mustafi 36', Sánchez 41'59,530
2 December 20184–2Aubameyang 10' (pen.), 56', Lacazette 74', Torreira 77'Dier 30', Kane 34' (pen.)59,973
1 September 20192–2Lacazette 45+1', Aubameyang 71'Eriksen 10', Kane 40' (pen.)60,333
14 March 20212–1Ødegaard 44', Lacazette 64' (pen.)Lamela 33'0
26 September 20213–1Smith Rowe 12', Aubameyang 27', Saka 34'Son 79'59,919
1 October 20223–1Partey 20', Gabriel Jesus 49', Xhaka 67'Kane 31' (pen.)60,278
24 September 20232–2Romero 26' (o.g.), Saka 54' (pen.)Son 42', 55'60,156

Tottenham Hotspur vs Arsenal

VenueDateScoreHome goalscorersAway goalscorersAttendance
White Hart Lane12 December 19921–0Allen 20'33,707
16 August 19930–1Wright 87'28,355
2 January 19951–0Popescu 22'28,747
18 November 19952–1Sheringham 29', Armstrong 54'Bergkamp 14'32,894
15 February 19970–033,039
28 December 19971–1Nielsen 28'Parlour 62'29,610
5 May 19991–3Anderton 43'Petit 17', Anelka 33', Kanu 85' 36,019
7 November 19992–1Iversen 7', Sherwood 20'Vieira 39'36,085
18 December 20001–1Rebrov 31'Vieira 89'36,062
17 November 20011–1Poyet 90'Pires 81'36,049
15 December 20021–1Ziege 11'Pires 45' (pen.)36,076
25 April 20042–2Redknapp 62', Keane 90+4' (pen.)Vieira 3', Pires 35' 36,097
13 November 20044–5Naybet 36', Defoe 61', King 73', Kanouté 88' Henry 45+1', Lauren 55' (pen.), Vieira 60', Ljungberg 69, Pires 81'36,095
29 October 20051–1King 17'Pires 77'36,154
21 April 20072–2Keane 30', Jenas 90+5'Touré 64', Adebayor 78'36,050
15 September 20071–3Bale 15' Adebayor 65', 90+4', Fàbregas 80'36,053
8 February 20090–036,021
14 April 20102–1Rose 10', Bale 47'Bendtner 85'36,041
20 April 20113–3Van der Vaart 7', 70' (pen.), Huddlestone 44'Walcott 5', Nasri 12', Van Persie 40'36,138
2 October 20112–1Van der Vaart 40', Walker 73'Ramsey 51'36,274
3 March 20132–1Bale 37', Lennon 39'Mertesacker 51'36,170
16 March 20140–1Rosický 2'35,711
7 February 20152–1Kane 55', 86'Özil 11'35,659
5 March 20162–2Alderweireld 60', Kane 62'Ramsey 39', Sánchez 76'35,762
30 April 20172–0Alli 55', Kane 58' (pen.)31,811
Wembley Stadium10 February 20181–0Kane 49'83,222
2 March 20191–1Kane 74' (pen.)Ramsey 16'81,332
Tottenham Hotspur Stadium12 July 20202–1Son 19', Alderweireld 81'Lacazette 16'0
6 December 20202–0Son 13', Kane 45+1'2,000
12 May 20223–0Kane 22' (pen.), 37', Son 47'62,027
15 January 20230–2Lloris 14' (o.g.), Ødegaard 36'61,870
28 April 20242–3Romero 64', Son 87' (pen.)Højbjerg 15' (o.g.), Saka 27', Havertz 38'61,554

Fixture top scorers in the derby (Premier League era)

Players in bold represent those who are currently playing for Arsenal or Tottenham.[38] [39]

RankPlayerClub(s)Goals
1 Harry KaneTottenham Hotspur14
2 Emmanuel AdebayorArsenal, Tottenham Hotspur10
3 Robert PiresArsenal8
4 Son Heung-minTottenham Hotspur7
5 Gareth BaleTottenham Hotspur5
Thierry HenryArsenal
Robin van PersieArsenal
8 Pierre-Emerick AubameyangArsenal4
Freddie LjungbergArsenal
Rafael van der VaartTottenham Hotspur
Patrick VieiraArsenal
Theo WalcottArsenal
Ian WrightArsenal

Cup semi-finals and title deciders

Although Arsenal and Tottenham have never met in a major cup final, there have been North London derby matches that have significantly contributed to one of the two clubs winning a trophy, such as semi-finals and title deciders. These include:

Statistics and records

As of 28 April 2024, there have been 195 competitive first-class meetings between the two teams since the first league meeting in 1909, of which Arsenal have won 82 and Tottenham 61.[47] The most goals in one game were scored in the closely contested 5–4 Arsenal victory at White Hart Lane on 13 November 2004. The biggest winning margin was a 6–0 away win by Arsenal on 6 March 1935. Tottenham have twice won 5–0 (25 December 1911 and 4 April 1983) and Arsenal once (23 December 1978), with all three fixtures taking place at White Hart Lane. Arsenal also won by 5–2 margins both in February and November 2012 home at the Emirates.[11]

Tottenham's record for goals scored against Arsenal is 14 goals by Harry Kane, with Bobby Smith scoring 10 goals followed by Billy Minter with nine goals.[48] Arsenal's record is held jointly by Emmanuel Adebayor, Alan Sunderland and Robert Pires, with eight goals each.[49] Adebayor also formerly shared the record for most goals by a player in the North London derby with ten: eight scored for Arsenal and two for Tottenham. Arsenal's long-time defender David O'Leary holds the record for most North London derbies played with 35, while Gary Mabbutt and Steve Perryman shared the corresponding record for Spurs, with 31.[49]

Terry Dyson is the only Spurs player to score a hat-trick in a first-class derby game, having done so on 26 August 1961 in a 4–3 win for Spurs.[50] The Arsenal players to have done so are Ted Drake (20 October 1934) and Alan Sunderland (23 December 1978).

Summary of results

(count starting 1909)

CompetitionMatches playedArsenal winsDrawsSpurs winsArsenal goalsSpurs goals
League174 71 48 55 270 236
FA Cup6 4 0 2 9 5
League Cup14 7 3 4 21 19
Community Shield1 0 1 0 0 0
Total195 82 52 61 300 260

Crossing the divide

Due to the rivalry between the clubs, relatively few players have played for both Arsenal and Tottenham since 1913. The first player to have played for both clubs, however, predated the start of the rivalry; Bill Julian joined Royal Arsenal in 1889 and Tottenham in 1894.[51] Many other players played for both clubs before the start of the rivalry, including Charles Ambler, Arthur Elliott, Thomas Fitchie, Tom Pratt, Peter Kyle, and George Payne. A number of players had joined both clubs in the 20th century, but it was only in the 1960s that Laurie Brown became the first player to have played in the North London Derby for both clubs.[52] The players who have played for both since 1919 when the rivalry escalated are listed below.[48] [53] [54] [55] [56] [57] [58]

Arsenal, then Tottenham

NamePosArsenalTottenham
CareerAppsGoalsCareerAppsGoals
Jimmy BrainFW1924–312321391931–353410
Laurie BrownDF1961–6410921964–66653
David JenkinsMF1966–682591968–70172
Rohan RickettsMF2001–02102002–05362
David BentleyMF1997–2006812008–11413
William GallasDF2006–10101122010–13611
Emmanuel AdebayorFW2006–09143622011–1510641

Former Arsenal winger Joe Hulme managed Tottenham Hotspur between 1945 and 1949. George Graham was firstly an Arsenal player, then managed the Gunners between 1986 and 1994, before later taking up the reins at White Hart Lane between 1998 and 2001.

Clive Allen played three matches in Arsenal's 1980–81 pre-season friendly campaign, although never played a competitive league match for them.

Jamie O'Hara was a youth player at Arsenal before joining Tottenham. However, he did not play a single game for Arsenal.[59]

Ron Piper was an amateur at Arsenal without playing a senior match before joining Tottenham in October 1960.

Tottenham all-time record goalscorer Harry Kane, also the record scorer in North London Derby fixtures, briefly played for Arsenal's youth academy as an eight-year-old, being released after a single season.[60]

Tottenham, then Arsenal

NamePosTottenhamArsenal
CareerAppsGoalsCareerAppsGoals
George HuntFW1930–371981381937–38213
Freddie CoxRW1938–49105181949–539416
Vic GrovesMF1952–53431955–6420137
Jimmy RobertsonRW1964–68181311968–70598
Steve WalfordDF1975–77111977–81984
Willie YoungDF1975–776441977–8123719
Pat JenningsGK1964–7759011977–853270
Sol CampbellDF1992–2001315152001–06, 201019711

In addition, former Spurs player Herbert Chapman subsequently managed Arsenal from 1925 to 1934.[61] Forward Billy Lane first played for Tottenham during 1922 and again from 1924 in a two-year stint at the club, but started in 1963 to feature as a scout for Arsenal.[62] Former Gunner Terry Neill was Spurs's manager from 1974 to 1976, before he crossed back to manage Arsenal between 1976 and 1983.[63]

Pat Holland was a reserve and youth team coach at Spurs from 1988 to 1995 and from 1997 to 2005 in a second spell with the club.[64] Holland went on to take up the role of a coach at Arsenal's Academy in 2012.[65] Holland left the role after less than two months for personal reasons, but has continued to feature for Arsenal as a scout.[66] [67]

Sol Campbell's 2001 transfer from Tottenham to Arsenal was a landmark move at the time, with Campbell going on to win two Premier League titles and three FA Cups with Arsenal.[68] Campbell was a club captain at Tottenham.[69]

Played for both teams in North London derby

The following players have played in at least one North London derby for both teams:[70]

Appearances in the North London derby! Name! For Arsenal! For Tottenham
Laurie Brown4 3
Sol Campbell8 13
David Jenkins2 1
Pat Jennings9 23
Jimmy Robertson1 8
Willie Young8 3
William Gallas6 2
Emmanuel Adebayor9 4
Note: Jimmy Robertson and Emmanuel Adebayor are the only players to have scored for both teams in North London derbies.

Clubs' honours

As of 6 August 2023, these are the football honours of Arsenal and Tottenham Hotspur:[71] [72] [73]

National CompetitionArsenalTottenham Hotspur
First Division / Premier League132
FA Cup148
EFL Cup24
FA Community Shield177
Total4621
European competitionArsenalTottenham Hotspur
UEFA Cup Winners' Cup11
UEFA Cup / Europa League02
Inter-Cities Fairs Cup10
Total23

In its present format, Arsenal have, as of 2022–23, qualified to play in the UEFA Champions League on 19 occasions and Tottenham six, although Tottenham did achieve a fourth-place finish in the 2011–12 Premier League season but were denied a place in the Champions League due to Chelsea winning the Champions League. Arsenal were runners-up in the 2005–06 UEFA Champions League competition,[74] as were Tottenham in the 2018–19 Champions League.[75] Prior to this, Arsenal qualified for the former European Cup on three occasions, while Tottenham did so once. Arsenal were unable to compete in the 1989–90 competition owing to a ban on English clubs following the Heysel Stadium Disaster.[76]

While the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup is recognised as the predecessor to the UEFA Cup, it was not organised by UEFA. Consequently, UEFA do not consider clubs' records in the Fairs Cup to be part of their European record. However, FIFA does view the competition as a major honour.[77]

Highest attendances

See also

Notes and References

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  2. News: Arsenal's best ever north London derbies against Tottenham: ranked . Charlie. Eccleshare . 17 November 2017 . .
  3. News: Tottenham v Arsenal: 10 memorable north London derbies . Craig . Bloomfield . 20 April 2011 . Talk Sport .
  4. News: Tottenham 4-5 Arsenal . 13 November 2004 . BBC .
  5. News: Harry Kane sets north London derby goalscoring record. 6 December 2020. Press Association . BT Sport . 6 December 2020.
  6. Web site: Kane sets all-time north London derby scoring record with superb strike for Tottenham against Arsenal. Andrew. Steel. Goal . 6 December 2020 .
  7. Web site: Tottenham Hotspur in Friendly Matches - Season 1887–1888 . Topspurs . 20 December 2006.
  8. Book: Tongue, Steve . https://books.google.com/books?id=l67VDAAAQBAJ&pg=PT20 . Turf Wars: A History of London Football . Chapter 1 Early days (1863-1899) . 19 August 2016 . Pitch Publishing . 9781785312489 .
  9. Book: Soar, Phil . Tottenham Hotspur The Official Illustrated History 1882–1995 . 1995 . Hamlyn . 0-600-58706-1 .
  10. News: White Hart Lane has seen Diego Maradona and Johan Cruyff, but after 118 years Tottenham have outgrown it. https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220621/https://www.independent.co.uk/sport/football/premier-league/tottenham-hotspur-spurs-white-hart-lane-farewell-goodbye-diego-maradon-johan-cruyff-a7733846.html . 21 June 2022 . subscription . live. Martin . Cloake . 13 May 2017. The Independent .
  11. Web site: Records against Tottenham . Arsenal.com . 20 December 2006.
  12. Book: Goodwin, Bob . Spurs: The Illustrated History . 2003. Breedon Books Publishing Co Ltd . 978-185983-387-2 . 30.
  13. Web site: Season 1914–1915 . Jim Duggan's Topspurs . 5 January 2007 . 1 January 2007 . https://web.archive.org/web/20070101023851/http://www.topspurs.com/1415.htm . dead .
  14. Web site: Arsenal's final game outside top flight. www.arsenal.com. 28 February 2016.
  15. These allegations range from political machinations to outright bribery. A detailed account of what facts are known can be found in Book: Spurling, Jon . Rebels for the Cause: The Alternative History of Arsenal Football Club . Mainstream . 2004 . 978-1-84018-900-1 . Chapter Two: Sleaze and the Tory MP .
  16. Web site: England - Southern League Final Tables . RSSF .
  17. Book: Welch, Julie. The Biography of Tottenham Hotspur . Vision Sports Publishing. 7 September 2015 . 9781909534506 . Chapter 5 - The Human Chain of Lightning .
  18. Web site: Tottenham Hotspur . Football Club History Database . 15 September 2007.
  19. Book: Soar, Phil . Tyler, Martin . amp . The Official Illustrated History of Arsenal . Hamlyn . 2005 . 0-600-61344-5. 40 .
  20. Book: Goodwin, Bob . The Pride of North London . Polar Publishing . 1997 . 1-899538-04-6. 37 .
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  24. Web site: Theo Walcott Taunted Tottenham Fans With '2-0' Hand Gesture During Arsenal's FA Cup Win (GIF/PHOTO). Huffington Post.com. 4 January 2014 .
  25. News: Police seek Arsenal v Spurs Theo Walcott coin-throwers. BBC News . 3 February 2014 .
  26. News: Tottenham Hotspur 2-0 Arsenal . BBC Sport . 14 May 2017 .
  27. News: Spurs beat Arsenal for 1st finish above neighbor in 22 years . USA Today . 14 May 2017 .
  28. Web site: Vurley . Callum . Arsenal stars send heartwarming message to Beth Mead after north London derby win over Tottenham following tragic death of her mum . . 16 January 2023 . 16 January 2023.
  29. News: Sunday Football as it happened . BBC Sport . 9 May 2010 . 9 May 2010 . Jonathan . Stevenson.
  30. News: Soprano and Jail Bird . London . The Guardian . Barry . Glendenning . Paul . Doyle . 21 October 2005.
  31. News: Tottenham v Arsenal: as it happened . London . The Daily Telegraph . Jonathan . Liew . 14 April 2010.
  32. News: Soccer violence declining say fans. 27 February 2002. BBC. 28 February 2016.
  33. Web site: National Fan Survey 2007/08 Season. https://web.archive.org/web/20100107034336/http://www.premierleague.com/staticFiles/67/f8/0,,12306~129127,00.pdf . . 7 January 2010 . 4 June 2019.
  34. Web site: Origins of Nicknames for 20 Premier League Clubs. World Soccer Talk.com. 18 March 2016 .
  35. Web site: Spurs and the Jews: the how, the why and the when . Martin . Cloake. Alan. Fisher. 6 October 2016 . The Jewish Chronicle . 30 June 2018.
  36. News: Premier League tackles antisemitism with campaign to stamp out Y-word. Gibson. Owen. 14 April 2011. The Guardian. en-GB. 0261-3077. 28 February 2016.
  37. Web site: RIVALRY UNCOVERED! . Football Fans Census . 26 October 2011 . dead . 2 June 2013 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080910061502/http://www.footballfanscensus.com/issueresults/Club_Rivalries_Uncovered_Results.pdf . 10 September 2008 .
  38. Web site: The all-time top scorers in the north London derby. 13 March 2021. 90min.com. Grey Whitebloom.
  39. Web site: The top scorers in the history of the North London Derby. 1 December 2020. Football Manager.
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