Newcastle look bound for Champions League after crushing Tottenham 6-1

Newcastle United's Callum Wilson celebrates scoring their sixth goal with Miguel Almiron. (Reuters)
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Updated 23 April 2023
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Newcastle look bound for Champions League after crushing Tottenham 6-1

  • Win at St. James’ Park opens up 6-point lead over top 4 rivals

NEWCASTLE: What a difference a year makes.

Newcastle United put one foot firmly in the Champions League by hammering Tottenham Hotspur 6-1 at St. James’ Park to open up a six-point gap to their top-four rivals — and with a game in hand.

The result comes a little over a year after Antonio Conte’s Spurs put lowly Newcastle to the sword 5-1 in London. How the tables have turned now. The Magpies blitzed their opponents, who are now looking up at Newcastle, rather than down.

Five first-half goals, two apiece from Jacob Murphy and Alexander Isak as well as one from Joelinton, ended this one as a contest. Harry Kane grabbed a consolation just after the break but Callum Wilson added his 11th of the campaign to put the icing on the cake.

Newcastle boss Eddie Howe made just the one change to his side, with Sean Longstaff coming in for Anthony Gordon. And the midfielder, along with the other five in United’s front six, was at it from minute one, in a far cry from the disappointing dip at Aston Villa.

In fact, it took the Magpies just 60 seconds to open the scoring.

Pedro Porro will have nightmares about the runs of Joelinton from the Newcastle left, and one such dart caught the Spurs wing-back napping as the Brazilian cut in and fired at goal. His shot was saved by Hugo Lloris low to his left but that palmed clearance only fell to Murphy, who hammered into the roof of the net.

Just five minutes later it was 2-0 — and this time the creator was the scorer.

A searching ball from Fabian Schar picked out Joelinton, who ghosted in behind Porro again, slipped around Lloris and tucked into the empty net.

In a blistering opening quarter the Magpies added three, four and five in very quick succession — and it was the often unsung Murphy who added another, before on-fire Isak bagged another two to add to the eight he claimed in his previous 10 starts.

The third goal came when Murphy lined up from 30 yards and with one swipe of his right, bamboozled Lloris, who did not even move from the moment it left the Newcastle winger’s boot.

It was four when Joe Willock, a contender for man of the match, played one of the balls of the season with the outside of his foot, opening up a clear run at goal for Isak, who slid past Lloris.

He got his second, and Newcastle’s fifth within the first 21 minutes, when a deft touch inside by the impressive Longstaff put the Swede in on a tight angle. But his form is such that tough situations matter little to Isak, who tucked in for 5-0.

And while it will be a 21-minute period few with associations to Spurs will want to watch back, the least comfortable viewer of reruns would undoubtedly be Lloris. It was far from a captain’s display by the French stopper, who was embarrassingly replaced at the break.

Spurs could not be as bad for the second 45 minutes — and so it proved. Some fight was shown as Kane bagged his 24th of the season with a left-footed effort down low past England colleague Nick Pope, but all resistance was ended when, within two minutes of being brought on, Wilson was found by fellow sub Miguel Almiron and it was six.

Many Newcastle fans will now be asking whether it is time to dust off the passport.

It is hard to see them finishing outside the top seven clubs to make at least a Europa League berth, but will they actually mix it with the elite?

Brighton are 10 points behind Newcastle with two games in hand in eighth, and Liverpool seventh some nine points away from the Magpies.

Wins at Everton on Thursday and against relegation-threatened Southampton on Sunday will bring the dream closer and the chanting louder as Newcastle close in on Champions League football.


Drake Maye aims to do what Tom Brady couldn’t with the Patriots: win a playoff game in Denver

Updated 24 January 2026
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Drake Maye aims to do what Tom Brady couldn’t with the Patriots: win a playoff game in Denver

FOXBOROUGH, Mass.: Drake Maye has a chance to accomplish something not even Tom Brady did with the Patriots.
Maye is hoping to beat the Broncos in the AFC championship game in Denver on Sunday and lead New England to the Super Bowl for the first time since 2018. The Patriots have never won a playoff game in Denver — losing all four tries, with Brady going 0-3.
“Just the AFC championship, the chance to go to the Super Bowl. That’d be huge,” Maye said. “Another road environment that’s had success in the past. … I know it would be a big-time win.”
The Patriots advanced to their 14th AFC championship game in the last 25 years on Sunday when they beat the Houston Texans 28-16 in Foxborough. Denver beat Buffalo 33-30 to reach the conference title game.
New England and Denver both finished 14-3 in the regular season, but the Broncos won the tiebreaker for home-field advantage because they had a better record against common opponents: Denver beat the Raiders twice this season but the Patriots lost to them.
That loss — to the worst team in the NFL in the first game of the Mike Vrabel era — sent New England into one of the most inhospitable environments in the league. In addition to the high-energy crowd, the Patriots will also have to contend with a low-oxygen environment that they won’t have a chance to acclimate to.
“Kind of what we’ve been doing on the road all season long,” said Maye, who has guided the Patriots to an 8-0 road record this season. “They’ve got a great team, so we’re going to have a tough challenge. But I’m looking forward to getting out there. And getting a chance to possibly celebrate on an away field would be pretty special.”
The last team to go undefeated on the road with a new head coach was the San Francisco 49ers under George Seifert in 1989; they won the Super Bowl.
“Coach  has always been saying, ‘Road warriors,’” Maye said. “So, we’re trying to find that one more time and finish out strong what we’ve done this year.”
The Broncos are 18-5 in home playoff games all-time. But they’ll will be without starting quarterback Bo Nix, who broke his ankle near the end of the divisional round victory over Buffalo. Instead, the offense will be led by former Patriot Jarrett Stidham, who hasn’t thrown a pass since 2023.
That’s why New England opened as a 5½-point favorite — the biggest road favorite ever in a conference championship game. The line has since moved to Denver plus-4½.
“We always feel as though no matter what anyone else has to say, we still have something to prove,” said cornerback Marcus Jones, who returned an interception for a touchdown against Houston. “We’re trying to always prove ourselves right and not trying to prove other people wrong. That’s kind of the philosophy we’ve had for a long time.”
Win or lose, the Patriots could have trouble getting back to New England: A major snowstorm is expected to dump a foot or more of snow on the area.
Vrabel said the team is prepared if it can’t leave Denver on Sunday night.
“We have multiple plans of what could go on based on the weather.  something that they’re familiar with here,” he said. “I mean, there’s things I can control,  that I can’t control.”