
EPL Index
·4 de mayo de 2025
Player Ratings: Jarrod Bowen Scores as West Ham United Hold Tottenham Hotspur in 1-1 Draw

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Yahoo sportsEPL Index
·4 de mayo de 2025
It was another chapter in what has become a recurring story for both clubs: West Ham United and Tottenham Hotspur played out a largely forgettable 1-1 draw at the London Stadium, a result that does little to ease the growing sense of stagnation surrounding both sides this Premier League season.
Spurs arrived with some momentum after their midweek European triumph, but that confidence fizzled out almost as quickly as it arrived. West Ham, under Graham Potter, remain a curious proposition—flashes of enterprise mixed with stretches of inertia. This wasn’t a classic, and by the final whistle, the result seemed as inevitable as it was uninspiring.
Tottenham Hotspur got the start they wanted when Wilson Odobert, a bright spark on the day, latched onto a low cross from Mathys Tel to fire home his first Premier League goal. The build-up owed much to Max Kilman’s lapse in concentration, as the £40m summer signing was robbed of possession inside his own half. Tel was quick to capitalise, laying it off with precision for Odobert to finish calmly past Alphonse Areola.
Photo: IMAGO
But Spurs’ familiar fragility resurfaced. For all their tactical discipline under the current regime, their inability to preserve a lead is becoming alarmingly routine. They allowed West Ham back into the contest, and it was no surprise when Jarrod Bowen—once again the Hammers’ most reliable threat—brought the hosts level.
The equaliser came in the 28th minute. Aaron Wan-Bissaka, whose performance was nothing short of exemplary, threaded a smart pass through the defensive line. Bowen took it in stride and fired from an acute angle, netting his tenth Premier League goal of the season. It was a moment of composure in an otherwise scrappy affair.
From there, neither side truly seized control. Richarlison fired wastefully over for Spurs, while Bowen and James Ward-Prowse had chances late on to nick all three points for West Ham. Ward-Prowse’s injury-time free-kick drifted just wide of Vicario’s post, sparing Spurs further punishment.
For all the individual talent on display, this was a match defined by disjointed passages of play and a palpable lack of rhythm. Tottenham’s midfield trio—Sarr, Bissouma, and Kulusevski—were functional but lacked imagination. Meanwhile, West Ham relied heavily on the dynamism of Wan-Bissaka and the clinical edge of Bowen.
There were flashes, of course. Odobert and Tel showed promise for Spurs, while Paquetá offered some control in midfield for the Hammers. But these were isolated bursts in a contest more likely to be remembered for what it lacked than what it delivered.
Neither side will feel entirely satisfied. West Ham continue to wrestle with inconsistency under Graham Potter, while Spurs’ inability to convert a good start into a convincing win underlines the questions still hovering over their long-term direction.
With the Premier League season entering its final stretch, both teams must find more cohesion—and fast—if they are to finish with purpose rather than simply drift into the summer break.