Harry Kane strikes as Southampton hold Spurs

Tottenham Hotspur's English striker Harry Kane (left) vies with Southampton's English defender Ryan Bertrand during the English Premier League football match between Southampton and Tottenham Hotspur at St Mary's Stadium in Southampton, southern England on January 21, 2018. PHOTO | GLYN KIRK| AFP

What you need to know:

  • Kane's goal was his ninth in his past five Premier League starts and he is now just a goal away from becoming the 27th member of the '100 club'.

  •  Southampton started brightly, pressing Tottenham in a style they themselves have become known for.

  • Both teams continued to press, making for an attractive game in appalling conditions.

SOUTHAMPTON

Harry Kane struck his 99th Premier League goal to earn Tottenham a 1-1 draw against Southampton on Sunday but Mauricio Pochettino rued the loss of two vital points in the push for a Champions League place.

The result moves Spurs to within two points of fourth-placed Liverpool, who have a game in hand, but it was not enough to lift Southampton out of the relegation zone.

Kane's goal was his ninth in his past five Premier League starts and he is now just a goal away from becoming the 27th member of the '100 club'.

But with Pochettino's side piling on the pressure in the closing stages against his former club, the Argentine will consider this a missed opportunity in Spurs' bid to qualify for the Champions League.

The disappointed Spurs boss said his side could rue the dropped points at the end of the season, with a tough run of fixtures coming up — the next three Premier League games are against Manchester United, Arsenal and Liverpool.

"You must give credit to the opponent, but I am not happy with our performance," he said. "We needed to move the ball quicker and create more. We made a lot of mistakes."

"It is temporary that Southampton are in the relegation zone, for sure they will push up the table," he added.

SPIRITED PERFORMANCE

"It is two points we are going to miss at the end of the season because it is so tough between six or seven teams."

The form guide appeared to give Southampton little chance of victory but this was a spirited performance from the home side. Mauricio Pellegrino's team had not won in the league since November and dropped into the relegation zone this weekend.

Fans are growing impatient that none of the £75 million (85 million euros, $104 million) Liverpool paid for Virgil Van Dijk has yet been invested, with just 10 days left of the transfer window.

Flu struck both teams in the build-up, with Southampton missing Shane Long and Tottenham without Hugo Lloris and Christian Eriksen.

 Southampton started brightly, pressing Tottenham in a style they themselves have become known for.

Manolo Gabbiadini, making only his second start in 14 games, almost connected with Dusan Tadic's low cross after James Ward-Prowse had found him with an excellent long-range pass.

Tadic again showed his threat down the left when another sweeping move saw Pierre-Emile Hojbjerg almost apply the finishing touch to the Serbian's excellent cross.

DESERVED LEAD

Southampton took a deserved lead in the 15th minute when Sanchez deflected past his own goalkeeper Michel Vorm after being tempted by Ryan Bertrand's low cross from the left.

Spurs almost levelled two minutes later when Ben Davies's corner eventually dropped to Eric Dier and he shot low against the right post.

But Kane moved onto 99 goals in the Premier League as he headed in Davies's next corner, beating two Southampton defenders to the ball to score from close range just 197 seconds after Sanchez's own goal.

Both teams continued to press, making for an attractive game in appalling conditions.

Spurs went close to taking the lead with Davies again the provider, this time for Moussa Sissoko, who volleyed his cross just wide.

UNMARKED

Jack Stephens should perhaps have put Southampton back in front but he headed over the bar after finding himself unmarked from Ward-Prowse's excellent free-kick.

The rain relented but the intensity of the game did not in the second half. Pochettino's side did not have things all their own way, with Southampton maintaining their high-pressure approach.

But Dele Alli saw more of the ball as the game wore on and shot low just beyond the left post after good work from Mousa Dembele.

Alli then went agonisingly close six minutes from time as Sissoko found him five yards out but Stephens managed to execute a last-ditch block.

Kane was then a whisker away from reaching the century milestone as he shot inches wide of the far post in the closing stages.