Tottenham host Brentford on 6 December with both sides level on points yet pulling in different directions. Spurs’ season reads like a high‑wire act — 19 points from 14 games with 23 scored and 18 conceded — while Brentford have the same tally from 14, but a negative goal difference and a staccato rhythm. The head-to-head leans towards Tottenham and the data promises action: Spurs’ last five have all delivered both teams to score and over 2.5 goals, and the model edge is nudging in that direction again.
Head-to-head: Spurs’ recent edge, Bees’ occasional sting
The recent series has tilted towards the hosts. The head-to-head summary shows Tottenham with more goals (17) and more wins (5, 56%) than Brentford (10 goals, 1 win, 11%), with Spurs also logging more clean sheets. Even so, Brentford’s 3–1 away win in 2023 is a reminder that this fixture has room for a twist.
| Date | Home | Score | Away | Competition |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 02 Feb 2025 | Brentford | 0–2 | Tottenham | Premier League |
| 21 Sep 2024 | Tottenham | 3–1 | Brentford | Premier League |
| 31 Jan 2024 | Tottenham | 3–2 | Brentford | Premier League |
| 13 Aug 2023 | Brentford | 2–2 | Tottenham | Premier League |
| 20 May 2023 | Tottenham | 1–3 | Brentford | Premier League |
Form and mood: chaos vs control
Tottenham’s last 10 run reads erratic — “DLLDLWLWDD” — yet their games have become guaranteed spectacles. Over the last five, Spurs have recorded 100% for both BTTS and over 2.5, scored nine goals, and, tellingly, opened the scoring in just 20% of those fixtures. That combination paints a side that plays on the edge and invites a response.
Brentford’s recent sequence is more worrying: four defeats in the last five. The 2–0 loss at Arsenal was accompanied by a BBC verdict that highlighted a “mature” home performance; Mikel Merino and Bukayo Saka did the damage, with Mikel Arteta praising his team’s control and Danny Murphy pointing to Arsenal’s depth. It underlines Brentford’s current reality: competitive in phases but conceding momentum too easily.
Tottenham — last five at a glance
| Date | Fixture | Score |
|---|---|---|
| 02 Dec 2025 | Newcastle vs Tottenham | 2–2 |
| 29 Nov 2025 | Tottenham vs Fulham | 1–2 |
| 26 Nov 2025 | Paris Saint Germain vs Tottenham | 5–3 |
| 08 Nov 2025 | Tottenham vs Manchester United | 2–2 |
| 29 Oct 2025 | Newcastle vs Tottenham | 2–0 |
Brentford — last five at a glance
| Date | Fixture | Score |
|---|---|---|
| 03 Dec 2025 | Arsenal vs Brentford | 2–0 |
| 29 Nov 2025 | Brentford vs Burnley | 3–1 |
| 22 Nov 2025 | Brighton vs Brentford | 2–1 |
| 09 Nov 2025 | Brentford vs Newcastle | 1–3 |
| 01 Nov 2025 | Crystal Palace vs Brentford | 2–0 |
The numbers: why this should be open
Across the season sample (14 fixtures each), Spurs show 71% over 2.5 and 57% BTTS, while Brentford sit at 64% for both. Tottenham average six corners for and 2.5 cards received; Brentford generate 5.43 corners with 1.86 cards. In attack, Spurs’ efficiency stands out — 23 goals from 44 shots on target with a listed conversion of 52% — while Brentford carry volume (58 shots on target) but a lower conversion rate (36%). Timing also matters: Spurs’ top scoring window is just after half-time (46–60), Brentford’s late surge is a theme (76–90).
| Metric | Tottenham | Brentford |
|---|---|---|
| Games played (GP) | 14 | 14 |
| W-D-L | W5 D4 L5 | W6 D1 L7 |
| Points | 19 | 19 |
| Goals For | 23 | 21 |
| Goals Against | 18 | 22 |
| Attacking/tempo metric | Tottenham | Brentford |
|---|---|---|
| BTTS (Yes %) | 57% | 64% |
| Over 2.5 (%) | 71% | 64% |
| Shots on target (season) | 44 | 58 |
| Shot conversion (%) | 52% | 36% |
| Top minute window (season) | 46–60 (27%) | 76–90 (43%) |
Angles, context and scenarios
The market view is cautious on a home win. The match-winner probability tilts to Tottenham at 38%, with Over 2.5 at 52% and BTTS: Yes at 63%. That aligns neatly with Spurs’ recent pattern of high-event games and Brentford’s tendency to trade chances, especially late on.
There’s also narrative noise around Spurs: a BBC piece this week noted Son Heung-min’s return to the club environment, which at the very least sharpens the focus on their attacking identity. Fixture congestion is real — Spurs face Slavia Praha three days later — but the available numbers point more to tempo and game-state than to rotation. For a wider Premier League sweep, Kickwie’s premier league betting tips add useful context on trends this week.
How could it play out? A Spurs win would back up their strong head-to-head and soothe a jittery league run by confirming their firepower can outrun the defensive leaks. A Brentford result — built on fast transitions and that late-game scoring window — would validate their attacking volume and ease the sting of recent defeats. A draw with goals feels like the statistical middle ground; either way, the expectation is for a game that breathes, rather than one that locks up early.
