The numbers paint a tight, slightly volatile picture as Tottenham host Liverpool on 20 December. Spurs sit on 22 points from 16 games (6 wins, 4 draws, 6 defeats; 25 scored, 21 conceded), while Liverpool arrive with 26 points (8 wins, 2 draws, 6 defeats; 26 scored, 24 conceded). Both attack with intent, both concede chances, and neither has looked especially serene in recent weeks.
The current picture: two talented, imperfect sides
Tottenham’s domestic form has been erratic and the mood took a dent with the 3-0 defeat at Nottingham Forest, a performance even Thomas Frank described as “disjointed” and “a step backwards”. Across all competitions, the last five include setbacks against Brentford (0-2) and Fulham (1-2) alongside a lively 2-2 at Newcastle. Liverpool’s recent run is similarly mixed: a 2-0 loss at Brighton was preceded by a controlled 1-0 win away at Inter and solid league results at West Ham (2-0) and a 3-3 at Leeds.
| Team | GP | W | D | L | GF | GA | GD | Pts |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tottenham | 16 | 6 | 4 | 6 | 25 | 21 | 4 | 22 |
| Liverpool | 16 | 8 | 2 | 6 | 26 | 24 | 2 | 26 |
Discipline and set-piece rhythms may matter. This season Spurs average 2.56 cards received per match to Liverpool’s 1.88, while corners tilt slightly to the hosts (Tottenham 5.88 per game; Liverpool 5). In short: Spurs commit more fouls and play with more edge; Liverpool are a touch cleaner but no less assertive.
Head‑to‑head: recent scars, and one reminder of Spurs’ punch
The last ten meetings lean Liverpool’s way. Across that sample Tottenham’s 16 goals and two wins contrast with Liverpool’s 29 goals and six victories, with each side recording one clean sheet. More recently, the Premier League clashes have been open and heavy‑scoring, though Spurs did squeeze one clean, narrow win in the cups during 2025.
| Team | Goals | Wins | Clean sheets |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tottenham | 16 | 2 (20%) | 1 |
| Liverpool | 29 | 6 (60%) | 1 |
| Date | Competition | Home | Score | Away |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 27 Apr 2025 | Premier League | Liverpool | 5–1 | Tottenham |
| 06 Feb 2025 | League Cup | Liverpool | 4–0 | Tottenham |
| 08 Jan 2025 | League Cup | Tottenham | 1–0 | Liverpool |
| 22 Dec 2024 | Premier League | Tottenham | 3–6 | Liverpool |
| 05 May 2024 | Premier League | Liverpool | 4–2 | Tottenham |
That 1-0 cup win for Spurs earlier in 2025 shows they can shut the game down when their structure holds. The risk, as Forest exposed with goals from Callum Hudson‑Odoi and Ibrahim Sangare, is that when Spurs’ midfield spacing slips, opponents flood through the lines quickly.
Form lines and tempo
Across the last 10 matches, both teams average 1.4 goals scored and 1.7 conceded per game, and each has failed to score in 20% of those outings. The recent trend data underlines contrasting rhythms: Liverpool have been starting better in their last five, while Tottenham’s games are more frequently breaking open.
| Team (last 5) | Over 2.5 (%) | BTTS (Yes %) | Scored first (%) | Min/Goal For | Min/Goal Against |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tottenham | 80% | 40% | 20% | 56.3 | 64.3 |
| Liverpool | 20% | 40% | 80% | 50 | 112.5 |
Season‑long, Spurs’ matches are more chaotic: Over 2.5 has landed 69% of the time for Tottenham and 63% for Liverpool. Spurs also receive more cards (2.56 per match) and concede a similar volume of corners to the ones they win, while Liverpool’s profile is steadier. It hints at a game in which Liverpool might control phases, but Tottenham can turn any transition into a chance.
Where the goals might come
Minute‑window trends suggest an intriguing battle around the hour mark and in the closing stages. Tottenham’s most productive spell this season is minutes 46–60, while Liverpool often crest late (76–90).
| Team (season) | Shots on target | Offsides (against) | Shot conversion | Top minute window |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tottenham | 52 | 31 | 48% | 46–60 (25%) |
| Liverpool | 70 | 31 | 37% | 76–90 (40%) |
Liverpool’s last five underline that pattern: they’ve scored first in 80% of those games and have not needed chaos to find goals. For Spurs, the question is whether they can keep the middle third compact enough to avoid being picked off, then exploit the post‑interval surge that the metrics suggest.
Model view and match scenarios
Kickwie’s model tilts slightly towards the visitors and expects chances at both ends.
| Market | Pick | Probability |
|---|---|---|
| Match Winner (1X2) | Liverpool | 57% |
| Over/Under 2.5 | OVER 2.5 | 57% |
| BTTS | BTTS: YES | 64% |
A Liverpool win would validate their recent habit of controlling the first phase and finishing stronger, easing the sting of Brighton away. A Spurs win would steady the post‑Forest narrative and give Frank’s project a timely jolt of credibility against a top‑six peer. A draw? It would underline what the data already says: two good teams with clear weapons and equally clear flaws, neither quite ready to run away from fixtures like this.
If you track models and markets across Europe, Kickwie’s hub of epl predictions this week is a useful companion for trend-spotting and cross‑league context.