Sunderland pulled off a narrow but deserved 1–0 victory over Tottenham Hotspur at the Stadium of Light on Sunday 12 April 2026, claiming back‑to‑back Premier League wins and denting Spurs’ slim European hopes. The only goal of the game came on 61 minutes through Nordi Mukiele, whose deflected strike proved enough for Regis Le Bris’ side to grind out three points in a tense Round 32 clash.
Match Overview
| Field | Detail |
|---|---|
| Tournament | Premier League – Round 32 |
| Match | Sunderland vs Tottenham |
| Date | 12 April 2026 |
| Kick‑off | 13:00 UTC |
| Half-Time | 0 – 0 |
| Full-Time | 1 – 0 |
| Venue | Stadium of Light, Sunderland |
Cautious first half, chances for Spurs
The opening 45 minutes were open and scrappy, with both sides showing energy but lacking cutting edge. Tottenham created the better openings, with Brian Brobbey, Richarlison and Dominic Solanke all seeing half‑chances go begging, while an early penalty decision was awarded and then overturned after VAR review, leaving Spurs frustrated. Sunderland absorbed the pressure well, defended compactly and limited clear‑cut opportunities, meaning the halftime whistle arrived with the score still locked at 0–0.

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Mukiele’s deflected winner
The match was decided 11 minutes into the second half when Nordi Mukiele drove forward from right‑back and let fly with a powerful left‑footed shot from outside the box. The ball took a heavy deflection off van de Ven, wrong‑footing Tottenham goalkeeper Guglielmo Kinsky and looping into the net for a 1–0 lead. The goal was harsh on Spurs, but Sunderland’s discipline and defensive shape ensured the margin stayed intact as the game chewed through several minutes of added time.
Goals Scorer
| Minute | Team | Event description |
|---|---|---|
| 61′ | Sunderland | Nordi Mukiele |
The loss marked Roberto de Zerbi’s first match in charge of Tottenham, following his recent appointment after Igor Tudor’s departure. The result extended Spurs’ poor run, leaving them with just 30 points from 32 games and deepening concerns about their mid‑table slide and fading ambitions in the competition. For Sunderland, the hard‑fought win pushed them to 46 points, underlining Le Bris’ project of building a more solid, resilient side capable of grinding out results against top‑flight opposition.
Source: sofascore


