Ameobi rescues Newcastle to stretch fine run

Shola Ameobi came off the bench to ensure Newcastle’s unbeaten start to the season remained intact with an entertaining draw against Tottenham Hotspur at St James’ Park.

The substitute blasted home his side’s second equaliser four minutes from time as a pulsating encounter ended all square.

Jermain Defoe looked to have won it for the visitors when he fired past Tim Krul with 68 minutes gone, but Ameobi denied Spurs a fifth successive Barclays Premier League win to the delight of the majority of the 46,420 crowd.

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Rafael van der Vaart had put Harry Redknapp’s men ahead from the penalty spot five minutes before the break, but Demba Ba’s equaliser – his fifth goal in three games – within three minutes of the restart set the scene for the late drama.

Newcastle ran out knowing they were facing perhaps the toughest test of their campaign to date, but confident that they could come through it.

For 40 minutes, they gave as good as they got in a game in which the impetus repeatedly shifted between the sides.

Spurs started brightly with Gareth Bale having been switched to the right wing to chance his arm against makeshift left-back Ryan Taylor.

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In the event, the former Wigan man coped admirably and long before half-time Bale returned to his more usual position on the left, leaving Taylor to deal with Luka Modric instead.

The visitors passed the ball confidently in the opening exchanges with Newcastle old boy Scott Parker and Modric prominent, and Emmanuel Adebayor, whose participation was in doubt because of a hamstring injury, stretching the home defence at regular intervals.

That said, chances were few and far between, and although Krul had to race from his line to snatch van der Vaart’s seventh-minute through-ball off Adebayor’s toe and then pluck a looping header from Jake Livermore out of the air four minutes later, there were few genuine scares for the Dutchman.

As the half wore on, the Magpies warmed to their task and with wingers Gabriel Obertan and Jonas Gutierrez causing problems and Yohan Cabaye and Cheick Tiote edging things in the middle of the pitch, they started to threaten.

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Leon Best only just failed to get a toe to Ryan Taylor’s driven 13th-minute free-kick and Ba headed straight at goalkeeper Brad Friedel from Cabaye’s cross 11 minutes later.

But the breakthrough arrived five minutes before half-time, and it did so to the horror of Newcastle defender Steven Taylor.

Taylor tracked Adebayor’s run into the penalty area and saw the former Togo international go down under his challenge.

Referee Lee Probert took his time with the defender protesting his innocence but eventually pointed to the spot and, amid a cacophony of boos from the home fans, van der Vaart sent Krul the wrong way to open the scoring.

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Ba headed high over from Cabaye’s 42nd-minute cross as the Magpies attempted to drag themselves back into the game, but they headed for the dressing room on the whistle knowing they had a tough task on their hands.

Newcastle needed just three minutes to get themselves back on terms, and they did so in some style as Gutierrez produced a wonderful, mazy run.

The Argentina international skipped pass Modric and then full-back Kyle Walker on the left before crossing for the unmarked Ba to slide in and send the ball goalwards, where Friedel could only carry it into his own net.

Sensing an opportunity to win the game, the Magpies piled forward in numbers, but in doing so opened themselves up to Spurs’ pace on the counter attack.

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Adebayor fired across the face of goal and van der Vaart shot straight at Krul with the home defence struggling to keep the visitors at bay.

But in the meantime, Obertan had whistled a drive just wide of Friedel’s far post in a frenetic passage of play.

Redknapp opted for even more pace with 63 minutes gone when he replaced van der Vaart with Defoe, and the newcomer wasted little time in making his mark.

Having already forced Krul to sprint from his line to cut out Parker’s through-ball, he turned smartly on the midfielder’s pass to thump a left-footed shot past the goalkeeper and into the bottom corner.

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Newcastle manager Alan Pardew threw on Hatem Ben Arfa and Ameobi after withdrawing Ba and Best with 19 minutes remaining, and it was the home side which finished the stronger.

Friedel had to pull off fine saves from Tiote and then Ryan Taylor as time ran down, but there was nothing he could do to prevent Ameobi from snatching a point with his drilled 86th-minute strike.

Either Defoe and Fabricio Coloccini might have won it in a breathless conclusion, but the spoils were ultimately shared.

Taylor admitted the referee was right to award a penalty against him but believes Newcastle’s determination showed as they twice fought back to stay unbeaten.

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“I think it was a penalty, I made contact and I’m disappointed with that,” Taylor said.

“But credit to the lads, we came back and it was fully deserved.”

Spurs manager Redknapp said: “When you are 2-1 up with minutes to go, you are looking to win the game, for sure, so it becomes disappointing.

“Last year, we came here and we were losing with a couple of minutes to go and we grabbed an equaliser, so you are delighted.

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“But when you are winning so late in the game, you are really looking to make sure you get the three points if you can.”

Spurs lost captain Ledley King to an abductor muscle injury before the break, and he now faces several weeks on the sidelines.

Redknapp said: “He plays on Saturday and he comes out the following Friday and has a little jog around for five minutes and then plays on a Saturday, so really his body is nowhere near fit.”