Despite a committed performance from start to finish, our young Blues signed off our Under-18s Premier League season with a hard-fought goalless draw at Tottenham Hotspur’s training ground on Saturday afternoon.
Hassan Sulaiman's side worked tirelessly from start to finish, aiming to end the season on a high.
Despite strong moments throughout the match and coming close to breaking the deadlock, Spurs' defence remained resolute. The game was evenly contested, with the home side also creating chances, but our defenders stood firm.
The final result was a goalless draw, and we head back to Cobham for the last time this season with the points shared. With all fixtures now played, the Blues currently sit in third place in the Under-18s Premier League table.
Patiently building
This London derby got off to a steady start as both sides cautiously assessed the tempo, each looking to assert dominance and find an early breakthrough.
We began applying pressure early, with promising runs from the energetic Ibrahim Rabbaj unsettling the Spurs defence inside the penalty area. Despite the intensity, Tottenham held firm and dealt with the early threat well.
In the opening stages, it felt like we were steadily building momentum. We dominated possession and pushed forward with intent. Frankie Runham, working out wide, was lively throughout, making dangerous runs and weaving his way into the box. Yet again, our opponents' backline proved difficult to break down, though there were encouraging glimpses for the Blues.
As the match progressed, the home side began to grow into the game. Tynan Thompson emerged as a bright spark for Spurs, using the wing effectively to cause problems going forward. However, our defender Joseph Wheeler-Henry kept a close watch on him, shielding goalkeeper Jack Austin from serious danger.
Austin was eventually called into action, reacting sharply to a low, close-range strike from Reiss Elliot-Parris. The Chelsea keeper stayed composed and gathered the ball cleanly.
Approaching the half-hour mark, a cagey spell developed as both teams struggled to create clear-cut opportunities. We nearly found the opener when Harry McGlinchey floated a ball into the penalty area. Sol Gordon met it with a flicked header, but the Spurs player between the sticks, Samuel Archer, was well-positioned and caught it comfortably.
Chances remained hard to come by. Runham had a promising moment inside the box, firing a left-footed strike on goal, but Archer reacted quickly and made another strong save.
Arguably the best chance of the half came from the hosts. Thompson, again influential, cut inside and unleashed a powerful curling effort. Austin had to leap to tip the shot away, his gloves stung by the strike as he kept the scores level.
As we approached half-time, the tempo lifted and both teams seemed to settle into their rhythm. Our midfielder Reggie Walsh launched a long, looping ball forward, which Gordon did well to reach with a flicked finish - only to see it rise over the crossbar.
That proved to be the final opportunity of the first half, as the teams went into the interval goalless, each still searching for the breakthrough after the restart.
Still searching
Chelsea came out for the second half with the same intent and energy that had built in the closing stages of the first. Rabbaj made a clever weaving run before setting up Runham for a low-driven shot, but the effort skimmed just wide across the face of goal, denying him the opener.
Riding that momentum, another opportunity followed not long after. Substitute Kobe Barbour, introduced by Sulaiman, made an intelligent and rapid run down the wing. Spotting Walsh in space, he squared it to him, but the midfielder's powerful effort struck the outside of the post. It was impressive work from the young Blues, and the signs were promising.
Chelsea were truly growing into the London derby, threatening more than at any point in the afternoon. Barbour remained lively, this time collecting the ball in midfield, shrugging off his marker and unleashing a venomous strike from distance. It looked destined to ripple the net, but for the second time this afternoon, the woodwork denied Chelsea. His shot crashed against the post and spared Spurs once again.
Almost immediately after, the Blues produced another dangerous move. Rabbaj floated in a pinpoint cross into the penalty area where Walsh met it with a volley, but his attempt found only the side netting. At that point, a goal felt within touching distance.
As we passed the 70-minute mark, Chelsea continued to apply pressure, growing more confident on away soil. McGlinchey delivered a looping corner, and towering defender Olutayo Subuloye rose to meet it with a thunderous header, only to see it narrowly clear the bar.
However, Spurs had a moment of their own through a swift counter-attack. Substitute Luca Williams-Barnett surged upfield and let fly with a powerful strike. Thankfully, Austin was alert and produced a bold, reflex save, tipping the shot onto the crossbar before the ball ricocheted out of danger.
In the closing stages, we searched for a last-minute winner, including a return to action for Shaun Wade after his long-term injury. Despite the late push, Spurs remained compact and disciplined, forcing the Blues to settle for a point in our final fixture of the 2024/25 season.
The teams
Chelsea (4-3-3): Jack Austin; Joseph Wheeler-Henry, Lewi Richards, Olutayo Subuloye, Harry McGlinchey; Ollie Harrison (c), Frankie Runham, Reggie Walsh; Ibrahim Rabbaj (Shaun Wade 69), Sol Gordon, Hezekiah Grimwade (Kobe Barbour h-t)
Unused subs: Hudson Sands, Jeremiah Berkeley-Agyepong, Yahya Idrissi
Booked: Wheeler-Henry 31, Runham 90+3
Tottenham Hotspur (4-2-3-1): Samual Archer, Luca Furnell-Gill (Dan Batty 61), Harry Byrne, Samal Bangura, Elijah Upson, Junai Byfield, Miracle Adewole (Leon Myrtaj 78), Tye Hall (Luca Williams-Barnett h-t), Reiss Elliot-Parris (Ellis Lehane 61), George Feeney, Tynan Thompson
Unused sub: Dylan Thompson
Booked: Byfield 90+3