Christian Eriksen proved his worth to Tottenham Hotspur once again, as his two free-kick's helped them come from behind twice to draw 2-2 away against Swansea City.

Team news

Following the defeat to Southampton last weekend, Gary Monk made a couple of slight changes to his starting 11, recalling Jefferson Montero in place of Jack Cork, and Angel Rangel in place of Kyle Naughton, meaning the right back wouldn't get to feature against his former club.

Mauricio Pochettino made two changes from the Spurs side that claimed a 1-1 draw against AS Monaco on Thursday, both in the defensive area, bringing Kyle Walker and Ben Davies in for Kieran Trippier and Danny Rose respectively.

Swans take early lead

Having gone the whole of September without scoring a goal from open play, it took the Swans just four days of October and 15 minutes of the game to find their first of this month.

Andre Ayew was the goalscorer, but owed a huge amount of gratitude to Montero, who capitalised on Walker's bad positioning to find room, and pick out Ayew in the middle of the area. Under minimal pressure from those around him, the Ghanian placed a comfortable header past Hugo Lloris, giving his side the lead.

Fully in the knowledge that their North London rivals were running riot at home to Manchester United, thanks largely to songs from the Swansea fans, Spurs sparked into life after going behind.

Two quick goals

Erik Lamela had a shot blocked from the edge of the area, minutes before Eriksen scored his first of the game to level things up. A huge slice of luck appeared to have gone his way, with the ball looking like it deflected off the wall and into the net, however replays showed the Eriksen's brilliant curling effort had simply wrong-footed Lukasz Fabianski.

Unfortunately for the visitors, they didn't stay level for long, with Swansea's second goal coming from the most unlikely of sources. Jonjo Shelvey's inswinging corner was met by Harry Kane, who had a routine clearance on the cards, only to slice the ball directly into his own net.

There were further chances for Spurs to level the game before the interval, with Kane's low shot blocked by Fabianski, moments before the 'keeper managed to claw Eriksen's second free-kick of the game away from his top left-hand corner.

That same man was the last to threaten before half-time, Eriksen taking the ball from Lamela on the inside, before a crucial deflection from Ashley Williams saw his shot edge just wide of the post.

Tentative start to the second half

Neither team looked like scoring for a while in the second 45, with Swansea comfortable in the lead, and Spurs wary of any potential counter attacks.

There were chances, however, with Kane forcing Fabianski into a smart save soon after the restart, and Bafetimbi Gomis heading over the bar at the other end.

Swansea did enjoy more pressure on goal than their opponents, but failed to make chances pay, with Ki and Ayew among midfielders that saw chances go amiss.

Eriksen rescues point for Spurs

They were eventually put to cost for those missed chances, as Eriksen once again brought Spurs back level, on 65 minutes. There was no error of judgement from Fabianski this time around, just brilliance from the Dane, as he curled a stunning effort into the top corner.

Spurs' second goal seemed to knock the stuffing out of Swansea, who spent much of the rest of the game on the backfoot, looking to secure a point. Substitute Clinton N'Jie was looking lively, but was left frustrated after nobody latched onto his dangerous cross, following him running onto Dele Alli's saved effort.

Despite the new-found vigour from the away side, Swansea did go incredibly close to winning the game at the death, hitting the crossbar. Federico Fernandez was the unlucky man, getting on the end of Ki's cross, but unable to keep his header low enough, as the game finished 2-2.

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