
Audio By Carbonatix
A pair of headers from Fabian Schar and Nick Woltemade sent holders Newcastle United into the Carabao Cup quarter-finals at the expense of Tottenham.
Spurs have hurt a number of sides with their aerial ability this season, particularly at set-plays, but the much-changed hosts gave Thomas Frank's team a taste of their own medicine at St James' Park.
Newcastle took the lead midway through the first half when Schar easily rose above Lucas Bergvall to head them in front from Sandro Tonali's corner.
Spurs players protested to referee Chris Kavanagh as Tonali took the corner just as defender Djed Spence got to his feet after putting his boot back on, but the goal stood.
Woltemade doubled his side's lead with his sixth goal of the season after the German met Joe Willock's scooped cross and nodded past goalkeeper Antonin Kinsky, who missed the ball completely.
Spurs went close to immediately pulling one back when midfielder Pape Sarr's first-time effort forced Aaron Ramsdale into a flying save to his left.
But Newcastle saw the game out to reach the last eight of the competition for the fourth consecutive season.
Newcastle analysis: Geordies dream of further Wembley glory
The fourth round has traditionally been a graveyard for the Carabao Cup holders in recent years.
Manchester City were dumped out at this stage in 2021, while Liverpool and Manchester United followed in 2022 and 2023 respectively.
But Newcastle never looked like joining them on Wednesday night.
Captain Bruno Guimaraes talked about "creating history" once again by defending the trophy, and although head coach Eddie Howe made eight changes, those who came into the team clearly got the message.
There was a blend of six survivors from the side that ended Newcastle's 70-year wait for a major domestic trophy last season alongside five of the club's summer signings.
And it worked.
By the time German forward Woltemade made it 2-0, the home support were already singing - and dreaming - about a Wembley return in the March showpiece.
Newcastle have a lot of work to do to reach a third successive final, but Geordies - and their fans - still clearly believe.
What next for these teams?
Newcastle travel to the London Stadium to take on West Ham in the Premier League on Sunday, 2 November (14:00 GMT), before welcoming Athletic Club to St James' Park in the Champions League on Wednesday, 5 November (20:00 GMT).
Spurs host Chelsea at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in the Premier League on Saturday, 1 November (17:30 GMT), and stay on home soil to play Copenhagen in the Champions League on Tuesday, 4 November (20:00 GMT).
Latest Stories
-
Congress passes war powers measure for first time, rebuking Trump’s war with Iran
2 hours -
World Cup: Iran’s US entry terms changed for final group game
2 hours -
Spence appears not to shake hands with Partey
2 hours -
Trump to attend World Cup final and present trophy
2 hours -
A/R: Police bust suspected human trafficking ring, arrest 186 including 100 foreign nationals
2 hours -
World Cup: Should Ghana have been awarded a penalty against England?
2 hours -
Deschamps returns to France after death of his mother
3 hours -
Kunal Shah: The Indian entrepreneur taking charge of WhatsApp
3 hours -
Hundreds of schools in UK plan closures ahead of red heat alerts
3 hours -
Spider which uses spring trap to capture prey discovered in Australia
3 hours -
Tech stocks tumble on concerns over AI spending
3 hours -
US top court says Rastafarian man cannot sue prison guards who cut his dreadlocks
3 hours -
Germany rail network comes to complete halt nationwide due to IT malfunction
4 hours -
2026 World Cup: ‘They were very compact’ – Rice salutes Ghana after England stalemate
4 hours -
Google’s YouTube settles social media addiction case with teen
4 hours