Everton and Tottenham Hotspur both missed a chance to move up to second place in the English Premier League as they shared a battling 0-0 draw at Goodison Park yesterday.
Spurs climbed to fourth, level on 20 points with second-placed Chelsea and Liverpool which is third. Everton stayed seventh on 19 points, level with Manchester City and Southampton. Arsenal leads with 25 points.
The visitors from London dominated the first half and although they created a host of scoring chances before the break they were unable to make the vital breakthrough.
"It was very tight, a good game. We had good moments and a great first half with pressing and good attacking combinations and we should have gone ahead," Spurs manager Andre Villas-Boas told the BBC.
Everton manager Roberto Martinez told Sky Sports: "Spurs are a very good side and work very hard when they lose the ball and that upset our rhythm.
"But we found that rhythm in the second half."
Although Everton rallied after halftime, apart from a shot from former Spurs man Steven Pienaar that went narrowly wide of the far post it rarely threatened Hugo Lloris's goal.
The France goalkeeper stayed on the pitch until the end despite taking an accidental knee in the head from Everton striker Romelu Lukaku in the latter stages. Lloris's injury prompted a lengthy delay and the addition of nine minutes of stoppage time.
Villas-Boas said: "Hugo still doesn't remember the incident with Lukaku. He lost consciousness there but he seemed assertive and determined to continue and showed great character and personality."
In the day's other match Cardiff City was playing Swansea City, the first ever Welsh derby in English football's top flight.
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