Southgate opted for a five-man midfield with Mohamad Shawky making his Boro debut. He was to combine with Lee Cattermole and Fabio Rochemback in the centre with George Boateng and Stewart Downing on the right and left. Youngster Graeme Owens featured on the bench, a place given to him largely due to Gary O'Neill being cup-tied. Boro's only fit regular striker, Dong Gook Lee, was to plough a lone furrow up-front. Southgate drafted in two Boro Academy players, Tom Craddock and Ben Hutchinson, to support the Korean should his side need goals. Jones, Young (Davies 76), Riggott, Wheater, Taylor, Cattermole, Boateng, Rochemback (Owens 74), Shawky (Craddock 46), Downing, Lee, Schwarzer, Hutchinson THE FIRST HALF The players made their way out of the tunnel and into a night that wouldn't have looked out of place in a 1970's Hammer Horror Movie. Enter Jermaine Defoe as Spurs set the game in motion and immediately attacked. Defoe in particular was lively and he won a free-kick on the edge of the Boro area within the first minute. Gareth Bale took the free-kick but Shawky blocked the shot with his head. The ball broke back to the Spurs man but his shot deflected for a corner, Lee Cattermole turning his effort around the post. From the set-piece the ball bobbled around the box before a Pascal Chimbonda effort was deflected wide. An in-swinging corner ensued and Michael Dawson connected to it. The ball deflected again for a third successive set-play. After this corner was cleared Chimbonda volleyed a dangerous ball back across goal but an intelligent clearance from Riggott prevented Defoe from stealing in. The ensuing shot from distance from Younes Kaboul proved that the Spurs man was a defender - the ball going hopelessly wide. On four Fabio Rochemback lined the ball up as if he was going to play it square to Lee Cattermole but instead he tried to trick Paul Robinson by trying a shot from thirty-five yards. The England keeper was up to the effort however, palming the ball away from the corner. Nothing came from the set-piece. On eight Spurs' mobility undid Boro's backline more easily than Peter Stringfellow undoing a bra as Defoe passed to Jermaine Jenas. Jenas' first touch was competent but his shot was woeful - his side-footed effort hardly challenging Boro goalkeeper Brad Jones. You could tell he used to play for Newcastle. Three minutes later Spurs threatened again, this time through Defoe. Teemu Tainio's cross found the England front-man on the edge of the area and Jones came bravely off his line to meet him. Jones kept his composure and managed to catch Defoe's shot. On fourteen Michael Dawson attacked a Spurs' cross from the right and headed the ball narrowly over the bar. It was a warning for Boro as Dawson was being a thorn in Boro's side. Spurs were dominating proceedings at this stage and on nineteen Bale showed his youth against Boateng. He received a diagonal ball and managed to accelerate away from the Boro midfielder. In doing so however he forced the ball on to his weaker right foot and his effort on goal was easily saved by Jones, despite it being taken only six yards out. On twenty-two Young threw himself in front of Defoe before he was about to unleash his shot from twenty yards out. Where Defoe would usually hit the target, the distraction caused him to shoot wide. Boro were giving balls away more cheaply than a diseased gigolo and this allowed Spurs to come back at them time and time again. Boro were also not stringing enough passes together and it was this that was hampering them. On twenty-six another wicked ball from the right hand side allowed Kaboul to steal in with a header. His shot was saved by Jones, who initially spilled it and was glad to see no one following up in the six-yard box. On twenty-nine Middlesbrough escaped once more. Defoe stole into the area and crossed the ball to Tainio who was standing six yards out. If he had headed the ball down then Spurs would have broken the deadlock. But he didn't, he headed it straight towards the goal. And Jones managed a save. Our midfield five might as well have been replaced with the Jackson Five they were so lacking in rhythm. Perhaps the Diamond Lights of the big city were overawing as the players were less in tune than Glenn Hoddle and Chris Waddle. Either way they were rabbits in the headlights to the baying dogs of Spurs. Or put simply where Boro were rabbits, Spurs were rabid. On thirty-two Defoe had another shot which this time was blocked by Shawky. The Boro debutant was doing some excellent defending and was keeping his team in the game. Spurs were getting closer and closer however and luck was starting to turn their way. A lucky deflection allowed the ball to loop over Boro's backline and break to Defoe. From the penalty spot, he headed the ball towards goal. He turned to celebrate the opening goal of the game as he didn't expect Jones to tip the ball on to the crossbar. It was an inspired save from a goalkeeper in inspired form. Boro's second shot of the game came on forty-four. Wheater won the initial header from a Downing cross and nodded it down to Riggott. He took the ball on his right foot, then his left, before blasting his effort over the bar from eight yards out. It was a golden opportunity wasted. The halftime whistle couldn't come soon enough for beleaguered Boro and although Boro's defending had been strong, they had been under the cosh throughout the half. It was to be hoped that the second forty-five would show an improvement. THE SECOND HALF Southgate opted for a change of formation in the second half - switching from 4-5-1 to 4-4-2. Shawky can consider himself unlucky that he was replaced by Tom Craddock but Boro needed more attacking options. This was Craddock's second senior Boro appearance, having played on the final day of the 2005-2006 season at Fulham. Improvements were almost instantaneous. Craddock went out to the right to pick up possession and he passed the ball inside to Downing. Everyone expected the cross but Boro's England international decided to shoot, forcing Robinson into conceding the corner. Nothing came from this. However normal service quickly resumed - with a repeat of "Two Pints of Lager and a Packet of Crisps". Sorry that's BBC3. At the Lane, Spurs broke and Defoe tried another shot but it deflected beyond the by-line for a goal-kick. On fifty Craddock got in front of Kaboul and forced the Spurs defender into conceding another corner. Rochemback's ball found Craddock at the near-post but it was at an awkward height. The young striker had to resort to hitting the ball clumsily with his thigh. It went high and wide. A minute later Craddock flummoxed Kaboul again, drawing him towards him with all the exotic charm of a Boro belly dancer. This allowed the striker to win a corner off the Spurs' man. Nothing came from this. Fifty-five in and Bale had another opportunity from a free-kick. From twenty-five yards he whipped in a ball more wicked than Marks & Spencer's Deluxe Chocolate Dessert (with probably the same amount of tedious accompanied heavy breathing). The resulting bounce almost outfoxed Jones. He initially spilt the ball but managed to hang on at the second attempt. Defoe would have been flagged offside anyway. Three minutes later Downing whipped an equally dangerous ball into the Spurs penalty area. Dawson got up highest however and cleared the danger. Controversy reigned on the hour as Aaron Lennon went down under the challenge of Wheater in the box. Penalty shouts reverberated around the Lane but the referee was having none of it, believing Wheater had touched the ball before the man. A profitless corner was all Spurs managed to gain. A Wheater shot was charged down on sixty-three by Jenas. From this Spurs broke, with Defoe heading the ball down into Boro's six yard box. Boro managed to clear. On sixty-five Brad Jones was tested again as Defoe headed the ball towards goal from six yards out. Jones caught the effort. This was to be Defoe's last contribution of the game as Martin Jol went against the crowd by deciding to replace him with Robbie Keane in the sixty-seventh minute. On seventy-one the ambiguity of the offside rule reared its ugly head once more as Spurs broke the deadlock. The ball was passed down the left towards Aaron Lennon, who was two yards offside. It didn't reach him however and it found Keane, who passed to Gareth Bale. He made no mistake from six yards out. Boro were incensed but the goal stood - the ball had clearly been intended for Lennon who had been offside and this was why Middlesbrough felt aggrieved. TOTTENHAM HOTSPUR 1 (Bale, 71) MIDDLESBROUGH 0 And this was just the start as Boro's concentration, like in so many other matches this season, wavered once more. On seventy-four good play from Lennon down the right hand side allowed him to get away from Rochemback all too easily. He clipped the ball into the box and Tom Huddlestone headed the ball through Jones' legs for the second goal of the game. TOTTENHAM HOTSPUR 2 (Huddlestone, 74) MIDDLESBROUGH 0 Shortly afterwards Rochemback was replaced with Graeme Owens but there was a feeling of too little too late. Two minutes later and Young was replaced by Andrew Davies, Southgate possibly having one eye on Sunday's trip to Everton. Spurs were happy to run down the clock but on eighty-one the ball fell perfectly for Dong-Gook Lee, who was twenty-five yards out. His connection was woeful however and he blasted his shot high and wide. The final minutes of the game were as tepid as a plate of Little Chef chips as Spurs were comfortable and Boro could find no answer. On eighty-seven David Wheater had a header that flashed just wide of the target but in reality no one really cared. The game was dead and buried and everyone was just waiting for Boro's elimination. Entering into stoppage time, Didier Zokora had a great opportunity to score a third for Spurs but he pulled the trigger wide of the target. At the other end Downing picked out Lee from a deep position but the Korean couldn't get a toe-poke on it, the ball drifting harmlessly into the arms of Paul Robinson. In the final minute Downing whipped an out-swinging corner into the box and Wheater connected to it powerfully. His effort glanced narrowly wide. This was the last action of the game and Boro were out of the Carling Cup. Boro's bold and adventurous second-half approach was undone by a poor refereeing decision. But in reality that is a poor excuse as Spurs deserved their victory. Dominating for an hour, Boro merely matched them for the other thirty. That's not to say there was not passion and determination from a depleted Boro side but the goal that killed us off, Spurs' second, resulted from another lapse in concentration. Defensively Middlesbrough were strong but up-front they were toothless. This needs addressing in time for Everton but with injury following injury it is hard to see from where the goals will come. As for this evening - Boro's best route back into Europe has once again been snuffed out. Man of the Match: Brad Jones. Nervous against Northampton, he was superlative against Spurs. Had it not been for his magnificent first-half saves, particularly from Defoe, Boro would have been dead and buried at half-time. 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Excellent report....Bad luck lads.