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Don Nordhorn: One Fierce Sprint Car Competitor

Published in Racing
Sunday, 19 January 2025 11:00

Indiana has produced its share of great sprint car drivers and by the late 1960s many knowledgeable fans from across the country were aware of the exploits of Dick Gaines and Bob Kinser.

Given their list of accomplishments, no one was surprised when these two giants were enshrined in the National Sprint Car Hall of Fame. Yet, one of the fiercest competitors these men faced was actually a teammate. That driver was an unassuming man from Evansville, Ind., named Don Nordhorn.

Born on January 16, 1934, Nordhorn is 91 years old and 50 years have passed since he walked away from the sport. His father Henry was an insurance salesman while his mother Alma was a homemaker. Thus, there was nothing to suggest he would devote much of his life to auto racing. As one could expect he has reached a point where it takes an extra minute or two now to recall some of the key moments in his stellar career. It is also true that he isnt one to boast.

He was a man of his times, and like so many who ultimately made their mark in the speed game it all began humbly.

When asked when he began his career he says I think I was around 20 years old. I started in an old junker, and I ran a Chrysler with a Plymouth body. His most common early haunt was the Evansville Speedrome where he competed with the United Stock Car Racing Assn.

A companion track for the USCRA was Kentuckys Henderson Speedway just south of Evansville on U.S. 41. Nordhorn first appears in the results during the 1954 season but quickly found his land legs. Early in the 1955 campaign he competed in a car sponsored by Leonard Auto Parts but accepted a ride with Evansville owner Del Burkes.

However, perhaps most important to his budding career was a chance to substitute for talented Ken Coffey in Gordon Ghormleys No. G-2.

Nordhorns first taste of victory came in a USCRA Australian Pursuit race on Sept. 3, 1955, and two weeks later he topped the 25-lap feature at the Speedrome. The thought of being a professional race car driver never entered his mind. As his career was getting underway, he was in his words a paint and body man at Hickeys Garage.

Don Nordhorn (Tri State Area Racing History collection)

There were three of us and each of us had our own customers, he said. It made it more personal. I did the work for Signal Delivery, who leased trucks to Whirlpool. They eventually wanted me to come to work for them and at that time we were actually located in the Whirlpool Plant.

At this time, he also took a more active role in the USCRA and in April 1956 was named secretary/treasure of the club. Now a true star, at the Speedrome he posted four 50-lap wins in the Ghormley entry and was declared by the Evansville Press to be the driver of the year.

Off the track substantial changes were afoot. The club was anxious to find new digs, and as result a new race track known as Evansville Speedway was born north of the city on U.S. 41.

Its funny how things play out. The new facility bordered a small farm owned by a man named Ed Helfrich who had no interest in auto racing. His son, current Tri-State Speedway proprietor Tommy Helfrich picks up the story.

My dad moved in 1954 or 1955, and he came from a farm family. He was poor and he was working at Swift Packing company in Evansville, and he had 40 acres and an old John Deere tractor, Tommy Helfrich explained. They started building this track right next to our property and he didnt even go down there. They got it open in 1957 so one Saturday night they had a tremendous rain storm, and everybody got caught in the infield and they had no way to pull anybody out. One of the drivers said, I think that guy up there has a little tractor. They walked up there and got my dad, and he got them out.

A simple good deed changed Ed Helfrichs life.

Right after my dad helped out somebody thought, Hey, this could be handy, Tommy Helfrich said. They figured since he has a tractor maybe he could work the track a little bit. The bigger problem was all of these people got together and built the speedway but none of the bills were paid. The club was now running into all kinds of problems, and there was a lawsuit against the track.

An attorney from Princeton, Ind., contacted my dad and asked if he would rent the track. Then that went on for a while and then somebody got crosswise with my dad, and he said, either sell it to me or Im done. That was in 1960, so depending on how you look at it that was either a blessing or a curse.

Fiscal issues aside, Don Nordhorn had every reason to love the place now known as Tri-State Speedway. He won the very first event held at the track on June 22, 1957, and when he made the transition to the supermodifieds it was more of the same. By 1961 he was named to the USCRA Board of Directors and captured the first supermodified event held at Tri-State that same year.

In a story of ongoing success at the Haubstadt, Ind., oval, he was the 1964 USCRA supermodified champion.

While the principal players in the club remained the same by 1965 races at Tri-State were under the Hoosier Auto Racing Club umbrella. The name change reflected the recognition that stock cars, albeit loosely defined, were no longer the premier in the area. Yet, at the same time the use of the word sprint car began to enter the lexicon.

Nordhorn, for his part, even confuses matters by reporting that Ross Moore owned his first sprint car. With Moore, an excavating engineer from Bridgeport, Ill., Don was nearly unstoppable at Tri State. In 1965, he won nine times on his way to his second straight championship. Putting another important win on his résumé, in early September he topped a 100-lap South Central Indiana Racing Assn feature at Bloomington.

The 1966 season was a time of new opportunities. Nordhorn had previously suggested a preference for remaining close to home, but before long he was straying farther away from his base. There was one big reason for the change.

Dizz Wilson called me and he asked me if I would drive one of his cars, Nordhorn explained. He had two cars at the time, and he already had Dick Gaines driving for him.

Wilson had a well-earned reputation for firing drivers who did not perform up to his exacting standards. Apparently, Nordhorn passed muster.

I got along with him pretty well, he said with a chuckle, and I lasted with him for several years, but Dick drove for him longer than me.

Nordhorn was still winning with Ross Moore, but he was also racing extensively with Wilson. On May 30 Nordhorn signed in with Dizz for a 400-lap open competition race at Ellis Speedway in Reed, Ky. Nordhorn claimed the $1,000 top prize by holding off Gaines and Georgia pavement ace Herman Wise. Wins came in long-distance tilts at Tri-State, he was victorious again at Bloomington, and he also fared well with IMCA at the Terre Haute Action Track.

The 1967 season proved to be another banner year. He found paydirt at Tri-State six times, an equal number at Bloomington where he reeled off four straight wins in May and early June, and he also grabbed the brass ring at Lawrenceburg. However, if there was a true signature win it came on Aug. 5 when Wilson and Nordhorn claimed the last 500-lap sprint car race at Eldora Speedway.

I looked down at my oil gauge and it was down to zero and I thought the engine was going to blow, Nordhorn recalled. I was watching the scorers because they sat up there and they flipped a card over every time you ran a lap. I looked up and saw I was ahead by 19 laps. Every now and then you would see a car sitting there with a bunch of steam coming out of it because their radiator was getting full of mud, and they were overheating.

I was careful not to get behind a wheel where they were throwing mud back. Still, I thought I had better stop to see what Dizz had to say about this lack of oil pressure. So, I did. I came in and pulled it out of gear and sat there idling. Dizz came over and I pointed down at the oil gauge, Nordhorn continued. He took two steps back and motioned me on. Somebody had a push truck right behind me. Coming in cost me three laps but it turns out that the oil gauge wasnt working. Keeping the radiator clean is what won me the race.

The feature took a bit over three hours to complete and, in the aftermath, Nordhorn quipped to Greenville, Ohio, reporter Jack Willey, A thousand bucks an hour isnt too bad. It sure beats the dickens out of anything I could think of. But the working conditions could stand a little improvement. I mean it got awfully dry out there and the air conditioning wasnt working too good.

In 1967, Nordhorn also made an appearance in Lawrence Foxs sprint car, and it proved to be a harbinger of things to come. While many may have surmised that Dizz Wilson had served another driver their walking papers, in this case Nordhorn had decided to walk away.

I didnt like the way Dizz treated me, he noted. He favored Dick Gaines quite a bit. It is true that Dick raced for him for a long time and won a lot of races. Still, we would go to a race and all of a sudden, Dick would decide he wanted to drive my car, and he did.

That happened several times. He would always get new tires. It was that sort of thing. I didnt think he appreciated me, so I had a good chance to leave, and I did. When Galen Fox called me and asked me to drive his new car, I thought it was a good chance to get away from Dizz.

Don Nordhorn and team owner Sid Van Winkle. (Donnie Hardesty photo)

It turns out that the move did catch Wilson off guard. He called me and wanted to know what was wrong, Nordhorn said. But I didnt have much to say. Finally, he said I guess if you drive for a guy for three years thats enough.

With this change of scenery, Nordhorn was once again a part of a potent two-car squad with another heavy-hitter as a teammate Bob Kinser.

When he thinks back to those days Nordhorn said, I always got along with Bob. There were still a few moments that needed to be smoothed over, but both men benefitted from the mechanical wizardry of Galen Fox.

He began the 1968 season at the IMCA openers in Tampa, Fla., then hit the ground running with three wins at Bloomington to start the year. Finding the IMCA schedule to his liking he scored two wins at the high banks of Winchester and in September he topped his foes at Nashville, Tenn. He completed his year with a sterling second-place run to Bob Cleberg in the prestigious Western World Championship at Arizonas Manzanita Speedway.

Perhaps no race in his entire career was as odd as his lone appearance at the Little 500 at Anderson Speedway. Things started well when he qualified third and he led laps early. Then things turned sour. Minnesota driver Harry Kern lost his life in a four-car tangle, and shortly thereafter rain halted the proceedings.

Nordhorn had been out front but blew his engine just before the skies opened up. Although he was just a teenager at the time, this set into motion a series of events that crew member Ernie Hays remembers well.

We took the car back to Bloomington and Galen and I worked all night to take the engine out of Bob Kinsers No. 53 car and put it in the No. 52, Hays recalled. Changing an engine wasnt like it is today. The oil tank was under the seat, and it was a real process back then. We got done about 7 a.m. and split for a couple hours of sleep. I think we got back there in the afternoon to finish the race.

Unfortunately, Nordhorn was eventually black flagged in the race for losing oil. The record shows that he had led 89 laps. Later Bob showed up to go to Haubstadt and there isnt an engine in his car, Hays said. He was not a happy camper.

Nearly 57 years later, Nordhorn remembers how it went down.

Bob was really mad, and I dont blame him, Nordhorn said. I think at that time Galen was paid based on what the car made, so when he decided to go back to the Little 500 that was a financial decision.

Anyone who followed the sport realized that Don Nordhorn knew how to win. While there was a time when he eschewed any notion that he would chase the USAC trail soon others were chasing him. Suddenly it made sense. In early 1972 Tri State Speedway welcomed their star home with Don Nordhorn Night.

On his special occasion he told reporters: I found myself travelling around to different tracks about as much as if I Id been running USAC but not making as much money. I just decided to make the switch.

In November 1968, he raced with the USAC sprints in Clovis, Calif., and the following year he started 17 features for owner Bob Ziegler, as well as with Ray and Cissy Smith. The final tally found him in the 12th position in series points with four top-five finishes. He remained active in the USAC sprint car ranks through 1974.

His first sprint car win came with owner Mark Hughes at Nazareth, Pa., in 1970, and three more came over the course of his career with Evansville radiator shop owner Sid Van Winkle. In 1973, he finished third in the final standings behind Rollie Beale and Lee Kunzman.

A move to Paul Lefflers operation in 1974 seemed promising, but the car was sold out from under him and a hard tumble later in the year required some time to heal. That also provided him with some time to think. He chose to walk away.

When Tommy Helfrich speaks of Don Nordhorn he says, He was one of my heroes. He was just a common Joe, but he was so gifted. So many of the people I admire just dont have an ego. He worked all week, but on the race track, you could watch him and could see his track sense and just how smart he was. He was a natural.

Ernie Hays would go forth to work for Stewart-Hass racing but as a kid he realized he was watching someone who was just a bit different. Don was really professional, he says. He almost reminded you of an Indy car driver. He approached everything methodically and he really drove methodically.

When some of the great sprint car drivers from our past are recalled, Nordhorns name should be in the conversation. Whether dirt or pavement, short or long distance he found victory lane often.

When he thinks about his greatest rivals, he doesnt note Gaines, or Kinser, or any of the big names from USAC or IMCA. No, consistent with who he is he mentions someone from home, Donald Edward Snooky Bullock.

When asked what became of his many trophies his response is unsurprising.

I sold my house, and I had all my trophies in the top of the garage, he said. One day I was getting them down and I sat them by the entrance to the garage and a guy came by and asked if I wanted to sell them. I decided that was a good way to get rid of them.

In the end Tommy Helfrich was right, Don Nordhorn was just a common working man, who happened to do a little racing on the side he just happened to do it very well.

T. Ivan Jerome contributed to this story.

GALLERY: The 39th Chili Bowl Nationals

Published in Racing
Sunday, 19 January 2025 11:56

IMSAs Super Team Hits The Track At Daytona

Published in Racing
Sunday, 19 January 2025 12:29

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.  The Rolex 24 At Daytona annually attracts a diverse group of drivers from around the world, occasionally creating unique superteam lineups.

This year, the best example of that phenomenon can be seen in the cockpit of the No. 91 Trackhouse by TF Sport Corvette Z06 GT3.R in the Grand Touring Daytona Pro class which features IndyCar Series frontrunner Scott McLaughlin, fellow New Zealander (and recent NASCAR transplant) Shane van Gisbergen, rising stock car star Connor Zilisch, and versatile sports car pilot Ben Keating.

The common denominator between the four is General Motors.

Chevy and Eric Warren came to me with the opportunity to do this, related McLaughlin, referencing the Executive Director of GM Racing. I was like, For sure Id love to team up with Shane! Thats something Ive dreamed of for a long time, whether here in IMSA or in Australia in a Supercar.

Trackhouse Racing boss Justin Marks was keen to get on board with the collaboration, paving the way for van Gisbergens participation. And Zilisch, despite focusing full-time on the NASCAR Xfinity Series, brings an impressive skill set to the effort, including Le Mans Prototype 2 (LMP2) class wins in both the 2024 Rolex 24 and Mobil 1 Twelve Hours of Sebring with Era Motorsport.

Connor is another star coming up through the ranks, observed McLaughlin. Hes a great kid, just got his head screwed on straight. In some ways, hes like an 18-year-old kid the way he gets excited and says some things out of the blue that make you wonder what the hell that was all about. But hes quick in everything hes gotten into, and he has a super-great feel for the car. I havent seen his data, but Im looking forward to analyzing him and how he goes about his work.

Having Ben as our Bronze is awesome, McLaughlin added about Keating, one of Americas top Chevrolet dealers and also a former Rolex 24 class winner (2015, GTD). Ive always wanted to drive with Ben, to be honest. Hes a really stout Bronze.

Roar Wraps Up, Porsches Lead Final Day

Published in Racing
Sunday, 19 January 2025 13:31

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. Inclement weather failed to put a damper on the final day of IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship testing at the annual Roar Before the Rolex 24 at Daytona Intl Speedway.

While the factory Porsche Penske Motorsport Porsche 963s remained in the Daytona International Speedway garages during a rainy one-hour concluding session for the Grand Touring Prototype (GTP) class, the two customer 963s fielded by Proton Competition and JDC-Miller MotorSports topped the timing screens.

Neel Jani posted the days best lap of 1 minute, 45.433 seconds (121.556 miles per hour) in Protons No. 5 Porsche, just surpassing Gianmaria Brunis 1:45.879 (121.044 mph) in JDC-Millers similar No. 85 car.

Jack Aitken filled out the top three in the No. 31 Cadillac Whelen Cadillac V-Series.R, while Sheldon van der Linde continued BMWs impressive form in the lead-up to next weekends Rolex 24 At Daytona by logging the fourth-best time in the wet conditions.

Janis lap was almost exactly 10 seconds off the fastest lap of the three-day Roar test, a 1:35.424 (134.306 mph) effort turned in on Friday afternoon by Dries Vanthoor in the No. 24 BMW M Team RLL BMW M Hybrid V8.

Forty-one of the 61 cars entered for next weekends twice-around-the-clock contest turned laps Sunday in a 60-minute session that was delayed more than two hours when a thunderstorm brought track activity to a halt.

We decided to drive because we have not had any experience yet in Daytona in the wet with that car, said Jani, a 41-year-old from Switzerland. We were trying it out and gathering data to see how the tire develops and how tire pressures develop, especially on the banking.

In the beginning it was a bit drier and there were some dry patches in the (Le Mans) chicane, but afterwards the conditions got worse, he added. But it was a very interesting session for us, just in terms of learning in the various conditions. Next week, it looks like on qualifying day it could be wet; this way we already have a bit of experience.

The wet track contributed to a handful of spins in Turn 1, but there were no crashes as drivers took care to not damage their cars prior to race weekend.

When there is no standing water, there is actually good grip because there is not a lot of rubber down, Jani said. But when it rains a lot, theres a big danger of aquaplaning. Turn 1 is definitely a tricky one, because if you cross the rubber line, its very slippery. And Turn 1 has a lot of rubber everywhere! So you have to find that two-meter gap somewhere in that line that has the grip. As soon as you miss that line, it gets fairly tricky.

Paul Di Resta (No. 22 United Autosports USA ORECA LMP2 07) paced the 10 Le Mans Prototype 2 (LMP2) entries that elected to practice in the wet. His 1:49.870 lap works out to a 116.647 mph average and was 0.6 second up on Mikkel Jensen in the No. 11 TDS Racing ORECA.

Ollie Millroy in the No. 70 Inception Racing Ferrari 296 GT3 was fastest among all Grand Touring Daytona (GTD) class competitors at 1:57.033 (109.507 mph). The fastest GTD PRO entry was the No. 3 Corvette Racing by Pratt Miller Motorsports Chevrolet Corvette Z06 GT3.R, with Alexander Sims clocking 1:57.672 (108.913 mph).

In continued damp but improving conditions later Saturday afternoon, the seventh and final session of the weekend was reserved for Bronze-rated drivers. That produced a handful of off-course excursions but nothing major.

Dan Goldberg led LMP2 in the seventh session in the aforementioned No. 22 United Autosports USA ORECA, with a best time of 1 minute, 40.613 seconds (127.379 mph), which was ultimately the fastest lap of the day.

Anthony McIntosh (No. 19 van der Steur Racing Aston Martin Vantage GT3 Evo) led GTD at 1:48.459 (118.164 mph) and Kenny Habul (No. 75 75 Express Mercedes-AMG GT3) led GTD PRO at 1:48.756 (117.841 mph).

The field for the 63rd running of the Rolex 24 At Daytona will be set on Thursday, Jan. 23, prior to the race on Saturday, Jan. 25.

Pursley: Just Wasnt Close Enough To Capitalize

Published in Racing
Sunday, 19 January 2025 15:50

It was a career-best Chili Bowl performance for Daison Pursley Saturday night inside the SageNet Center in Tulsa, Okla., as he finished second.

However, Pursley was left with disappointment as NASCAR Cup Series star Kyle Larson wired the field, leading all 40 laps of the feature to snag his third Golden Driller in the historic event.

While Larson was the class of the field, Pursley believes he could still match Larsons pace.


Yeah, disappointing. I mean, just sucks, Pursley began. Kyles one of the best. You give him the front row like that and hes hard to beat.

I dont feel like he was any faster than us or anything. He just started up front. Track position I feel like is everything in this building.

Starting from third, Pursley hounded the back bumper of Larsons No. 1k throughout the event.

In fact, the door swung open for the CB Industries driver with four laps to go as Larson slapped the outside wall hard as he rode the right-rear tire on it momentarily before Pursley came darting to his outside in turn one.

Before completing the pass, however, the caution flag waved due to the signage on the frontstretch wall littering the race track from Larsons key moment.

The field would reset as Larson would hang on for the final laps.

I had plenty of chances and never really got to capitalize on it, Pursley said.

So, it sucks that the banner got ripped off there and had to draw the yellow because I felt like I was gonna drive around him that corner. Just wasnt close enough to capitalize on his mistakes.

Nothing to hang our heads about. Just been second in this building all week, so, it kinda sucks.

Oilers' McDavid, Canucks' Myers face suspensions

Published in Hockey
Sunday, 19 January 2025 16:01

Edmonton captain Connor McDavid and Vancouver defenseman Tyler Myers will have disciplinary hearings with the league for their actions in the Canucks' 3-2 win over the Oilers on Saturday.

The NHL's player safety department said hearings for both players will occur on Monday afternoon.

The pair are facing potential suspensions after drawing match penalties during the chaotic closing seconds of the game in Vancouver.

Multiple scrums erupted, and McDavid was penalized for cross-checking Vancouver's Conor Garland, while Myers was penalized for cross-checking Edmonton's Evan Bouchard.

McDavid, 28, has 65 points (20 goals, 45 assists) through 43 games. The three-time Hart Trophy winner earned 15 penalty minutes Saturday after entering the night with only 14 on the season.

"Connor gets frustrated, and he gets his stick up," Oilers coach Kris Knoblauch said. "He's frustrated because we're down one goal and the best player in the league is getting held for 15 seconds."

McDavid's only suspension so far in his 10-year career was a two-game ban in February 2019 after an illegal check to the head against New York Islanders defenseman Nick Leddy.

Myers, 34, has 13 points (two goals, 11 assists) and 54 penalty minutes -- including 17 on Saturday -- through 45 games.

Myers previously was suspended three games for boarding in 2012 and three games for a hit to the head in 2014.

Field Level Media contributed to this report.

Mbappé: I've adapted to Madrid, now I can play

Published in Soccer
Sunday, 19 January 2025 14:00

Kylian Mbappé admitted he is now close to his best after scoring twice in Real Madrid's 4-1 win over Las Palmas on Sunday, saying "I've adapted to the team now, and I can play as I want."

Madrid went behind inside the first minute at the Bernabéu, before Mbappé responded from the penalty spot, Brahim Díaz added a second, and Mbappé scored a third, and had another goal disallowed for offside.

Rodrygo made it 4-1 in the second half, while Jude Bellingham and Federico Valverde both had goals ruled out by VAR, as Madrid went two points clear at the top of LaLiga.

"I'm really happy," Mbappé told Real Madrid TV, when asked about the Bernabéu crowd chanting his name during the game. "I've adapted to the team now and I can play as I want, with my teammates, with personality. We're all enjoying it."

Mbappé faced criticism for his form earlier in the season, but has now scored 18 goals in all competitions, including four in his last three appearances this week.

Madrid's comeback win saw them take advantage of slip-ups from Atletico Madrid -- who lost 1-0 at Leganés -- and Barcelona, who drew 1-1 at Getafe.

"It was an important game, we knew what had happened yesterday, with Atletico and Barcelona," Mbappé said. "We wanted to win, and we did. We started badly... but the reaction was 'top'.

"We were on the front foot, playing fast, attacking the spaces with quality. We scored a lot of goals. We're happy, because we're leaders."

The win over Las Palmas was a convincing response to losing 5-2 to Barcelona in the Spanish Supercopa final, and needing extra time to beat Celta Vigo in midweek in the Copa del Rey.

"I'm proud of [the team's] reaction," Mbappé said. "Losing the Supercopa was tough, and although we played well in the cup, we made mistakes and went to extra time. But we had the personality to win. Today was very important. Now we depend on ourselves to win the league."

Coach Carlo Ancelotti suggested criticism of Madrid's form has been excessive.

"I'm still a bit confused," Ancelotti said in his post-match news conference. "There are days when we've played very badly, but what I see is that Madrid are leaders. I'll keep studying, to see if I'm mistaken."

"There's criticism and then there's criticism," Ancelotti added. "Whistles from the Bernabéu hurt, and motivate us. It was a useful wake-up call."

Ancelotti praised Mbappé as "the best centre forward in the world."

"People doubted if he could play there," he said. "He's a great forward, who feels comfortable in the middle. His movement is unique, and playing inside, he can make the most of it."

Spurs fightback too late to avoid Everton defeat

Published in Soccer
Sunday, 19 January 2025 14:00

Everton's blistering first-half display secured a 3-2 win over a woeful Tottenham Hotspur side as David Moyes earned his first victory since returning for a second spell as manager at Goodison Park on Sunday, piling more misery on the visitors.

Needing to get back to winning ways after picking up one in their previous 12 league matches, Everton took the game to their troubled opponents, racing into a two-goal lead inside 30 minutes through Dominic Calvert-Lewin and Iliman Ndiaye.

Calvert-Lewin's fine finish was the first time his team had scored in a league game since Boxing Day, ending his own 16-match barren run stretching back to September.

Things went from bad to worse for Spurs in first-half stoppage time as young Archie Gray put through his own net to ensure Everton scored as many goals within one half of football as in their previous seven games in all competitions.

Goals from Dejan Kulusevski and Richarlison caused the home fans some concern late on but the hosts survived to record a win that moved 16th-placed Everton four points clear of the bottom three and within four of sorry Spurs who are one place higher.

"I'm delighted with how we went today, we needed a win for the lads and the club," Calvert-Lewin told Sky Sports.

"Everything clicked today. You go through periods where you're not hitting the back of net or getting the rub of the green. We were defensively solid and built from that."

Everton outclassed Tottenham in the first half for David Moyes' first win since his return as manager.

Peter Byrne/PA Images via Getty Images


On paper, this encounter looked like the perfect platform for Ange Postecoglou's Tottenham side to start to turn around their faltering season, which remarkably sees them looking over their shoulders at the drop zone rather than up the table.

Spurs had lost one of their previous 24 games at Goodison Park prior to Sunday's trip north, while they have won more points from Everton than against any other Premier League team.

Everton have only just sacked their manager Sean Dyche as they again find themselves battling relegation, failing to even score in nine of their previous 11 league matches

You would not have thought it was Everton struggling for goals though as Calvert-Lewin twisted and turned the Spurs backline inside out before opening the scoring 13 minutes in.

Ndiaye, one of the few bright attacking sparks for Everton this term, compounded Spurs' misery with another fine finish on the half-hour mark after bamboozling Radu Dragusin as the hosts continued to bombard the beleaguered Antonin Kinsky's goal.

Tottenham's Gray was then unfortunate to put through his own net after James Tarkowski headed the ball back across the area.

The visitors dominated possession after the break and at least gave themselves a chance of getting something from the match after Kulusevski's fine lofted finish before Richarlison, against his former club, slid the ball home in stoppage time.

The close scoreline, however, flattered injury-hit Spurs, whose season continues to lurch from one crisis to the next.

It was Tottenham's 12th Premier League loss this term, making it only the sixth campaign in which they have lost as many as 12 games in their first 22 matches of a league season.

"It is a difficult result," Spurs coach Postecoglou told Sky Sports. "We struggled to really get in the game in the first half and that gave Everton and momentum.

"We gave ourselves a mountain to climb but the players certainly tried to claw the game back but we just fell short. We couldn't really take control of the game. We had some chances where we probably should have capitalised early on, but in the end it wasn't enough."

Amorim: We are worst Man United team in history

Published in Soccer
Sunday, 19 January 2025 14:00

Ruben Amorim has said his Manchester United team might be the worst in the club's history following their 3-1 defeat to Brighton & Hove Albion on Sunday.

United failed to register a shot on target in open play as Brighton dominated at Old Trafford.

The result means Amorim has already suffered four home Premier League defeats since taking over as manager from Erik ten Hag, who was sacked at the end of October.

"We are getting a new coach who is losing more than the last coach," Amorim said. "I have full knowledge of that. I am not going to change, no matter what.

"I know we can succeed but we need to survive this moment. I am not naive. We need to survive now. We are the worst team, maybe, in the history of Manchester United.

"I know you want headlines but I am saying that because we have to acknowledge that and to change that. Here you go: your headlines."

After two positive results against Liverpool and Arsenal, Amorim said he would learn more about his players during the games against Southampton and Brighton.

United survived a huge scare against Southampton, the Premier League's bottom team, before winning 3-1 but were comprehensively beaten by Brighton.

Amorim has now lost seven of his 15 games since being appointed. United are 13th in the table, five places and 10 points above the relegation places.

"Everybody here is underperforming, no matter what the circumstances, we are underperforming and have to accept that," Amorim said.

"It's unacceptable to lose so many games. For any Premier League club, imagine Manchester United. So it's a really hard moment but we have to continue, we have to continue, there is no other way. We need to suffer and continue."

MANCHESTER, England -- The most shocking aspect of Manchester United's dismal 3-1 defeat to Brighton & Hove Albion on Sunday is that there was little surprise at all.

Anyone who watched the first 80 minutes against Southampton -- the Premier League's worst team -- on Thursday will have worried about what Brighton might do at Old Trafford. And in that sense, the Seagulls leaving Manchester as comfortable winners was entirely predictable.

United managed to rally themselves against Southampton to eventually win 3-1. There was no repeat against Brighton and, if anything, the visitors could have won more handsomely. They scored three, had another ruled out through VAR and squandered chances at the end.

Manager Ruben Amorim has been keen to take responsibility for what is an awful run of results onto his own shoulders, but this is not a new phenomenon. Brighton have won their past three games at Old Trafford under three different managers. The problem isn't Amorim, it's the situation he has inherited.

"We have to acknowledge the moment and not go around the problem," Amorim said afterward. "Everybody here is underperforming; no matter what the circumstances, we are underperforming and have to accept that.

"It's unacceptable to lose so many games. For any Premier League club, but imagine Manchester United. So it's a really hard moment, but we have to continue, there is no other way. We need to suffer and continue."

The most damning thing for United is that Brighton didn't even need to be that good. They arrived at Old Trafford having won just one of their past nine league games. But instead of looking out of form and out of sorts, they sauntered to victory.

The last time Brighton scored three in a league game was in October against Tottenham Hotspur's notoriously leaky defence.

"We are not surprised," Brighton boss Fabian Hurzeler said. "We haven't been getting the results that maybe we deserved.

"We had a very mature performance. We controlled the game and created chances. The guys looked quite confident on the pitch."

Brighton needed just three shots on target to score three goals. It helped that goalkeeper André Onana -- terrific against Southampton -- made a howler to gift the visitors their third goal. Yasin Ayari hit a hopeful cross towards nobody in particular and instead of a routine collection, Onana came sliding out and fumbled the ball into Georginio Rutter's path to score into an empty net. It was an embarrassment which summed up United's afternoon.

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Amorim brands his team 'worst in the history of Manchester United'

Ruben Amorim doesn't hold back on his struggling Manchester United side after another Premier League defeat.

United had just one shot on target, which came from Bruno Fernandes' first-half penalty. For the first time in nine years they failed to have a shot on target from open play in a league match at Old Trafford.

It was another one of those days when researchers were forced to open the record books to find out the last time United were this bad. Defeat to Brighton is their sixth home Premier League defeat of the season -- their most from their opening 12 home matches of a league season for 130 years. The last time it happened -- in the 1893-94 season -- they weren't even called United (they were named Newton Heath) and played at the Bank Street stadium.

Amorim has now lost seven of his first 15 games in charge, the first United manager to do so since Jimmy Murphy, who briefly took over after the Munich air disaster in 1958.

"We have to understand we are breaking all the bad records," Amorim said. "The opponents are better than us in many details. It's a hard moment, you have to acknowledge that we are in a very difficult situation."

Since Amorim took over from Erik ten Hag in November, his team have taken 11 points from 11 league games. They sit 13th in the table, just five places and 10 points above the relegation places. The danger is that things could get worse before they get better.

United's next five league games are all against teams 10th in the table or lower. If Amorim's team cedes points to the likes of Fulham, Crystal Palace, Tottenham, Everton and Ipswich Town over the next month, they will be a lot closer to the drop zone than they are now.

It's predominantly those teams that United struggle against. Under Amorim, United have beaten Manchester City and Arsenal and drawn with Liverpool, but have lost comfortably to Nottingham Forest, AFC Bournemouth and Wolverhampton Wanderers.

Before the latest harrowing defeat against Brighton, United paid tribute to Denis Law. Their legendary former striker, who died aged 84 on Friday, is celebrated with a statue outside Old Trafford and was part of one of the club's greatest ever teams in the 1960s.

What is happening now couldn't be further removed from the success enjoyed by Law and his teammates, something laid out plainly by Amorim in his post-match news conference.

"We are the worst team maybe in the history of Manchester United," he said. "In [the past] 10 games in Premier League, we won three. We need to survive now."

And that's where United find themselves. Focusing on survival after doing what everyone expected and losing again.

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