Tottenham haven’t beaten Chelsea in 90 minutes since 2019 and that looks unlikely to change on Sunday. Defensively they have been solid, with 8 clean sheets so far this season and only 20 goals conceded in 18 games. Their issue has been scoring at the other end, Harry Kane’s lack of form has exposed their limited scoring capacity and they sit 14th in the “Goals Scored” table with just 23 goals in those 18 matches.
Chelsea have 9 clean sheets of their own and concede less than 1 goal per game at Stamford Bridge, so the low scoring game seems the best way to play this match, especially as Antonio Conte is likely to set his team up to frustrate his former club.