Roy Keane slammed Tottenham for being 'all over the shop' against Manchester City on Sunday after conceding twice in the first half at the Etihad on Sunday.
Spurs took an early lead against the reigning Premier League champions after Son Heung-min rounded off a well-executed counter-attack with a strong finish.
Just two minutes later he scored again after turning the ball into his own net, before Phil Foden added a second goal in the 31st minute to give the hosts a deserved lead.
Much had been made before the match of Ange Postecoglou's powerful strike and how it could leave Tottenham's defense vulnerable against City's star-studded attack. Keane was not impressed with the defense the visitors showed.
City went in at half-time with a slim lead but could have been further ahead after Jeremy Doku and Bernardo Silva were both denied by the woodwork. However, Spurs also posed a threat in the run forward.
Phil Foden put City ahead in the first half after a brilliant move that set Tottenham's defense in motion
Spurs were previously in the lead at the Etihad, but conceded twice in the first half
Your browser does not support iframes.
Keane branded Tottenham's woeful defending 'shocking' and called on them to show more resilience in the second half.
“City were brilliant in attack but vulnerable at the back. They are missing players but for City it is excellent,” Keane told Sky Sports.
'Spurs are everywhere looking at the ball, Foden takes a tap in the six-yard area and the second sticks it in.
'As simple as you want, but shocking from Spurs, really bad, they have problems at the back, but against very good teams you get discovered.
Roy Keane slammed Tottenham's defense and branded visitors 'shocking'
“Spurs are everywhere, City are excellent, but Spurs still have one or two goals up their sleeve,” he added.
Fellow pundit and former City full-back Micah Richards raised similar concerns about Spurs in the second half, stating that his old club would be disappointed if he did not lead by more.
'City will be very disappointed (not to be in the lead by more), it should have been five or six.
'Especially Haaland's chance. Normally it's bread and butter for him, you have to put teams away.'