Spence Expected to Play Season Finale Despite Broken Jaw Suffered in Chelsea Defeat

Tottenham Hotspur right-back Djed Spence sustained a broken jaw during Thursday's 2-1 Premier League defeat by Chelsea at Stamford Bridge, according to an exclusive report published on 21 May 2026. The 25-year-old England-born defender picked up the injury in a second-half challenge with Chelsea forward Liam Delap. Despite the fracture, sources indicate Spence is expected to be available for Tottenham's final league fixture of the season against Everton.
The injury compounds a difficult campaign for a player who has struggled to establish himself at the north London club since arriving from Middlesbrough. Spence has made 25 appearances across all competitions this season, with his recent run in the starting eleven coming as Tottenham battles for a place in European competition next term. The club currently sits seventh in the Premier League table with one match remaining.
Medical Timeline and Fixture Congestion
The timing of the injury raises immediate questions about player welfare protocols. A broken jaw typically requires a recovery period of between four and six weeks before full contact training can resume, according to NHS guidance on mandibular fractures. Yet if Spence is indeed expected to feature against Everton on the season's final day, the timeline between injury and potential return would be approximately one week.
Tottenham's medical staff will need to assess whether protective face equipment could allow Spence to play without risking further structural damage. Several Premier League players have returned to action with facial fractures wearing custom-fitted masks, though the decision ultimately rests on specialist medical advice and the player's own assessment of pain tolerance and functional ability.
The timing also matters competitively. Tottenham travel to Goodison Park to face a Everton side that secured Premier League survival on the final day of last season and will approach this fixture without the pressure of a relegation battle. A win for Tottenham would consolidate their seventh-place finish and potentially secure entry to the UEFA Europa Conference League, depending on results elsewhere.
A Career of Disrupted Momentum
Spence's potential return to action underscores a recurring tension in modern professional football: the pressure on injured players to accelerate recovery timelines, and the institutional incentives that sometimes encourage it. Since joining Tottenham from Middlesbrough in January 2023 for a fee reported at the time to be in the region of £12.5 million, Spence has made limited starts and spent a significant portion of his tenure either injured or peripheral to first-team plans.
Loans to clubs including Rennes in France and Leeds United in England have punctuated his Tottenham career without producing the sustained first-team football that typically justifies such significant transfer investments. Thursday's injury, sustained in what was among his more complete performances in a Tottenham shirt, represents a cruel juncture in a career still searching for consistent momentum.
For Chelsea, the victory marked a rare bright point in an inconsistent season. Delap's challenge that caused the injury came during a period of sustained Chelsea pressure that ultimately produced the winning goal. Delap himself has enjoyed a breakout campaign at Stamford Bridge, with his physical presence and pressing intensity drawing comparisons with some of the club's legendary forwards.
Broader Implications for Premier League Player Care
The episode arrives as debate continues within English football about the physical toll exacted on players by an increasingly congested fixture calendar. The Premier League's decision to stage a mid-season tournament in the United States has drawn criticism from player welfare advocates, while the existing schedule already compresses domestic, European, and international commitments into a calendar that offers limited recovery windows.
Tottenham's own season illustrates the demands facing top-flight players. Thursday's defeat came just three days after a demanding away fixture in European competition, a turnaround that would be considered insufficient recovery time by many sports science practitioners. Whether the short turnaround contributed to the challenge that injured Spence is impossible to determine from available evidence, but the structural pressures on players at elite clubs remain a persistent background concern.
Spurs manager Ange Postecoglou has spoken publicly about the importance of managing player workloads, though the competitive imperatives of maintaining league position often override such considerations in practice. The Australian coach faces questions about whether rushing an injured player back serves the club's interests or merely satisfies short-term squad requirements.
What Comes Next
Tottenham face Everton on Sunday, 25 May 2026, in the final Premier League fixture of the season. Whether Spence features will depend on specialist medical assessment and the player's own readiness to play through what is typically a painful injury. The club has not issued a formal update on his recovery timeline beyond confirming the nature of the injury.
For a player whose Tottenham career has been defined by disruption and displacement, the prospect of ending the season on the pitch rather than in the treatment room carries significance beyond the three points at stake. The Premier League's medical protocols will determine whether that opportunity materialises.
Spence's availability for the season finale will depend on specialist assessment and his own assessment of playing through a fracture that typically requires several weeks of recovery.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/david_ornstein/2026/5/21