Leicester City 2-1 Tottenham Hotspur
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Tottenham were left ruing a host of missed chances as Leicester held out to move into the top half of the table with victory at the King Power.
A deft lob from Jamie Vardy and a curling shot from Riyad Mahrez gave the Foxes a healthy half-time lead.
Christian Eriksen contrived to volley wide from six yards out before Harry Kane rifled in with 12 minutes to go.
Fernando Llorente then stabbed over the top from close range as the visitors hunted an equaliser in vain.
The hosts rode their luck to the end - with referee Anthony Taylor waving away a strong injury-time penalty claim as Danny Rose went down under Wilfred Ndidi's challenge - but emerged with all three points from only 37% possession.
Puel's quiet revolution
The victory is the biggest result since Claude Puel took charge and the Frenchman has amassed a quietly impressive record in his first month on the job.
The Foxes' only defeat in his five league matches came to runaway leaders Manchester City and they have edged up from 14th up to ninth over that time.
This win was straight from the 2015/16 title-winning template.
Vardy was permanently poised on the last defender's shoulder or scampering down the channels. Wes Morgan twice came close with headers as Tottenham struggled with his physicality from set-pieces. Marc Albrighton hustled and harried as well as providing silver-service delivery into the penalty area.
Mahrez was still short of the sort of form that secured the 2016 PFA Player of the Year award, but the Algerian's enduring quality showed as he drifted off the right wing, past Jan Vertonghen and swept home the decisive goal just before the break.
Puel will know, however, that his predecessor Craig Shakespeare also sought to take Leicester back to the basics that won them the title, only to run out of momentum after initial success.
Time will be the test of his reign.
Tottenham hit more problems on the home front
Tottenham's position above Real Madrid and Borussia Dortmund in their Champions League group is no longer masking some serious stalling on the domestic scene.
Spurs have won just one of their last six games away from European competition, have lost as many league games as they did in the whole of last campaign and could well be seventh by the end of tomorrow.
For all his good work during his time at the club, Mauricio Pochettino's tactics seemed to set his side up for Leicester's counter-attacking sucker-punch.
A high defensive line left acres of space for Vardy to exploit, and Vicente Iborra and Ndidi had already aimed long balls over the top for the England striker before his sublime opener.
The Argentine was not helped by some shockingly poor finishing from his side.
Dele Alli - with three Premier League goals this season - should have beaten Kasper Schmeichel to level after Moussa Sissoko had been denied from a similar position in the first half. Worse was to come with the misses from Eriksen and Llorente.
Erik Lamela's bright cameo - including a cute pass for Kane's 10th of the season - after 13 months out will be one of few positives.
Vardy enjoys two-year anniversary
Two years ago to the day, Vardy scored for an 11th successive league game to set a new Premier League record.
With one goal in his preceding 10 matches for club and country his current form is less spectacular, but his goal showed that his confidence is undented.
As he stretched for his touch, it seemed initially as if the 30-year-old would control Albrighton's lofted through ball, but instead he chipped a delicate, instinctive volley over an advancing Lloris for a superb opener.
He celebrated with relish in front of the Tottenham fans and a performance full of aggression and pace kept the visiting defence fully occupied as his team-mates dropped deeper and deeper in the second half.
Vardy and Kane sparred on social media as Leicester closed out their title win two years ago and, while the England team-mates finished with a goal apiece, it was the Leicester man who won this battle.
Man of the match - Marc Albrighton
'You must fight' - manager quotes
Leicester manager Claude Puel: "I would say it is the best performance so far.
"There are encouraging signs going forward. The goals were fantastic, but not just the goals. The quality with the ball was good as well.
"It was difficult against a good team to keep this result but I think the team worked hard for each other with solidarity and desire and it was a fantastic game for us."
Tottenham manager Mauricio Pochettino: "I think we started so sloppy, that disappointed us a lot.
"We need to learn from this that we need to start every game with the first idea to fight and compete.
"Leicester showed more than us. Even though we had chances to score and stay in the game, we were poor."
Filbert Street farewell revisited - match stats
Leicester recorded their first home Premier League victory over Spurs since beating them in their final game at Filbert Street in the 2001-02 season.
Spurs have now lost as many Premier League games this season as they did in the entirety of last season (four).
Since the start of last season, Jamie Vardy has scored 11 Premier League goals against the 'big six' - five more than any other player.
Harry Kane has scored 11 goals against Leicester in all competitions - four more than he has scored against any other club.
Riyad Mahrez has been involved in five goals in his last seven Premier League appearances (three goals, two assists).
Erik Lamela assisted Kane's goal just 76 seconds after coming on as a substitute.
What's next?
Leicester take on Burnley at home on Saturday at 15:00 GMT with Tottenham kicking off away to Watford at the same time.