Tottenham’s crisis deepened as they turned in a desperate performance in a 3-0 defeat at Brighton, where Hugo Lloris suffered a serious arm injury after another howler.

Lloris dropped the ball on the goal line and hurt himself in the process in only the third minute, allowing Neal Maupay to open the scoring, and it only got worse after that as Aaron Connolly's double gave the impressive Seagulls a deserved three points.

As good as the hosts were, this must go down as one of the worst performances of Mauricio Pochettino's reign and, following on from Tuesday's 7-2 Champions League humiliation to Bayern Munich, the dark clouds are mounting over the club.

Pochettino was forced to outline his commitment to the job in the build-up to this match but the result and, more notably, the performance will only lead to more speculation that his time could be coming to an end.

They look a million miles away from the side that have challenged at the top end of the Premier League for the last four seasons and their alarming slide in 2019 continues with an 11th defeat of the calendar year.

Their away form is an even bigger concern as they are now 10 games without a league win on the road, going back to January.

In contrast, it was a Red Letter Day for Graham Potter's men, but it could have been an even bigger win had they not wasted some late chances.

The tone was set by a shambolic start from Spurs.

The contest had barely even started by the time their best-laid plans were thrown into chaos as they endured a nightmare start thanks to another Lloris howler.

It was only last week that the France captain tried a Cruyff turn inside his own six-yard box and got tackled to concede, but this was just as unforgivable and it led to his serious arm injury.

Pascal Gross' overhit cross ought have been a routine tip over for the goalkeeper, but he chose to try and catch it and, falling backwards on the line, he dropped the ball - allowing Maupay the easiest of nod-ins.

To make matters worse, Lloris suffered a serious arm injury in his fall, which saw him eventually leave the pitch on a stretcher with gas and air and screaming in agony.

It was a horrible way to begin the match, but perfect for Brighton and they made use of their leg-up to run Spurs ragged.

A deserved second goal came just after the half-hour as Spurs were cut open down the right and Connolly got to Dan Burn's cross first, forcing sub goalkeeper Paulo Gazzaniga into a smart low save, but the teenager was on hand to ram home the rebound for his first Premier League goal.

This was as bad as it had been under Pochettino and it got worse 20 minutes into the second half, with another goal that came down Spurs' right.

Connolly was set clear by a long ball, he was allowed too much space by Toby Alderweireld and made the most of it by cutting inside and firing into the bottom corner.

Spurs pushed for a late response, with Son Heung-min, Harry Kane and Lucas Moura all wasting good chances, but it was Brighton who were pushing for an even bigger win.

Adam Webster and Gross brought saves out of Gazzaniga as they finished strongly, leaving Spurs with some serious questions to answer.