Tottenham took the lead, had the majority of the play and had several clear chances, but they could not find a winner against a Leicester City side who showed the resilience they have been devoid of for much of this Premier League season.

Mauricio Pochettino's side excelled for much of the match. They performed well for large portions of the game, with a solitary defensive lapse giving their opponents the chance to draw level. The majority of the game was an attack versus defence encounter, as Spurs maintained their unbeaten Premier League record. Still in touch of the league leading sides, Spurs are finding ways to avoid defeat.

Concerns will be afoot that their play in the final third is short of invention of late, however, and Pochettino will be desperate for Harry Kane to return to action.

A draw did little to help either side, although damage was limited to either team as a result, too. Claudio Ranieri would have taken a point at lunchtime on Saturday, you can be sure of that.

So, what did we learn?

Missing Toby

Toby Alderweireld

They may have only conceded the one goal, but Tottenham are just simply not quite as defensively secure without their brilliant Belgian.

Toby Alderweireld is a calming influence on the Tottenham defence and makes mistakes as often as Sam Allardyce eats caviar.

Attacking Future

Leicester City v FC Copenhagen - UEFA Champions League Group Stage - Group G

Claudio Ranieri treated all football fans with his selection. Naming Riyad Mahrez, Ahmed Musa, Jamie Vardy and Shinji Okazaki in the squad, the Italian manager was probably hoping that Mahrez and Musa would pin back the marauding runs of the Spurs full-backs, but this template could have some longevity.

Islam Slimani will still come back into contention at some point, too, as Ranieri continues to tinker with his options in the final third. The intent of naming all four players will have made Pochettino adjust his pre-game thinking and might be a method Ranieri continues with.

Janssen's time will come

Vincent Janssen

Vincent Janssen's early tagging as the 'next Soldado' is premature and harsh. His all-round game was there for all to see once again, as he moved intelligently and linked up play.

Putting his penalty away with the same calm confidence he showed from 12 yards in midweek, Janssen clearly is not a player short of self-belief at the moment. A prolific period will arrive for the former Eredivisie striker and he is currently doing important, necessary work for his team.

Huth's glory is over

Leicester City - Premier League Title Winners Parade

Robert Huth was one of the many players cited in the remarkable Leicester City story last season. Surplus at Stoke City, he was a useful loan signing in 2014/15 and became a league winning central defender last season, much to the surprise of anyone who had watched him previously.

Changes in the way the Premier League is refereed and an end to the Foxes' invincibility have seen Huth return to the defender he always was. Strong, physical and often too clumsy. The penalty he conceded against Spurs was typical of his play, even if it was a little harsh.

Son Struggles

Tottenham Hotspur v Leicester City - Premier League

Heung-Min Son was a fringe player for Spurs this season and he has become an integral part of the side this year.

The South Korean had a spurt of goal scoring earlier in the campaign, but is now without a goal in his last five Champions and Premier League appearances.