Tim Sherwood tasted victory at White Hart Lane for the first time as Tottenham put on a vintage display to crush Stoke.
Roberto Soldado converted his fifth penalty of the campaign while Aaron Lennon and Mousa Dembele also scored fine goals to give Spurs a comfortable 3-0 win.
Tottenham were flat and wasteful in Sherwood's first full game in charge on Boxing Day, but on Sunday they were far better.
Sherwood promised to bring attacking football back to the blue and white half of north London and he certainly has lived up to that vow.
His team have averaged two goals a game in the four matches he has been in the Tottenham dugout.
More welcome to the Tottenham manager will be the fact that his team managed to keep a clean sheet in the league for the first time since November 3.
With his first win as permanent head coach now under his belt, Sherwood will be confident of achieving a shock victory at Manchester United on New Year's Day.
Stoke never looked like threatening the Spurs goal, although manager Mark Hughes was rightly aggrieved that Michael Dawson was not penalised for hacking down Oussama Assaidi in the box when the game was goalless.
Hughes was on his feet complaining after four minutes. Jon Walters was barged over by Zeki Fryers after latching onto a long ball over the top, but referee Kevin Friend waved play on.
Both teams took their time to get going. Dawson buried a volley deep into the away fans and Sherwood was annoyed at his team for not creating enough chances.
Tottenham's first real opening came when Lennon got behind the Stoke defence following a cutting pass from Kyle Naughton, but neither Christian Eriksen nor Emmanuel Adebayor could finish.
Sherwood spun around on the touchline and yelled angrily as Soldado dragged a volley wide.
Although they were wasteful in front of goal, Tottenham dominated possession in the first quarter.
Stoke did venture forward on one occasion, though, and they should have arguably had a penalty from the attack.
Assaidi cut inside from the left channel and was too quick for Dawson, who cut the Moroccan down in the box. Stoke's players - and Hughes - complained en masse, but Friend gave nothing.
Friend pointed to the spot when Adebayor's acrobatic volley struck Shawcross' outstretched arm and Soldado converted to maintain his flawless record from the spot.
Tottenham continued to dominate after the break. Dembele held onto the ball majestically in midfield.
Walters earned a booking for pulling Dembele back, but the Belgian and Shawcross saw yellow for clashing after the challenge.
Dembele got the goal his performance deserved just after the hour. The midfielder looked to have run out of options when he checked inside from the right, but after dropping the shoulder he escaped Steven N'zonzi and drove a left-foot strike into the bottom corner past a sprawling Thomas Sorensen.
Sherwood leapt up into the air and clenched his fists in celebration - and a third goal came soon after.
Soldado's cross found its way to Lennon at the back post via Adebayor's boot and the England winger despatched a dipping volley past Sorensen from the tightest of angles.
White Hart Lane was rocking for the first time under Sherwood's stewardship.
Lennon received a standing ovation when he was replaced by Erik Lamela with 15 minutes left.
The Argentinian would have had his first Premier League goal soon after had Geoff Cameron not put in a fine block after a lay-off from the selfless Adebayor.
Crouch had a chance to pull a goal back for Stoke, but he wasted it and Tottenham achieved their first league win at home since October 27.
Roberto Soldado converted his fifth penalty of the campaign while Aaron Lennon and Mousa Dembele also scored fine goals to give Spurs a comfortable 3-0 win.
Tottenham were flat and wasteful in Sherwood's first full game in charge on Boxing Day, but on Sunday they were far better.
On the spot: Tottenham celebrate their first goal via Roberto Soldado's fifth penalty of the season
Clear cut: Ryan Shawcross raise his arms to an acrobatic shot from Emmanuel Adebayor for the penalty
Dembele and the returning Paulinho bossed the midfield against a physical Stoke side while Lennon's performance on the right flank gave Tottenham the cutting edge they lacked against the Baggies.
Sherwood promised to bring attacking football back to the blue and white half of north London and he certainly has lived up to that vow.
His team have averaged two goals a game in the four matches he has been in the Tottenham dugout.
More welcome to the Tottenham manager will be the fact that his team managed to keep a clean sheet in the league for the first time since November 3.
With his first win as permanent head coach now under his belt, Sherwood will be confident of achieving a shock victory at Manchester United on New Year's Day.
Stoke never looked like threatening the Spurs goal, although manager Mark Hughes was rightly aggrieved that Michael Dawson was not penalised for hacking down Oussama Assaidi in the box when the game was goalless.
Hughes was on his feet complaining after four minutes. Jon Walters was barged over by Zeki Fryers after latching onto a long ball over the top, but referee Kevin Friend waved play on.
Both teams took their time to get going. Dawson buried a volley deep into the away fans and Sherwood was annoyed at his team for not creating enough chances.
Tottenham's first real opening came when Lennon got behind the Stoke defence following a cutting pass from Kyle Naughton, but neither Christian Eriksen nor Emmanuel Adebayor could finish.
Deceived: Stoke keeper Thomas Sorensen after being sent the wrong way by Soldado's spot kick
See below for the terrific interplay starting and ending with Dembele, with touches from Capoue (15), Lennon (7), Eriksen (23), Adebayor (10) and Soldado (10), for Spurs second goal - now click here for more from our Match Zone
Hands up: Both managers, Stoke's Mark Hughes and Spurs' Tim Sherwood, raise their arms in protest
Unleashed: Dembele fires the shot that put Spurs up 2-0 past Stoke's Steven Nzonzi
Buffer: Mousa Dembele made it two with a slick turn and emphatic finish with his left foot
Sherwood spun around on the touchline and yelled angrily as Soldado dragged a volley wide.
Although they were wasteful in front of goal, Tottenham dominated possession in the first quarter.
Stoke did venture forward on one occasion, though, and they should have arguably had a penalty from the attack.
Assaidi cut inside from the left channel and was too quick for Dawson, who cut the Moroccan down in the box. Stoke's players - and Hughes - complained en masse, but Friend gave nothing.
Head-to-head: Shawcross and Dembele were both booked after this heated coming together
Hammered home: Neil Lennon's volley on the end of Soldado's cross gave Spurs an unassailable 3-0 lead
Tottenham were back on the attack moments later through Lennon, who turned Erik Pieters inside out - but Ryan Shawcross diverted the ball away from three Spurs players lurking in the box.
Sherwood jumped up and down in angst, but he finally had a smile on his face after 36 minutes when Soldado gave Spurs the lead.
Friend pointed to the spot when Adebayor's acrobatic volley struck Shawcross' outstretched arm and Soldado converted to maintain his flawless record from the spot.
Tottenham continued to dominate after the break. Dembele held onto the ball majestically in midfield.
Walters earned a booking for pulling Dembele back, but the Belgian and Shawcross saw yellow for clashing after the challenge.
Dembele got the goal his performance deserved just after the hour. The midfielder looked to have run out of options when he checked inside from the right, but after dropping the shoulder he escaped Steven N'zonzi and drove a left-foot strike into the bottom corner past a sprawling Thomas Sorensen.
Sherwood leapt up into the air and clenched his fists in celebration - and a third goal came soon after.
Soldado's cross found its way to Lennon at the back post via Adebayor's boot and the England winger despatched a dipping volley past Sorensen from the tightest of angles.
White Hart Lane was rocking for the first time under Sherwood's stewardship.
Lennon received a standing ovation when he was replaced by Erik Lamela with 15 minutes left.
The Argentinian would have had his first Premier League goal soon after had Geoff Cameron not put in a fine block after a lay-off from the selfless Adebayor.
Crouch had a chance to pull a goal back for Stoke, but he wasted it and Tottenham achieved their first league win at home since October 27.
In behind: Lennon uses his exceptional speed to get around Stoke's Nzonzi
Super sub: Erik Lamela almost scored with this chance after coming off the bench in the 75th minute for Lennon
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