Chelsea will host Tottenham in the Premier League on May 19 in one of the top flight’s most fiery derbies.Fans of both teams may claim they have bigger adversaries elsewhere, but there’s rarely a clash in the top flight that sees so much bad blood – and the 2016 ‘Battle of the Bridge’ still stands out.Clattenburg was kept busy during the infamous Battle of the BridgeGettyIt was ten years ago today when the rivalry boiled over, with Spurs in search of a first Premier League title and facing Chelsea to keep their trophy aspirations alive, but things didn’t exactly go to plan.Trailing league leaders Leicester by seven points with three games to go, anything less than a win for Spurs would see the Foxes clinch the title, and it should have been easy.Jose Mourinho had been sacked as Chelsea boss for the second time, with the club lingering in mid-table under Guus Hiddink and on course for their worst league finish since 1996.How Hazard and Fabregas lit the fuse for ‘Battle of the Bridge’There was nothing left for Chelsea to play for, but that’s the sort of logic that only applies to a normal match.Ahead of the game, the scale of what was to come had already been confirmed, with Chelsea’s foreign players showing the rivalry was far more universal than just a local derby.“The fans, the club, the players, we don’t want Tottenham to win the Premier League,” said Eden Hazard.“Hopefully not, I don’t want Spurs to win it,” Cesc Fabregas confirmed.Former Arsenal midfielder Fabregas may have been the first trigger, kicking out at Mousa Dembele with just minutes gone before the Belgian raised his hands at John Obi Mikel.Niggling tackles then began popping up all over the place, with Kyle Walker picking up the game’s first booking for a pointless kick at Pedro, but not everyone was so distracted.Harry Kane and Heung-min Son capitalised on the ongoing drama, keeping their cool to give Spurs a 2-0 half time lead, while everyone else seemed more preoccupied with kicking each other.The 2016 ‘Battle of the Bridge’ was a feisty affairGettyDiego Costa was the human embodiment of what would soon unfold when he began rutting with Jan Vertonghen, and then the first real spark came.Not looking Rose-yClearly not content with being two goals to the good and having already hacked down Chelsea’s Willian, Danny Rose decided he wanted another bite at the Brazilian, who this time reacted.Mauricio Pochettino leaped onto the pitch to break the pair up, setting off the game’s first melee.An untethered Dembele somehow avoided red for an eye-gouge on Costa, but only Willian and Rose picked up yellow cards to end the half, giving Pochettino 15 minutes to calm everyone down.Erik Lamela must have heard something else in the dressing room from his fellow Argentine though, leaping in high on Fabregas’ ankles before stepping on his hand while the Spaniard recovered.That was enough for Spurs to fully lose the plot, conceding first from Gary Cahill before a stunning postage stamp Hazard curler handed Leicester the title.Dier was keen to leave one on HazardGettyEric Dier, already on a booking, looked intent on ending Fabregas’ Euro 2016 campaign with a horrendous lunge that somehow went unpunished, and a previously calm Kane even joined in on the action once he realised all was lost.Mark Clattenburg blew his whistle for full time, but he might as well have been ringing the bell for round two, as another brawl broke out on the touchline, with master agitator Costa again the centrepiece. Spurs took the league record for most yellow cards given to a single team in one match with nine, resulting in FA punishment, but it was mystifying how there hadn’t been at least one red, until a year later.Clattenburg claimed he allowed Spurs to ‘self-destruct’Clattenburg departed England for a job as Head of Refereeing in Saudi Arabia, and later opened up in startling fashion over what happened during ‘The Battle of the Bridge’.“I allowed [Spurs] to self-destruct so all the media, all the people in the world went, ‘Tottenham lost the title’,” Clattenburg said in 2017.“If I sent three players off from Tottenham, what are the headlines? ‘Clattenburg cost Tottenham the title’. It was pure theatre that Tottenham self-destructed against Chelsea and Leicester won the title.Clattenburg had plenty to say about the match in the following yearsGetty“I helped the game. I certainly benefited the game by my style of refereeing.“Some referees would have played by the book. Tottenham would have been down to seven or eight players and probably lost and they would’ve been looking for an excuse.“But I didn’t give them an excuse, because my gameplan was: Let them lose the title.”Clattenburg’s tactics arguably risked serious injury ahead of Euro 2016 the following month, but they undoubtedly helped deliver one of the league’s most infamous games in history.