2013/14 NEWCASTLE 0 TOTTENHAM 4
1. Tim Krul
26. Mathieu Debuchy
6. Mike Williamson
27. Steven Taylor
3. Davide Santon 45'
8. Vurnon Anita
7. Moussa Sissoko
11. Yoan Gouffran
18. Luuk de Jong 63'
28. Sammy Ameobi 71'
9. Papiss Cisse
Subs
10. Hatem Ben Arfa 63'
13. Mapou Yanga-Mbiwa
15. Dan Gosling
21. Rob Elliot
22. Sylvain Marveaux 71'
23. Shola Ameobi
36. Paul Dummett 45'
Emmanuel Adebayor claimed a double as Tottenham condemned Newcastle to a fourth successive home defeat for the first time in the Barclays Premier League era.
The Togo international striker turned in a fine individual display as Spurs tore Alan Pardew's depleted side to shreds at St James' Park to maintain the pressure on the top four with a 4-0 rout.
He struck from close range with just 19 minutes gone on a wintry Tyneside night to give the visitors a lead they never looked like relinquishing, and Aaron Lennon was only denied a second by the post.
The game was effectively over eight minutes into the second half when Paulinho was presented with an equally straightforward task to double his side's lead after goalkeeper Tim Krul failed to hold Adebayor's stinging shot.
Adebayor doubled his tally with seven minutes remaining when the unfortunate Krul made a good save to deny substitute Andros Townsend, but saw the frontman follow up to complete the scoring.
Tottenham were not finished, however, and the Dutchman found himself picking the ball out of his net for the final time five minutes later after being beaten from distance by substitute Nacer Chadli.
Tim Sherwood's men were simply too pacy, too inventive and too clinical for their hosts, who could not match them in any department.
The win took Spurs' points tally to seven from a possible nine since their 5-1 humbling by Manchester City and kept them firmly in the race for Champions League qualification.
But for Pardew, it proved a miserable way to celebrate 150 games at the helm and provided further evidence that, despite his denials, the club has little more than pride for which to play for the remainder of the season.
It was the first game at St James' since a second successive 3-0 derby defeat against Sunderland and neither the performance nor the result went down well with the home fans among a crowd of 48,264 who have now seen their side claim just four of the last 24 points they have contested.
That, coupled with simmering resentment over owner Mike Ashley's decision to sell and not replace Yohan Cabaye last month, made for an ugly atmosphere, and one which is unlikely to improve in the short term if things do not improve markedly on the pitch.
Newcastle went into the game looking for a first home win since Boxing Day and having lost their last three in the league at home, and there was little evidence that they were capable of addressing that situation.
There have been, and continue to be, mitigating factors with Fabricio Coloccini, Cheick Tiote and Loic Remy still missing and Cabaye long departed, and despite the return from injury of both Yoan Gouffran and Papiss Cisse, there was still a makeshift look about Pardew's team.
By contrast, Spurs looked a unit from the off despite making three changes to the side which won 1-0 at Everton at the weekend and they might have gone in at the break with significantly more than a single-goal lead.
Magpies midfielder Vurnon Anita had already deflected an Adebayor shot inches wide and Krul saved a Paulinho shot from a tight angle when the visitors took a 19th-minute lead.
Midfielder Nabil Bentaleb shook off Moussa Sissoko all too easily wide on the left to deliver a cross which Krul could only palm to Adebayor, who had the simplest of tasks to tap it home.
With Paulinho orchestrating and Mousa Dembele and Lennon running at the home side, Tottenham threatened at regular intervals and particularly on the break.
Mike Williamson only just managed to get to Kyle Walker's driven 24th-minute cross ahead of Lennon after Paulinho had carved Newcastle wide-open and as the half wore on, Adebayor, Dembele and Lennon started to produce their full range of tricks.
Hard work and determination kept Pardew's men in it, if only just at times, and they had chances of their own, if few and far between.
Indeed, they might have taken the lead themselves had Cisse got a more decisive touch to Luuk de Jong's eighth-minute knock-down in front of goal, and the striker also lobbed wide under pressure from advancing keeper Hugo Lloris with 26 minutes gone.
Spurs extended their lead in exhilarating style with just eight minutes of the second half gone when Paulinho flicked Bentaleb's pass into the path of Adebayor and then followed up to score when Krul could only parry the striker's shot.
Gouffran, Mathieu Debuchy and Cisse all tested Lloris in quick succession, but Adebayor's mishit volley after Krul had saved Townsend's effort and Chadli's dipping, curling late strike completed a miserable night for Newcastle.