Darren Bent's second-half header gave Tottenham their first victory of the season over Polish team Wisla Krakow in the Uefa Cup at White Hart Lane.
Spurs took the lead when Aaron Lennon's cross was finished by David Bentley on 33 minutes, only for Tomas Jirsak to hit back 67 seconds later with a chip.
Substitute Fraizer Campbell gave Spurs fresh attacking impetus on 56 minutes.
And the former Hull striker's cross found Bent, who hit the net from six yards for a confidence-boosting win.
But the home side were made to work hard for their victory against a disciplined Wisla side, who created a number of problems for Juande Ramos' side.
Still searching for his best starting 11, the Spaniard could have done without the enforced absence of new signings Luka Modric, out with a knee injury, Vedran Corluka and Roman Pavlyuchenko, both cup-tied.
However, he recalled captain Ledley King, rested for the 2-1 defeat to Aston Villa, while restoring David Bentley, Giovani Dos Santos, Chris Gunter and Jermaine Jenas to form a side with a clear offensive intent.
Spurs sought to stamp their authority on the game from the off, harassing the visitors at every opportunity and adding some weight to their tag as second favourites for the tournament.
But despite dominating possession, Spurs failed to create the final delivery for strikers Darren Bent and Giovani.
It was not until a Jonathan Woodgate header from a corner in the 23rd minute, saved comfortably by Krakow keeper Mariusz Pawelek, that either side offered an attempt on target.
But the game sprang into life in the space of 67 seconds just after the half hour mark. First Aaron Lennon ran at the Krakow defence from the left before placing the game's first decent cross back for Bentley to slot left-footed into the far post.
But Spurs' season to date was typified when, in their next foray forward, Krakow equalised. Brozek neatly fed the unmarked Jirsak, who calmly chipped over the advancing Heurelho Gomes.
The visitors took advantage of Spurs' fragility at the back and could have had a second but for Gomes saving a 25-yard Roberto Cantoro drive.
Spurs began the second half as they did the first, their endeavour almost rewarded when Bentley forced Pawelek to tip over his rasping 20-yard drive before Giovani poked wide when through on goal.
Jenas and Lennon combined brilliantly before feeding Bent, who slotted home, but the striker had strayed into an offside position and the goal was ruled out.
This prompted changes from Ramos, with debutant on-loan striker Campbell and Jamie O'Hara replacing Lennon and Chris Gunter.
After a 20-minute period of graft with little end product, it was the fresh Campbell-Bent partnership which provided the breakthrough for Spurs.
The former Hull striker worked himself into space on the right before serving up a hanging cross to the back post, where Bent was waiting to head home.
Confidence now flowing, Spurs crafted two good chances in succession three minutes later, Pawelek firstly diving low to save from Gareth Bale and King heading just wide from the resulting corner.
Spurs almost sacrificed their lead with four minutes to go, a King mistake gifting Andrzej Niedzielan an opening, but the substitute was denied by a last-ditch tackle by Woodgate.