Bolton's Martin Petrov should be fit after recovering from the hamstring problem that kept him out last weekend.
The Bulgarian could replace Matt Taylor on the left wing.
Tottenham will be without Rafael van der Vaart because of a hamstring injury, while winger Aaron Lennon is doubtful with a similar problem.
Goalkeeper Heurelho Gomes is back after a European ban, while striker Jermain Defoe hopes to return from an ankle injury at Ars*nal on 20 November.
When Tottenham visited Bolton in this fixture 13 months ago, Gareth Bale was an unused substitute, a talented but raw youngster unable to displace Benoit Assou-Ekotto at left-back.
A year later, the Welshman returns to the Reebok as one of the planet's most talked-about players following another stunning display against Inter Milan on Tuesday.
For the second time in a fortnight, the winger ran riot against Inter defender Maicon, widely regarded as one of the world's best right-backs. Is stopping Bale football's mission impossible right now? It could be a long 90 minutes for Bolton full-back Gretar Steinsson.
Despite the hype surrounding Bale, Tottenham are no one-man team, with playmaker Luka Modric also outstanding against the European champions. Manager Harry Redknapp appears to have the Midas touch right now, with his decision to gamble on the fitness of Rafael van der Vaart paying off; the Dutchman lasted only 45 minutes on Tuesday but settled any early nerves with the opening goal.
Wanderers boss Owen Coyle says Spurs' success in the Champions League makes Redknapp the obvious candidate to succeed Fabio Capello as England coach after Euro 2012. Coyle's side have won only one of their last eight league games but have a good home record against Tottenham, who have never won a Premier League game at the Reebok Stadium.