Centre-back Terry got in the way of a goalbound shot from Emmanuel Adebayor in stoppage time at White Hart Lane to ensure a point for the visitors.
The draw left Spurs third in the Premier League table, two points in front of their London rivals, after Adebayor’s opener was cancelled out by an equaliser from Chelsea striker Daniel Sturridge.
And it meant Spurs were nine points adrift of leaders Manchester City and Chelsea 11 shy of the table-toppers.
Chelsea skipper Terry was, inevitably, booed by the home fans in this London derby.
And in the eighth minute he failed to cut out a cross from Gareth Bale, a mistake compounded by goalkeeper Petr Cech’s failure to gather the centre and that allowed Adebayor to score.
But Chelsea were level in the 23rd minute when Sturridge arrived to turn in a low cross from Ashley Cole, which came in after Spurs midfielder Rafael van der Vaart had deflected the ball onto the full-back’s hand.
However, despite shouts of handball from Tottenham players, 2010 World Cup final referee Howard Webb allowed the goal to stand.
Chelsea were nearly 2-1 up before the break when Didier Drogba’s fierce shot came back off the angle of post and bar.
Bale, with six minutes left, screwed a first-time shot wide and soon afterwards Spurs’s former Chelsea defender William Gallas was off-target from a corner.
But Chelsea’s Ramires then wasted a great chance when, unmarked, he headed wide from a free-kick.
Meanwhile, Manchester United manager Sir Alex Ferguson has condemned Blackburn fans for their treatment of boss Steve Kean.
Rovers fans continuously barracked Kean during the 2-1 defeat by Bolton on Tuesday and Ferguson said: “I have never seen anything as bad as that.
“It doesn’t say a lot for society. For goodness sake give the lad a break.”
Tottenham’s Harry Redknapp, Everton’s David Moyes and Newcastle’s Alan Pardew are other top-flight managers to slam the behaviour of the Blackburn fans.
Ferguson added: “I feel for the lad. I tried to phone him but he probably quite rightly had his phone switched off.”
Moyes walked out of Tuesday’s match and said: “I was disgusted with how football supporters treated Steve and the only way I could show it was by leaving at half-time. If they had supported their team as well as they shouted at their manager, then I think the team might have got a result in the game.
“As a human being I was there and I felt for another one.”
Pardew, who worked with Kean at Reading, said: “If they want to carry on like they are doing, all they are going to do is harm their own team. I can’t see the logic in that.
“It’s a sign of the game. I don’t know whether 20, 30 years ago, it would have been quite as vicious to Steve Kean.”
The League Managers’ Association said the fans’ reactions were “unacceptable”.
Kean has struggled to win over the Blackburn faithful since he succeeded Sam Allarydce a year ago.
There has been increasing speculation about Kean’s position following Blackburn’s poor start to the season, although he insisted after defeat on Tuesday that he does not expect to be sacked.
An LMA statement read: “The aggression and abuse over recent weeks has stepped well beyond the mark.
“It is to Steve’s significant credit that he has shouldered this continued onslaught with dignity and professionalism and has continued to work with his players to try to improve results on the pitch.”
Redknapp described the supporters’ behaviour as “horrific”.
He said: “I have never seen it like that. That is horrific to stand and take that. I just felt sorry for him; it was sad to see.
“He has loads of injuries [in the squad]. I heard people saying players weren’t trying or weren’t making the effort for him. That’s absolute nonsense.
“They tried for their lives. He probably has three of his four best defenders missing and you need your best players.”
However, ex-Rovers striker Kevin Gallacher told BBC Sport that Kean’s position had become “untenable”, while former Home Secretary Jack Straw has added his voice to those calling for Kean to be sacked.
Straw, MP for Blackburn since 1979, told BBC Radio 5 live: “All of us have been extremely patient with the owners and with Steve Kean.
“But having been at the game on Saturday, and after listening to the one last night [Tuesday], I think that there is no option as far as the owners are concerned but to ask Steve Kean to leave.”
Blackburn fans are also unhappy at what they claim is a lack of leadership from Venky’s, the club’s owners, from India.
The LMA said: “As new owners, the Venky’s should build relationships, develop trust with their fans and communicate their vision on a regular basis in an open and visible way”.
Results
Thursday: Tottenham 1-1 Chelsea,
Wednesday: Aston Villa 1-2 Arsenal; Everton 1-0 Swansea; Fulham 0-5 Man Utd; Man City 3-0 Stoke; Newcastle 2-3 West Brom; QPR 2-3 Sunderland; Wigan 0-0 Liverpool.
Tuesday: Blackburn 1-2 Bolton; Wolverhampton 2-2 Norwich.— AFP-BBC Sport.



