The uncomfortable Yves Bissouma truth Tottenham must understand now
This past summer transfer window, Tottenham Hotspur tried to sell off Yves Bissouma but were unsuccessful. He suffered a rough knee injury in August and was then stretchered off in October in international duty with another serious appearing knee injury, too.
But even before the injuries precluded a transfer, Spurs struggled to sell Bissouma because he was so underwhelming last season that no clubs were falling over themselves to take him on - and take on his wages. Aside from some lukewarm interest from clubs in the Turkish Super Lig, Bissouma had no real suitors.
That's an important thing to keep in mind. Bissouma is bured on the Tottenham roster, even when healthy, for good reason. He isn't good enough, and even the club have acknowledged that Bissouma is the kind of player Spurs are better off without.
Tottenham are not better off without Yves Bissouma
But here's the thing, and this is where Tottenham have to be brutally honest with themselves. If last season's version of Bissouma, which played a key role in them winning the Europa League, were to start next weekend in the place of Rodrigo Bentancur or Joao Palhinha, would Spurs be worse off? Would Spurs have a worse record now if Bissouma were starting every week in midfield in the place of literally any other midfielder in the squad?
The answer is no. And it's not no because Bissouma is better than any of the midfielders Spurs currently have, though you could argue that Rodrigo Bentancur, who earned an extension whereas Bissouma is getting the boot, is just as bad.
But even though Archie Gray, Lucas Bergvall, Joao Palhinha, and Pape Matar Sarr are all better football players than Yves Bissouma in the year 2025, Tottenham would not be a worse team functionally or in the table with Bissouma in the starting lineup.
That right there should be taken as an indictment of how poorly Thomas Frank has done as a manager. He has a midfield filled with young talent that he either does not use at all or uses improperly. Or in the case of Xavi Simons, he vacillates between both options.
Bissouma is a baseline replacement level Premier League midfielder. Tottenham has turned some of the league's best players into replacement level producing players over the past couple of months. That there has been no upgrade from the caliber of player of a Bissouma on the pitch even though the actual players themselves are better is further evidence that Frank is not nearly doing well enough for Spurs.