Tottenham subtly showing they don't trust Johan Lange either
There is not one single individual solely responsible for the malaise that ails Tottenham Hotspur right now, because there are certain players, plenty of members of the ownership group, just about everyone in the front office, and manager Thomas Frank all in the circle of blame at this point.
As Spurs continue to drop points in the Premier League table, the threat of relegation is not one this club is above, as last season's 17th placed side in the league are arguably even worse under Thomas Frank in 2025/26 despite a few very succesful summer signings like Xavi Simons and the now injured Mohammed Kudus.
Spurs are coming off a disastrous January transfer window in which they lost key players to injury, director of football Fabio Paratici, and more trust from their fan base after signing precisely zero players in any of their key positions of need.
Tottenham are not fooled
Sporting director Johan Lange is now the main man making the decisions at the club after Paratici rather quickly bolted for Serie A disappointments Fiorentina, leaving Tottenham Hotspur supporters pretty scared for the future.
Lange's poor January transfer window has been akin to a vote of no confidence from the Tottenham faithful, who were already very sour on the failed Aston Villa executive. While Lange's eye for young talents, such as Lucas Bergvall, is worth praising, everything else he has done at Spurs has been well below par.
It looks like Tottenham, as an entire enterprise, are not in disagreement with their fans about not wanting to fully trust Johan Lange to be the one to call the shots in the board room. According to a report from the Daily Telegraphs's Matt Law, Tottenham are actually actively searching for a Fabio Paratici replacement in 2026.
Per Law, Spurs want to have two co sporting directors in charge of the club, rather than entrusting everything into one man. Right now, that is the case, as Spurs have yet to replace Paratici, so Lange is the one main sporting director running the show. But Tottenham do not want that to be the case, as they would like someone else to share recruitment duties.
It is a wise strategy, because while two heads can lead to conflict, when looking at Lange's track record and how badly things ended up in January without Paratici, perhaps Lange needs someone to conflict with him. And Lange can then focus on young talents with someone else making the veteran signings - or, as Paratici tried in the summer, attempt to talk Lange out of a bad coaching hire.