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John Heitinga leaves Tottenham assistant coach role after appointment of Igor Tudor

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John Heitinga leaves Tottenham assistant coach role after appointment of Igor Tudor - The Athletic - The New York Times
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John Heitinga has left his role as Tottenham Hotspur’s assistant coach 33 days after being appointed.

Thomas Frank was sacked as head coach last week, eight months into a three-year contract. Former Juventus head coach Igor Tudor has replaced Frank on an interim basis until the end of the season.

Heitinga opted to leave the club as he did not wish to remain part of the new coaching structure under Tudor.

Tudor’s first official day in the role was Monday and his backroom staff has taken shape. The 47-year-old will be supported by assistant coach Ivan Javorcic, physical coach Riccardo Ragnacci and goalkeeping coach Tomislav Rogic. Both coaches worked under Tudor during his spell at Juventus last year.

There has been further change as Heitinga has left Spurs along with fellow assistant coaches Justin Cochrane and Chris Haslam. Cochrane and Haslam followed Frank when he left Brentford to join Spurs last summer. Cochrane had previously worked in Tottenham’s academy. The 44-year-old is also a member of Thomas Tuchel’s backroom staff and will support England’s head coach at this summer’s World Cup.

Set-piece coach Andreas Georgson and individual development coach (IDP) Cameron Campbell, who were appointed in the summer following Frank’s arrival, are set to stay. Goalkeeping coach Fabian Otte is expected to remain despite the arrival of Rogic.

Mid-season managerial changes? Nottingham Forest and Tottenham certainly have form for it

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Mid-season managerial changes? Nottingham Forest and Tottenham certainly have form for it - The New York Times
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New Year, new managers.

Chelsea kicked things off when they sacked Enzo Maresca on New Year’s Day, before Manchester United parted company with Ruben Amorim four days later.

Now, after a pair of February firings this week, there have been four Premier League sackings already in 2026, the most ever seen across the first two months of a calendar year.

Tottenham Hotspur reignited the sacking spree when they dismissed Thomas Frank on Wednesday, while Nottingham Forest relieved Sean Dyche of his duties less than 24 hours later, releasing a statement in the early hours of Thursday following their 0-0 draw at home to last-place-by-a-mile Wolverhampton Wanderers the previous evening.

Both Tottenham and Forest have a turbulent history of mid-season managerial upheaval.

Of the 188 mid-season sackings (a figure that excludes managers who left their role voluntarily) in the 34-year Premier League era, Tottenham account for 14, more than any other club. They have now appointed former Juventus head coach Igor Tudor until the end of the season.

Forest, who have featured in 25 fewer Premier League seasons than Tottenham, have the highest dismissal rate, sacking a manager on average every 56.3 matches. Owner Evangelos Marinakis appointed Vitor Pereira on Sunday, making this the first time a Premier League club has employed four ‘permanent’ managers in the same season. Pereira was himself a casualty earlier this season, dismissed by Wolves in November.

Dyche’s draw against Wolves, despite Forest managing 35 shots in the match, proved his undoing. This is only the second time a Premier League manager has been dismissed having faced the men from Molineux in his final match. The other was Nathan Jones, sacked by Southampton this month three years ago after a 2-1 defeat, lasting just 94 days in the job.

But which sides do Premier League managers most often face before the axe falls?

Liverpool lead the way here, with 13 bosses dismissed in the aftermath of an encounter with the Merseyside club.

They delivered the final blow to Jose Mourinho’s reign at Manchester United, winning 3-1 at Anfield in December 2018. Scott Parker, now in charge of Burnley, was sacked by Bournemouth after a 9-0 defeat at Liverpool in August 2022. It remains the heaviest defeat preceding a Premier League dismissal.

Liverpool have also been in the front row for the final curtain of three Fulham managers: Jean Tigana (2002-03), Rene Meulensteen (2013-14), and Slavisa Jokanovic (2018-19). The only other instance of a club sacking three managers after the same opponent involves Crystal Palace, with Steve Coppell, Alan Pardew and Roy Hodgson all dismissed after facing Chelsea.

As two of the six ever-present Premier League clubs since it began play in 1992, it is little surprise that Liverpool and Chelsea rank towards the top of this list, having had more opportunities to face under-pressure managers.

Adjusted for games played, the list takes on a distinctly lower-mid-table feel, topped by Wigan Athletic, who spent much of their eight Premier League seasons treading water before finally succumbing to relegation in 2012-13.

They ushered five Premier League managers to their exits, with the most memorable dismissal arriving in the wake of the greatest moment in the club’s history. Wigan’s 1-0 victory over Manchester City in the 2012-13 FA Cup final was such a seismic upset that it fast-tracked the dismissal of Roberto Mancini, who was sacked two days later.

Among the current crop of Premier League sides, Bournemouth sit highest, with an opposition manager departing once every 82.5 games — most recently Maresca, who left two days after Chelsea’s 2-2 draw with them.

They are fifth in the all-time per-game list, but over the past four years, there has been one golden rule for beleaguered managers: do not lose to West Ham United. Bruno Lage (Wolves) in 2022, Frank Lampard (Everton) in 2023, Erik ten Hag (Manchester United) in 2024, and Nuno Espirito Santo (Forest) in 2025 were all sacked after a defeat against the east London side.

Their 3-0 defeat by visitors West Ham in August brought a familiar and ominous sight for Forest managers: a visibly disgruntled Marinakis glowering down from the directors’ box at the City Ground.

Marinakis’ four Forest sackings have all followed losses at home, and he rarely allows his temper to cool, dismissing three of those managers within 24 hours of the match ending. Only Nuno was afforded a longer reprieve, with Marinakis waiting just over a week before dismissing him during the September international break.

Turgid home performances in front of your own fans rarely help a manager’s case, and the toxic atmosphere that greeted Frank after Tottenham’s 2-1 home defeat to Newcastle United last Tuesday night made his position untenable. But it is away matches that account for a slight majority of dismissals, at 53 per cent.

There is minor evidence that managers are granted more clemency on their travels. The most common scoreline preceding a sacking after an away defeat is 3-0, compared to 2-1 at home, suggesting that a slender loss on the road is punished less regularly.

In rare cases, not even victory is enough to mask the wider malaise that has placed a manager on the chopping block. Twelve have been sacked after a win, most recently Daniel Farke, now in charge of Leeds United, who was dismissed by Norwich City in November 2021 with the club bottom of the Premier League, despite beating Brentford 2-1 away hours earlier.

The decision to sack a manager rarely hinges on a single game, but there are telltale signs when a match is a must-win. The least subtle example came in David Moyes’ final game as Manchester United manager in April 2013: a 2-0 defeat at Everton, accompanied by a memorable image of a fan in the stands near the dugouts dressed as the Grim Reaper, brandishing an inflatable scythe.

Job security for a Premier League manager grows more precarious by the season. The eight sacked so far in 2025-26 lasted an average of 319 days in charge, the shortest tenure of any single campaign’s cohort of dismissed bosses.

The margins for error are shrinking rapidly.

Clubs turn to Igor Tudor when they’re on a cliff edge – Spurs will not daunt him

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Clubs turn to Igor Tudor when they’re on a cliff edge – Spurs will not daunt him - The New York Times
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Igor Tudor knows better than to think he is your first choice. It is the story of his coaching career. In 12 jobs, he has only been hired at the start of the season three times. His reputation is like that of The Wolf in Pulp Fiction. If you’re hiring Tudor, it’s because someone’s in a panic and there’s a bloody mess to clean up.

Udinese were on a 10-game losing streak in April 2018. They were sliding towards relegation for the first time in almost a quarter of a century. Luigi Delneri got the sack. Massimo Oddo couldn’t revive them. Udinese were flat-lining. Tudor found a pulse. They had four games left. The first one was dramatic. Udinese were seconds away from beating Benevento, only for Bacary Sagna to score an equaliser for Roberto De Zerbi’s team in a dramatic 3-3 draw. But they Udinese beat Verona and Bologna by 1-0, and Tudor was their saviour.

The Croat left, only to return a year later. Udinese had not learned their lesson. They needed him again. A point was all that kept them out of the relegation zone. Not even Davide Nicola, the coach best known for rescuing Serie A teams in times of trouble, managed to shock Udinese back to life. Only Tudor could do that. Udinese took points off the Milan clubs, beat the teams around them and ended in 12th, their joint-highest finish in the past 13 years.

In the interim, Tudor has tried to shrug off the stereotypes and step out of the pigeonholes. Italy has a tendency to place coaches in categories. He was, for a long time, portrayed as an escape artist like Nicola and Davide Ballardini. A Harry Houdini figure from Split. To leave it behind, Tudor did something unexpected. When Juventus fired Maurizio Sarri in 2020 and promoted Andrea Pirlo, Tudor was invited to become his assistant.

Not many head coaches accept becoming a No 2. But this was Juventus, the club Tudor served as a sharp-elbowed centre-back for the best part of a decade. Pirlo had never coached before. He’d been hired, initially, to take charge of the under-23s. Il Maestro lacked experience. Tudor, by contrast, didn’t and Juventus’ executive team, which included Fabio Paratici, later of Tottenham Hotspur, thought he might be able to lend a hand.

While Juventus’ nine-year title-winning streak ended that season, they played a modern hybrid style of football with Rodrigo Bentancur and Dejan Kulusevski (the pair made more than 40 appearances each and Radu Dragusin played four times), beating Barcelona at the Camp Nou and winning the Coppa Italia. Since that season, Juventus have not bettered the 78 points they racked up in the league. Some thought Pirlo deserved more time. He was fired after only one season.

But Pirlo’s career since at Fatih Karagumruk in Turkey, then Sampdoria in Italy’s second division, and now Dubai United has raised questions: how much of that season at Juventus was down to him and the presence of players such as Cristiano Ronaldo? And how much of it was down to his assistants, Tudor and Antonio Gagliardi?

A partial answer came when Tudor stepped in for Eusebio Di Francesco at Hella Verona in September 2021. They had lost every game and, as happens every year since they were last promoted, pundits had taken one look at Verona’s squad and predicted relegation. Tudor instead made them a revelation. It was their best season in years, a ninth-place finish, 53 points.

Verona’s attack was the joint-fourth best in the league in Tudor’s time. Diego Simeone’s son, Giovanni, scored 17 times, his best goalscoring season, and got a move to Napoli soon afterwards. Other players’ careers were launched by Tudor, as was his own.

The same executives who picked De Zerbi to coach Marseille picked him. Only once in the past eight years had Marseille collected more points than under Tudor. He was not made to feel welcome.

“What Igor went through, I wouldn’t wish on my worst enemy,” Marseille president Pablo Longoria reflected in Le Provence. “He found himself in a club where everyone was against him: inside and outside. Fans were whipping up tension against him. They were calling for Jorge Sampaoli to come back, others asked for power to be given to the players. There were calls to fan groups to get rid of the coach. When I returned to Marseille, the pre-season was like the 37th round of the league, where you’re playing for your life. That’s not normal. And again, I didn’t see the situation coming.”

Whistled from the start of his Marseille career, Tudor silenced the sceptics in an atmosphere far more hostile than the one awaiting him in north London. His first defeat actually came against Tottenham in the Champions League group stage, when the team was undone by a Chancel Mbemba red card and a couple of Richarlison second-half goals. In Ligue 1, Marseille didn’t lose until October. After a sticky patch, they then went on a long winning streak into the New Year. The boos turned to cheers, as Marseille knocked PSG out of the Coupe de France and qualified for the Champions League again.

Tudor then left of his own accord, citing personal reasons. “Working at Marseille is like working at another club for two or three years,” he said. Exhausting. De Zerbi would probably agree.

The experience at the Velodrome encouraged clubs of similar stature to reach out to Tudor. When Sarri quit as Lazio coach in March 2024, Tudor’s first game featured a stoppage-time winner against Juventus. It was another reminder to his old club of what he could do after being on staff the last time they won something and having caused an upset with Verona too.

Although Juventus took their revenge, winning 3-2 on aggregate, in the Coppa Italia semi-finals (as Arkadiusz Milik broke Lazio hearts with an 83rd-minute second-leg goal), he did very well. Sure, Roma got the better of them in the derby, but that 1-0 defeat was the only loss Lazio suffered in the nine league games Tudor oversaw. They climbed from ninth to seventh, as Napoli collapsed, and qualified for the Europa League. Tudor then walked, again of his own accord. His vision for the club was incompatible with that of the owner and sporting director.

Tudor thought Lazio’s squad desperately needed overhauling. He wanted to keep Daichi Kamada, who left for Crystal Palace. “He asked us to change eight players,” Lazio owner Claudio Lotito said. “That was too many for a group we consider to be up to the task. But he left like a decent person. I want to make that clear.”

Clubs come to Tudor when they’re on a cliff edge. He is not afraid to stare into the abyss. He won’t allow it consume him. Instead of asking him to stop teams falling out of the league, his recent briefs, Tottenham aside, have been about preventing teams from spiralling out of the lucrative European places.

A year ago, Juventus broke glass and pushed the emergency button. Heavy 4-0 and 3-0 defeats against Atalanta and Fiorentina damaged Thiago Motta so badly that the next big thing in Italian coaching was out of a job after just seven months.

Juventus were fifth at the time but the momentum was with the teams around them. Bologna, for instance, were looking better without Motta under Vincenzo Italiano and were about to win their first trophy in more than 50 years. Roma were resurgent under Claudio Ranieri and Lazio looked good under Tudor’s replacement, Marco Baroni. All in all, there were four teams within four points of one another battling for one spot. Juventus claimed it, losing only one of Tudor’s nine league games at the helm.

It went down to a tense final day in Venice, where Juventus went behind, got in front, lost the lead again and then won late. Qualification for the Champions League rolled his contract over. Juventus had a get-out. But their participation in the Club World Cup neared on the horizon and Damian Comolli, another ex-Tottenham employee, had only recently replaced the sacked Cristiano Giuntoli, becoming general manager and later chief executive.

Sticking with Tudor was, in some respects, a little underwhelming but given how steeped he is in Juventus’ DNA, it was not viewed unfavourably either. The Club World Cup was an opportunity for him to get to know the team even better and to, quite unexpectedly, have an audience with Donald Trump in the Oval Office.

Juventus started the season taking nine points from nine. The 4-3 in the Derby d’Italia against rivals Inter and a 4-4 draw against Dortmund in the Champions League were spectacular. But the team was overperforming its expected goals (xG), suggesting their form might not be sustainable. Kenan Yildiz, the team’s star playmaker, could not pull a rabbit out of the hat every game. Gleison Bremer, the club’s best defender, went down with a torn left meniscus and the strikers stopped scoring.

Tudor railed against refereeing decisions. He got angry with the fixture computer for piling games against Inter, Dortmund, Verona, Atalanta, Villarreal, Milan, Como, Real Madrid and his final game against Lazio one on top of the other.

Eight games without a win persuaded Comolli, who had not hired him in the first place, and the rest of the executive team that a change was needed. The cover of Luciano Spalletti’s book, which Tudor was reading in his office, showed his replacement.

The 47-year-old departed believing he could have turned it around. The calendar was softening up, after all. But he wanted more from Juventus’ senior players. It was a young group in need of leadership, expensively and poorly assembled by Giuntoli.

The new structure of the club was still taking shape and financial fair play rules limited what Juventus could do in the summer. They were, for instance, unable to make Randal Kolo Muani’s signing from PSG permanent. He moved to Tottenham on loan instead. Kolo Muani scored five goals in 11 games under Tudor. That’s five more than he’s mustered for Tottenham in 18 Premier League appearances.

Make no mistake, Tudor is ready for the Spurs job. He has saved clubs in worse positions with worse players and less time available. He has withstood the kind of hostility in Marseille you’ll never find in England and proven fans wrong. He has been around big-name players in each of his spells at Juventus, from Zinedine Zidane to Cristiano Ronaldo.

“Alessandro Del Piero used to get mad if we lost a game in training,” Tudor told DAZN in August. “That was the famous Juventus way. I’m the same in life. It’s about talking in facts and leading by example. I’m a man of few words and don’t turn the other cheek when someone is out of line. You have to always be on it in training because that way the game itself is easier.”

It’s the mentality Paratici tried to impose at Tottenham, only to acknowledge Tottenham has its own mentality, its own DNA. Tudor has been dealt as challenging a start to his interim role as the one he faced at Lazio. Injuries are bad, too, and he will perhaps have to adapt the 3-4-2-1 he has used since his days at Verona to fit the players available to him.

At Juventus, the motto is “winning isn’t important, it’s the only thing that counts”. How Tottenham win football games between now and the end of the season doesn’t matter. They have to win, whatever it takes. And Tottenham have decided, not without justification, that it takes Igor Tudor.

Tottenham Hotspur rebuffed Lucas Bergvall transfer enquiries over winter window

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Tottenham Hotspur could face a battle to keep hold of Lucas Bergvall this summer after being forced to rebuff enquiries from rival teams in the winter transfer market.

Bergvall’s first season at Spurs saw him occupy a key role under then-boss Ange Postecoglou and named the club’s player of the year after helping them win the Europa League.

Postecoglou’s replacement as head coach, Thomas Frank, used the Sweden international less frequently and often out wide, rather than the central midfield position he favours and tends operate most effectively.

His situation alerted suitors in England and further afield, with Chelsea and Aston Villa among the 20-year-old’s long-term admirers.

Both sides made direct contact with Spurs to establish whether a potential opportunity existed, but it was made clear they currently do not intend to consider his departure and the matter advanced no further.

Villa’s check call followed Spurs pipping them to the signing of Conor Gallagher and Chelsea’s came around the time they were also evaluating a deal for Douglas Luiz, who ultimately joined Villa.

Bergvall moved to north London from Djurgarden in June 2024 and signed a new contract 12 months later, which secured his services through until the summer of 2031.

He is sidelined at present after suffering an ankle injury against Borussia Dortmund last month.

Appointing Igor Tudor is the biggest decision Spurs hierarchy will make – it has to pay off

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Appointing Igor Tudor is the biggest decision Spurs hierarchy will make – it has to pay off - The New York Times
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If all goes well, Igor Tudor could end up as a happy little footnote in the history of Tottenham Hotspur. The man who swiftly repaired the ship, won a few games and kept Spurs in the Premier League.

If all goes well, Tudor will be able to shake hands with chief executive Vinai Venkatesham and technical director Johan Lange after the home game against Everton on May 24, wave goodbye to the fans, and then get on with the rest of his career. Tottenham, secured in the top flight for another year, will be able to focus on the richer managerial market of the summer, the chance for a higher-profile appointment, yet another optimistic reset. And the summer of 2026 will look like the summers of 2025, 2023 and 2021, another chance for everyone to start again.

But what if it goes wrong? Tudor has bravely leapt aboard a sinking ship. Spurs have won just two of their last 17 Premier League games. They are five points above the relegation zone with only 12 league games left. They are amid another devastating injury crisis, which just this week has also cost them Wilson Odobert, who tore his left anterior cruciate ligament on Tuesday night. Their next game is at home against Arsenal.

So even though West Ham United and Nottingham Forest are below Spurs in the table, the threat is still very real. The unthinkable has now become very thinkable indeed. In fact, it is the only thing that Tottenham must think about until they get the wins that they need. If they do not, and they end up being relegated for the first time since 1977, then Tudor will be far from a footnote. He will be the man who took Tottenham down.

That is why this appointment, even if it is only for 12 league games, is the biggest decision that Venkatesham and Lange will make at Spurs. There is no margin for error. The whole club is effectively walking on a tightrope without a safety net. If it goes wrong, the devastation and humiliation will be all-encompassing. The worst-case scenario, the downside risk, is nothing short of catastrophic.

The reputations of Venkatesham and Lange are on the line. Since Daniel Levy’s dismissal last September, fans have been anxiously waiting to see how this new era would pan out, whether the new leadership could make the right decisions to get Spurs back where they should be. This season has turned out to be worse than anyone could possibly have imagined, with another injury crisis and truly miserable performances and results under Frank. The hierarchy clearly wanted to give Frank time and avoid a knee-jerk reaction to a difficult spell. But this week, they had to act.

Fans want to see decisive leadership, a clear sense that the steering wheel is being tightly gripped at difficult moments. The club say that they had a plan ready to deliver in case they were in this situation, but no one would have wanted to be in this difficult situation this February. There are simply very few good out-of-work coaches waiting for a call, even fewer with experience of English football. The one man who would have fitted perfectly, Michael Carrick, took over at Manchester United one month ago, when Spurs were sticking with Frank.

Instead, they have ended up enduring a high-pressure couple of days, which started when Frank was called by Venkatesham and Lange on Wednesday morning and asked to attend a meeting at the club’s training ground, at which point he realised he was being dismissed. Even after the club officially announced Frank’s departure later that morning, some members of staff were left wondering whether they would be kept on or following the Dane out the door.

Their early FA Cup exit has at least given Spurs extra time and space to identify Frank’s replacement. No fourth-round tie this weekend means an 11-day gap between the Newcastle game and Arsenal next Sunday, a break akin to an international window. The players had a long-planned five days off this week, coming back in on Monday.

So Spurs assessed candidates this week. Robbie Keane was on the list. Edin Terzic and Marco Rose were informally approached, but Terzic would prefer not to join a club mid-season and is focused on finalising an offer for the summer, while Rose is still contracted to RB Leipzig until the summer, despite being removed as manager last March, which would have been an extra complication and cost. In the end, Spurs have gone for Tudor, out of work since being sacked by Juventus in October, with a strong record of short-term turnarounds.

Tudor is not a new name for Tottenham. During Fabio Paratici’s brief return to the club as a sporting director, he pushed for the idea of replacing Frank with Tudor, whom he knew from his time at Juventus. In the end, that particular plan has only been enacted a few weeks after Paratici left Spurs for Fiorentina.

Of course, it is a risk. Anyone would be a risk under these circumstances. Tudor’s CV has taken him all over Europe, and to some big clubs, but his record and reputation are fairly mixed. He has no grounding in English football. Spurs have never made an appointment like this before. In their long history of caretaker, acting and interim managers, they have traditionally always been internal appointments, including Ryan Mason, Chris Hughton, Clive Allen and David Pleat. The idea of an external interim, new to the club, new to the league, represents a leap into the dark for everyone involved.

This is not what anyone envisaged when the season began. It is not what anyone envisaged when Spurs were in the European positions just a few months ago. But the crisis is real and someone needs to keep this ship afloat. If Tudor cannot do that, then the whole thing will go down with him.

Additional reporting: Jay Harris, Seb Stafford-Bloor

Igor Tudor style of play: Tottenham can expect pressing, organisation and daring football

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Tottenham Hotspur’s playing style has been like a rollercoaster ride in recent years.

The breathless approach taken by Mauricio Pochettino made way for the pragmatism of Jose Mourinho, while a low-block-and-counter-attack approach was short-lived under Nuno Espirito Santo. Antonio Conte’s regimented methods were initially effective, but entertainment was lacking. Enter Ange Postecoglou as the perfect antidote to that.

Thomas Frank was hired to be the man who could balance all of the above attributes into a single, coherent system, but things did not go to plan during his eight months at the helm, leaving Spurs with the task of finding their sixth manager in seven years.

To avoid a further slide down the league table, Spurs have acted quickly after verbally agreeing a deal to appoint Igor Tudor as interim head coach until the end of the season. Tudor was most recently the head coach of Juventus, but parted ways after just seven months and 24 games in charge in October on the back of a winless streak of eight games in all competitions.

Tudor has a penchant for firefighting, with his last two roles coming in the latter stages of a season. His appointment in Turin came last March after Thiago Motta’s sacking, almost one year after a similar short-term role as Lazio head coach in 2024 following Mauricio Sarri’s resignation.

Spurs fans will be pleased to know that the former Croatia international had an immediate impact on results after his previous appointments. At Lazio, his 18 points from a possible 27 were bettered only by Atalanta in that period, while he suffered just one loss in the remaining nine league games at the end of the 2024-25 season at Juventus.

Crucially, what kind of coach are Spurs getting? More Conte than Postecoglou? More Mourinho than Frank? Allow The Athletic to break things down.

The first point of note is how Tudor typically sets up his team.

Across his recent spells at Marseille, Lazio and Juventus, the 47-year-old prefers a back-three formation — most commonly using a 3-4-2-1 shape with narrow forwards supporting a central striker.

Spurs employed a back-three system on occasion under Frank, so the system change would not be an overwhelming change for their centre-backs. Cristian Romero, Radu Dragusin and Micky Van de Ven would be the most likely trio in the centre of defence, at least until Kevin Danso returns. The Austria defender is set to be sidelined for several weeks, having snapped a ligament in his big toe during Tottenham’s 2-0 win over Eintracht Frankfurt in the Champions League two weeks ago.

Tudor will also be without Romero for his first three league matches in charge, with the club captain serving a ban for his red card challenge on Casemiro in the 2-0 defeat to Manchester United.

With a fit and firing wing-back partnership of Destiny Udogie and Pedro Porro, Spurs have the right profiles to suit Tudor’s preferred system. However, the pair are sidelined with injuries, which look set to keep them out of action for more than a month. Djed Spence has only just returned from the physio’s table for Tuesday’s defeat to Newcastle United, but is a capable alternative on either flank. Archie Gray deputised at right wing-back under Frank, but is more comfortable in central midfield, while January signing Souza, 19, from Brazilian side Santos, lacks top-level experience.

The biggest questions are in Spurs’ attack. Injuries mean any interim coach would have faced a lack of options across the front line, but the shortage of right-sided players may prompt a change of system from Tudor’s preferred 3-4-2-1.

Mohammed Kudus, Frank’s first-choice option on the right wing, will be out of action until at least the March international break. Dejan Kulusevski — arguably Tottenham’s brightest creator — has been sidelined for the entirety of the season with a complicated patellar injury. In Kudus’ absence, Frank used Wilson Odobert from the right, with the France Under-21 international enjoying his best stretch of form since joining Spurs in August 2024 — but he sustained an anterior cruciate ligament injury on Tuesday.

Until Kudus returns, there is no natural right-wing alternative. Mathys Tel is primarily a left-sided attacker or centre-forward. Conor Gallagher, who replaced Odobert on the right after his injury against Newcastle, is more comfortable in central midfield.

That brings us to Randal Kolo Muani, whose loan spell has been disastrous. He has made 18 appearances in the league without registering a goal or an assist. He is, however, Spurs’ top scorer in Europe (three goals in seven games), netting twice against Paris Saint-Germain and once against Eintracht — clubs he has represented (he is contracted to PSG).

The good news is that the France international enjoyed a good loan spell at Juventus in the second half of last season — mostly under Tudor — scoring 10 goals across 19 matches in the league and Club World Cup, occasionally playing beside or behind Dusan Vlahovic. Perhaps the potential to partner Kolo Muani with Dominic Solanke, who has scored four goals since returning from a long-term ankle injury in January, will prompt Tudor into considering a change in formation.

Whatever the system, Tudor’s principles are predominantly centred around front-foot, aggressive football that is grounded in strong physicality.

This can be seen most clearly in Tudor’s last full season in management during the 2022-23 campaign with Marseille. From their playstyle wheel below, dominance in possession and territory (Field tilt, 86 out of 99) shows that Tudor prefers his side to be the protagonists on the ball, but what is most notable is their out-of-possession approach.

Few teams across Europe’s top seven leagues could match the defensive energy that Tudor asked of his side (Intensity, 97th percentile).

While his 3-4-2-1 system will fall into a back five when retreating into a lower block, Tudor is keen to impose a high-pressing defensive approach when he can.

As evidence of this, no Ligue 1 side won possession in the final third more frequently than Marseille’s 6.0 per 90 in 2022-23, with a man-to-man press often at the heart of their smothering recovery of the ball.

Converting those high regains into goalscoring chances did not quite marry up with their volume, with just one goal scored in a sequence following such an action — good enough for the joint-second lowest return in the division that season.

An example of Tudor’s aggressive approach with Marseille is shown below against Lyon.

A sideways pass is the trigger for Marseille to step up, with the head coach standing with his arms out wide in expectation within frame one.

It’s a risky sequence, but the kind of press that Tudor often encourages, where players must be switched on and prepared to follow the opposition aggressively up the pitch. Balerdi, the wide centre-back, has to step far from his position and engage in a critical defensive duel, but the reward is an overload in attack.

In another example against Troyes, Tudor’s team are slow to get up the pitch after a clearance, but a lung-busting run from Cengiz Under kickstarts the team-wide press.

Again, the pass out wide is the trigger; within seconds, the Turkish winger is applying pressure to the receiver, with his two midfielders and wide centre-back Chancel Mbemba tearing forward in support.

Yoann Salmier has limited options — each of his team-mates are being marked — and plays a risky pass into midfield, where Marseille’s Valentin Rongier steps in to win the ball, before slipping it through to Under to score.

At its best, Tudor’s out-of-possession approach is suffocating, a full-blooded style that excites fans and sets adrenaline pumping through the team. But such a daring press is prone to moments of misjudgement, and can just as easily unravel as energy lulls and tackles aren’t followed through.

There are familiar patterns during Juventus’ 2-2 draw with Villarreal, as Teun Koopmeiners charges out of midfield to apply pressure after the sideways pass in frame one. Wing-back Joao Mario also steps up, but as Villarreal move the ball back inside, we can see how stretched the midfield has become, with Koopmeiners still high up the pitch.

Villarreal midfielder Dani Parejo points to the space in frame three, and Rafa Marin obliges, firing the ball through to Santi Comesana and taking six Juventus players out of the game. After a quick one-two, the ball breaks for Georges Mikautadze, who opens the scoring.

In a more extreme example later in the first half, Juventus use an opposition goal kick as a chance to step up, leaving acres of space between the midfield and the back four.

Sure enough, Villarreal clip the ball over the top and skip the press. And although Pierre Kalulu does well to jump from defence and concede the foul, it’s a sequence that demonstrates the unnecessary pressure that Tudor’s sides can sometimes find themselves under after committing too high.

If they don’t make meaningful challenges in the final third, they leave themselves a few good passes away from being picked apart.

Despite its flaws, many facets of Tudor’s tactical style suit this Tottenham squad, and there is the potential to implement an effective high-pressing strategy when everyone is fit.

Van de Ven, Romero and Danso are capable of playing that proactive wide centre-back role, while Porro and Udogie can press high from the wing-back roles and offer plenty in attack. The midfield will need to be switched on, energetic, and physically capable, but Pape Matar Sarr, Lucas Bergvall, Conor Gallagher and Joao Palhinha seem to fit the bill.

Tudor will reinstate rigorous organisation and demand plenty from his players, and may inspire a short-term response. But with a stretched squad and morale on the floor, there are no guarantees that the coach’s adventurous style won’t be misplaced.

Tudor’s arrival might well be the closest appointment to Spurs’ “To dare is to do” club motto in recent years.

Thomas Frank was meant to bring stability to Spurs, but ended up unpopular with fans and players

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When Thomas Frank was appointed Tottenham Hotspur’s new head coach in June 2025, his task was to rebuild the club’s culture. But the defining image of his tenure — or rather the defining sound — was booing. And booing directed specifically at him.

Within a few months of Frank taking over, booing became a routine part of a Tottenham matchday.

At times, it was directed at the players, like at Guglielmo Vicario when Spurs lost to Fulham on November 29. When Tottenham drew at Brentford and lost at Bournemouth in January 2026, Frank was singled out for treatment by the Spurs away end. It got louder and more pointed time after time, when Spurs lost at home to West Ham United, when they drew away at Burnley. During Frank’s final game, the 2-1 defeat by Newcastle United last night, fans’ anger was mixed with resignation and a new sense of fear about the relegation threat. But they sang ‘Sacked in the morning’ at Frank again. And this time, they got their way.

There have been some unpopular managers at Tottenham in recent years. But even at the worst moments for Ange Postecoglou and Antonio Conte — the last two permanent predecessors — they were not as rejected, as scorned as Frank was on Tuesday night. Even the mutiny that led to Nuno Espirito Santo’s dismissal did not feel quite as personal as the anger that Frank has faced for the last few months.

For all the talk of cultural change and building a new environment, Frank never made much of an impression on the players, and leaves Spurs as the most unpopular head coach they have had in modern times.

Only by a few months does Frank also avoid being the shortest-serving. He did at least make it more than halfway through his debut season. By surviving all the way through to February, he did far better than Jacques Santini and Nuno, both of whom took over in the summer (Santini in 2004, Nuno in 2021), and then left in early November. But while Frank only managed Spurs for 26 league games, he still managed to witness some of the most dramatic changes in Tottenham’s history. Changes that transformed the structure and direction of the club. Changes that left Frank exposed and demanded even more from him.

What Spurs have needed, more than anything, is a football team that people could believe in and rally behind. And Frank was never able to deliver it.

While Frank left the job in fairly typical circumstances — as with Conte and Mourinho, he was sacked mid-season — he came to it unlike almost any other Spurs manager. His was a uniquely mixed inheritance. Because last season Tottenham both won the Europa League, their greatest moment for a generation, and finished 17th in the Premier League, their worst season for almost 50 years. It was a painful decision to dismiss Postecoglou but one that Daniel Levy took to rebuild Spurs as a consistent force in all competitions. Frank was sacked having utterly failed to rebuild Spurs’ standing in the Premier League, effectively running last season on repeat, from the huge gap between the records at home and in Europe to the devastating injury crisis.

Tottenham wanted to give Frank the best possible tools to succeed so he was allowed to assemble a high-quality backroom staff, including members from Brentford and some recruited from outside. It was an early sign of the club’s commitment to Frank’s rebuilding. But the most important tools for any manager are the players. And there is no avoiding the fact that Frank was not handed a strong group.

Spurs never replaced Harry Kane when he left in 2023, just as they did not replace Son Heung-min soon after Frank took over. In Postecoglou’s last Spurs press conference, he had bemoaned the “development gap” left by the club’s replacement of experienced players with teenagers. Tottenham had clearly been overtaken by Aston Villa and Newcastle, and had fallen further behind the rest of the ‘Big Six’. It was time to make up the gap.

Frank wanted more proven quality and goals from out wide, a new No 6 to shore up the midfield and, most importantly, a new No 10, with Dejan Kulusevski and James Maddison both sidelined with long-term injuries. Spurs were able to sign Mohammed Kudus and Joao Palhinha quickly enough to feature in their season opener, the UEFA Super Cup, but a top-quality No 10 proved more elusive.

They had targeted Morgan Gibbs-White and Eberechi Eze, got close to both, but ended up with neither. Levy was suddenly so desperate for a win in the market, and eventually did a £52million ($71m) deal to sign Xavi Simons from RB Leipzig.

Gibbs-White and Eze would have hit the ground running at Spurs, but Simons needed more time. Randal Kolo Muani, Kudus, Palhinha and Simons are not bad players, but balanced against the departure of Son, and the injuries to Maddison, Kulusevski and Solanke, not many would say that Frank started with a strong squad. The window ended as they all do at Tottenham, with fans furiously arguing about whether it had made the team and the squad better or worse. It felt like time for everyone to take a breath and focus on the football.

But instead, September 4, 2025, proved to be one of the most dramatic days in the history of the club. Levy, who had run the club with near-total control for almost 25 years, was sacked. It was a genuinely shocking moment which marked a radical change in how the club was run. And it meant that the man who led the process to appoint Frank, who signed the players he would choose from, was no longer in the building.

The challenge for Frank was to take this patchy squad, built together by a series of different executives for a series of very different managers, and turn it into a functioning team. A team that could correct the apparent excesses of the Postecoglou era — the ups and downs, the defensive frailty, the inability to play two good games each week — replacing them with something robust, flexible and sustainable. Just like Frank’s Brentford team, who got promoted to the Premier League and managed two top-half finishes in four years, but on a bigger scale.

And there was certainly a moment, a few games into the season, when it felt as if that hope might even be easily and quickly realised. Frank’s first game was the Super Cup in Udine against Luis Enrique’s brilliant Paris Saint-Germain team. Frank unveiled a bespoke 3-5-2 system. Palhinha and Kudus both shone on debut. Spurs shut the game down, excelled on set pieces, went 2-0 up, only to fade at the end and lose on penalties. A missed opportunity for silverware, but a clear statement of intent.

When Spurs beat Burnley 3-0 at home on Premier League opening weekend, the players were visibly buzzing with optimism about this new chapter. Best of all, Spurs went to the Etihad Stadium in their second league game, deployed another masterclass of organisation, pressing and countering, and won 2-0.

Looking back, the start of Frank’s tenure was also its peak. Burnley was one of only two home league wins. Manchester City was their only win against a top side. Beyond that, the best teams they beat were, with all due respect to the others, Villarreal, Everton, and Borussia Dortmund.

So many of the problems Frank could never escape were evident in his third league game, a 1-0 home defeat by Bournemouth that flattered Tottenham. Spurs were painfully limited on the ball, recording an xG of just 0.19 (this felt shocking at the time, but they managed to record even lower figures against Chelsea and Arsenal). They looked predictable in their build-up, unable to move the ball forward or create chances from open play. They did not look like they knew how to take the initiative in a home game.

And every single subsequent home game confirmed this to be the case. Opponents would come away from playing Spurs marvelling at how predictable Tottenham were, how poor they were in possession, and how easy they were to stop. Especially when so much of Spurs’ play was exclusively directed down the sides, and never through the middle of the pitch.

When they hosted Wolves — rooted to the bottom of the table — in September, they were even worse. They needed Palhinha to score in added time just to rescue a point. When Chelsea came to Tottenham, one of the biggest games in Spurs’ calendar, they looked utterly clueless in possession, finishing with an xG of 0.1. Their best moment was Rodrigo Bentancur not quite connecting with a Kevin Danso long throw. Against Fulham, they were 2-0 down after six minutes and could not recover. But no home game could compare to the toxicity when they lost to West Ham on January 17, and then to Newcastle on February 10, the two games when the stadium found its voice, united against the head coach.

Put this all together, and it made for one of the worst home records in the Premier League. Now, Spurs’ struggles at their £1.2billion stadium were nothing new. They were miserable there in the second half of last season, too. But Frank offered nothing for the home crowd to believe in and get behind. And with every passing home game, fans showed up less confident and less optimistic. Over time, the negative atmosphere toxified relations between the fans, the team and Frank himself.

After the Chelsea defeat, Micky van de Ven and Djed Spence walked off, straight past Frank, ignoring his requests that they acknowledge the crowd, an act for which they both later apologised. During the Fulham defeat, some sections of the crowd jeered Vicario after a costly mistake, leading to Frank saying that they were not “true fans”. Frank’s standing with the crowd never recovered from that moment when he challenged them. In recent years, most of the negativity at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium was directed at Levy. This season, it started to turn on the team and then overwhelmingly on the manager. Frank was never able to turn that tide.

The respite, such as it was, came away from home. Frank’s Spurs took 19 of their 29 points on the road. If the blueprint was the City win, they followed it well around the country, marrying defensive organisation with set-piece efficiency. That was how they won at West Ham United, Leeds United, Everton and Crystal Palace, four away wins that suggested that Spurs did have a method to win.

Even if it was not a method that worked at home. Even the 2-2 draws at Brighton & Hove Albion and Newcastle were perfectly creditable, games when the team showed fight and commitment. But the biggest away game of all came at Arsenal in November. And Frank’s negative 5-4-1 set-up, like a League One team trying to earn an FA Cup replay, added to fears that he did not fit with Spurs.

It was after the Arsenal game that the same question was asked, both inside and outside the club: was this job too big for him? Would he be able to make the step up from Brentford to Spurs?

It was a question to which Frank was never able to provide an adequate answer. It was after the Arsenal and Fulham defeats in November that Fabio Paratici, then Spurs’ sporting director, concluded that he did not fit this job. And after the 3-0 defeat by Nottingham Forest in December, Paratici started talking to Fiorentina, leading, along with his personal circumstances, to a swift departure from his new role.

Even on Frank’s few good days — those counter-attacking away wins — Spurs still set up playing reactive, minimalistic football, football that jarred with the traditions of the club. When Spurs fans in the away end at Brentford sang “Boring, boring Tottenham” after an unambitious 0-0 draw on January 1, it was the beginning of the end for Frank.

Many of the players did not enjoy the limited nature of Frank’s football either. A source close to one senior first-team player — speaking on the condition of anonymity to protect their relationship — said, just before Frank’s dismissal, that he was ultimately a coach for a “smaller team”, focused on compact defensive shape, long balls and counter-attacks. This meant that Frank was unable to get the best out of the talent available to him, with the player in question feeling that he was only able to perform at “10 per cent” of his potential because of Frank’s restrictive tactics.

Frank told those close to him that the second half of the season would be “painful” and that although Spurs have great facilities, they also had a squad low on quality. This applied to the left wing, where he tried various players with none really excelling. Tottenham’s recruitment department deserve a portion of the blame for assembling a disjointed squad but Frank never settled on a starting XI and his constant changes impacted the team’s momentum.

It is a simple fact of football that managing bigger teams is different from managing smaller ones. There are plenty of examples of very good managers — even great ones — struggling to make a big step up. Like Roy Hodgson going from Fulham to Liverpool in 2010. Or David Moyes going from Everton to Manchester United in 2013. Or even Nuno going from Wolves to Spurs in 2021.

Just like Hodgson, Moyes and Nuno before him, Frank struggled to convince that he could manage a club with the size and expectations of Tottenham. He was an intelligent, thoughtful voice in public, popular with staff, keen to know everyone’s name. But there was a perception that he was too nice, maybe lacking the ego or the out-sized charisma needed to lead a club of this size. The sight of Van de Ven and Spence walking past him when he urged them over to the fans played into that.

Another Tottenham player believed that while Postecoglou was perhaps not the best coach, the players respected him, admired his charisma and listened to what he said. But those players soon stopped listening to Frank, because, as this player saw it, he did not have the personality required to coach a big team.

Another long-standing training ground source concurred, pointing out that the players would ultimately run through brick walls for Postecoglou, whatever his faults, as proven by the Europa League win. The players never had the same respect for Frank, and knew that they did not have to work as hard for him. Which meant that — in the eyes of this source — they never trained with the same intensity they showed under the previous manager. The players knew that they could get away with less.

It should not be brushed over that Frank faced serious issues in terms of player behaviour and dynamics that he was not able to solve. Discipline and time-keeping were always a concern. After Spurs lost so painfully to Arsenal, Frank lectured his players in the dressing room about standards dropping. The next day, multiple players — including Cristian Romero — still turned up late. The club deny this was the case. The example of Romero is an instructive one. He was the only possible choice as captain when Son left, but his behaviour on and off the pitch was not always what you want from the man wearing the armband. Frank always backed Romero in public, even after he had criticised the club’s hierarchy and then received a four-match ban for a challenge on Manchester United’s Casemiro a few days later, but privately he held reservations about the defender’s leadership qualities.

That, in part, is why the club realised they had such an issue with leadership over the course of the season. Sources close to players would repeatedly refer to the lack of direction on the training ground. Or to the fact that, after a defeat, the players would get too down on themselves, with no one there able to lift and refocus them on the task ahead. It left a miserable mood during Frank’s last two months which no one could ever shift. And explains why the club signed Conor Gallagher — and pursued Andy Robertson — during last month’s transfer window. They were desperate to plug that character gap.

Nor should it be forgotten that Frank had to contend with an injury crisis as bad as the one that sunk Spurs’ league campaign last year too. Maddison and Kulusevski — their two best midfielders — did not start a single competitive minute for him. Solanke, the best centre-forward, did not start a game until late January. Most of the rest of the team went down with significant injuries. Bentancur, Danso, Pedro Porro, Richarlison, Lucas Bergvall and Kudus were all also missing for the final weeks of Frank’s tenure. Wilson Odobert tore the anterior cruciate ligament in his left knee during Frank’s final game in charge.

This would not be a very strong squad with everyone fit. So take those players out of it, and they were never going to be able to challenge this season.

But as a public figurehead, Frank never quite fit, never quite managed to find the right words when speaking in public. For someone who always had a reputation for talking intelligently in public, he appeared to struggle with the brighter spotlight that comes with being the public face of a big club. Spurs fans grew frustrated that Frank would never say anything to make them believe in him or his football.

When Frank joined, he said the only guarantee was that Spurs would “lose games”. In one light, that was a welcome piece of honesty. But over time, it was seen as defeatist. The contrast with Postecoglou, who said that he always won a trophy in his second season and then delivered, was obvious. Even when results were turning against him, Frank never came out fighting like Postecoglou would have done. When he said, in his post-match press conference after January’s damaging West Ham defeat, that he was turning the “super-tanker” in the right direction, most fans just got annoyed at him. The moment at Bournemouth when Frank was photographed drinking from an Arsenal-branded coffee cup was the most emblematic of them all. Such a small issue, yet also so telling about a manager who kept getting the optics wrong.

But for all the questions about Frank’s management style — whether he was too nice, too thoughtful, whether he had the charisma or the ‘aura’ to manage Spurs — in the end, it all comes down to the football. Tottenham, during his brief tenure, simply did not look like a good team. They never played with any style or creativity. They barely created anything from open play. They recorded low xG numbers, and then did so again and again. There was never any sense of where the football was leading. You could not see an obvious endpoint, a light at the end of the tunnel. Just more set pieces, and more of Porro chipping the ball down the line to Kudus.

Ever since Frank’s appointment, fans were wondering whether this was just a replay of the Nuno interregnum, that short spell at the start of the 2021-22 season. Nuno faced some of the same questions: whether he could scale up from a promoted side to a big one, whether he could coach a style of play suitable to Spurs’ players, stadium and expectations. But when Levy sacked Nuno, they still had Kane and Son, with Conte waiting to take over. There are no equivalent quick fixes from here nor fast routes back to the top.

Frank was Levy’s last big appointment at Tottenham, and his dismissal is the first big test of the post-Levy era. It was clear for some time that the hierarchy did not want to sack him, and he lost the fans and the players long before he finally lost the people running the club. The focus all season had been on patience, giving time for his cultural changes to take root.

The hope was that, if backed, he could transform the whole club. But instead, Frank was corroded by toxicity and negativity faster and more painfully than most of his predecessors. After last night, CEO Vinai Venkatesham had finally seen and heard enough, and made his recommendation to the board to make a change. And now that Frank is gone, the Tottenham hierarchy must answer what exactly they want to do with this football club.

Additional reporting: James Horncastle, Seb Stafford-Bloor

Thomas Frank’s dreadful Spurs spell is latest example that managers simply can’t change style

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Tottenham Hotspur’s decision to sack their manager after a hugely disappointing 38-game tenure is obviously bad news for Thomas Frank. But, to use a literary device curiously common in football punditry, it’s even worse news for ‘Your Thomas Franks’.

After all, Frank will surely get another decent job on the back of his impressive performance with Brentford. You can imagine him popping up at a mid-sized Bundesliga club, for example.

But Frank was the latest test case for Premier League managers who have overachieved with underdogs through straightforward football, and put themselves in the frame for a ‘big job’.

The viability of a manager successfully making the step up has become a common theme in modern football, particularly now there’s a bigger gap (in budget and expectations) between the top and bottom in the English top flight. There’s also an overwhelming emphasis on a certain style of football that falls in the middle of a Venn diagram roughly incorporating ‘entertaining’, ‘attacking’, and ‘possession’.

You can’t entirely separate that from bad results. Frank hasn’t been sacked because his football was boring; he’s been sacked because he collected 29 points from 26 league matches, because Tottenham are bottom of the six-game form guide (two draws and four defeats), and because they are being dragged into a scrap to avoid relegation. There are some legitimate excuses for Frank, particularly injuries, but he simply appeared to be unsuited to the demands of managing a big club.

Under Frank, Tottenham constantly looked too passive, particularly in the home defeats against Chelsea and Bournemouth. They were bad at building up from the back, most obviously for an early concession away at Leeds. Often, they didn’t have anywhere near enough creativity in the side, most obviously in a terribly limp display at Arsenal. On Tuesday night, Newcastle United overwhelmed Spurs, who struggled to get out of their own half for long periods.

Frank was, more or less, playing Brentford football with Tottenham.

Which brings us back to the question: can a manager change his identity? On recent evidence, no. The Frank era was a stark contrast from Mauricio Pochettino’s spell at Tottenham, even though Pochettino, like Frank, came from a Premier League newcomer (he took over midway through Southampton’s first season up after promotion). But Pochettino was always focused on playing ‘big club’ football. His Southampton became renowned as the league’s most aggressive pressing side. Results were good. But the style, as much as the success, attracted Spurs.

This is vaguely quantifiable. Here’s a slightly unusual graph. It features managers who have taken on ‘big jobs’ (which we’ve defined as clubs who have been in the league for 15-plus seasons — Arsenal, Chelsea, Everton, Liverpool, Manchester City, Manchester United and Tottenham Hotspur) having made the step up from another Premier League side. Along the bottom is the average possession share they recorded in their final season at their old club, a rough measure of style. And up the y-axis is how many matches they lasted at their new club, a rough measure of success.

There is a rough pattern here. Pochettino was the manager most focused on possession at his previous club, and he enjoyed a hugely positive stint at Tottenham, turning them into Champions League finalists and Premier League title contenders. Things ended badly for Brendan Rodgers and Roberto Martinez at Liverpool and Everton, but their initial progress was good. Rodgers’ Liverpool briefly seemed nailed-on to win the Premier League in 2013-14 when they had started as the fifth-favourites, and Martinez took Everton to their highest points tally in the Premier League era.

On the other hand, managers who were accustomed to low possession figures didn’t last long at all.

OK, there are a couple of outliers. Graham Potter was moving to Chelsea, a club traditionally less interested in ‘good football’ than other big clubs. He was therefore a bad fit for the opposite reasons to others.

The other outlier is Sean Dyche at Everton, the fourth-longest spell on this graph. But Everton, during that period, were little more than relegation scrappers, thanks to two significant points deductions in Dyche’s two seasons at the club. Early on, Dyche stated his intention “to play beautiful football if I can, but I want to play winning football first”. Fair enough. He kept them up twice. But at no point did beautiful football enter the equation, and even David Moyes’ relatively basic approach has been a significant upgrade in that respect.

Almost everyone else, more or less, has failed to change their identity. Of course, Managers don’t go into these bigger jobs blind. They know there are higher expectations, that they must adapt their style of play. But they seem to struggle in a multitude of ways.

Roy Hodgson at Liverpool was a classic case. “It is insulting to suggest that because you move to a new club, your methods suddenly don’t work when they’ve held you in good stead for 35 years,” he said at one point. “It’s unbelievable. My methods have translated from Halmstad to Malmo to Orebro to Neuchatel Xamax to the Swiss national team.” And while “Neuchatel Xamax” is a great name to throw in to underline your globetrotting background, namedropping the three-time Swiss champions didn’t convince Liverpool supporters that he understood the task.

“The fact that it hasn’t gone as well as I’d have hoped results-wise is just the nature of football,” Hodgson said later on. “I haven’t worked any differently here than I did in the last six months at Fulham.” That, of course, was partly the problem.

Moyes faced a similar problem when tasked with replacing Sir Alex Ferguson at Manchester United. The story about him coaching Rio Ferdinand by showing him videos of Phil Jagielka’s defending is perhaps overplayed — Moyes was surely making a specific tactical point — but the former Everton manager seemed overwhelmed by the task. His Everton side went into games against big teams primarily to stop the opposition. That wasn’t enough at United.

Another interesting case doesn’t feature on the above graph, as he was taking an international job. But Sam Allardyce’s single game in charge of England was telling. This was a man who unashamedly played long ball football, but also once claimed, albeit light-heartedly, that “I’m not suited to Bolton or Blackburn, I would be more suited to Inter Milan or Real Madrid… it’s not where I’m suited to, it’s just where I’ve been for most of the time”.

England was his chance to prove that. But in England’s 1-0 win in Slovakia, his captain, Wayne Rooney, ignored Allardyce’s tactics and did his own thing. “Wayne played wherever he wanted,” Allardyce said in his post-match interview with ITV. “He was brilliant and controlled midfield. I can’t stop Wayne playing there.” This was an odd comment. So he was asked about it further in the press conference.

“He holds a lot more experience at international football than I do as an international manager,” Allardyce said. “So, when he is using his experience and playing as a team member, it’s not for me to say where he’s going to play. We’d like to get him into goalscoring positions more. I must admit, he did play a little deeper than I thought he’d play.”

And this was a perfect example of the other side of management at big clubs: dealing with star players. Even Allardyce, the boldest and brashest manager in the game, who had worked with top-class players before, felt unable to instruct Rooney. Equally, it sounded like Rooney simply didn’t feel a manager of Allardyce’s calibre had the authority to boss him around. Often, big players just ‘aren’t having’ these managers.

There are some unusual cases on the list. Roberto Di Matteo, who had a promising spell as manager at West Bromwich Albion but was actually handed the Chelsea job as an interim after being the club’s assistant, won the Champions League with an ultra-defensive style of football but was seemingly not the man to create a more long-term, attack-minded approach the following season, and was sacked at almost the first possible opportunity.

It’s almost impossible to find a recent example of a manager transforming his style, going from success with ‘underdog football’ to success with ‘big club football’. Vincent Kompany’s strange journey from relegating Burnley with a comical commitment to possession football to performing excellently with Bayern Munich supports the idea that stylistic concerns are vital when it comes to big clubs appointing a new manager.

Frank remains a respected manager who was hugely popular during his spell with Brentford. And for those of us without a vested interest in the particular club, it’s always interesting to see how these coaches — Allardyce, Dyche, Frank — will fare when stepping up to a bigger job. But, sadly, they constantly fail.

Big clubs perform best when they appoint a coach with a track record of playing ‘the right style’ of football within the Premier League, with a foreign club, or even — being charitable to Enzo Maresca’s performance with Chelsea, as he did win two trophies — in the Championship.

The most damning thing about Frank’s experience is that this is the season when the Premier League has gone ‘old-school’, and his approach still seemed too basic for Tottenham.

The next case study could be Oliver Glasner. His performance at Crystal Palace has been exceptional, and in highlights form, Palace play very entertaining football. But last season and this season, his side has averaged the fourth-lowest possession share in the league, and have the lowest pass completion rate.

The New York Times

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Thomas Frank and Tottenham Hotspur seemed like a good match… until they didn’t

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Thomas Frank claimed he had “close to the perfect football life” during his time with Brentford. He spent nearly seven years in charge of the west London club and, apart from Pep Guardiola, no manager in the Premier League could come close to matching his job security.

None of that has proven to be true at Tottenham Hotspur. He has been sacked by the north London club after eight months in charge following a run of just two league wins in 17 Premier League matches against a backdrop of growing discontent from supporters.

The Dane joined Brentford in December 2016 as an assistant before being promoted to head coach two years later. He led them to the Premier League in 2021 and they did not spend a single day in the relegation zone across four seasons under Frank. There were two top-half finishes and memorable victories over Arsenal, Manchester City and Chelsea.

He had a fantastic relationship with owner Matthew Benham, director of football Phil Giles, the squad, staff, and fans. In May 2024, he held conversations with Manchester United and Chelsea about becoming their head coach. During an interview with The Athletic in the same month, Frank said: “I’m aware the grass is not greener in the garden next door, even if it looks like it. Then you get in there, take a closer look, and see a lot of weeds in the grass.”

Frank sacrificed his “perfect football life” in June when he replaced Ange Postecoglou as Spurs’ head coach. This was the opportunity the 52-year-old had been waiting and working for. He was taking over a squad with untapped potential who had won the club’s first major trophy since 2008, but a team that had underperformed with a 17th-place league finish.

The weeds were there for all to see, but with the right care and attention, Frank believed, Tottenham’s garden could blossom. His reign started positively but quickly unravelled and it was no surprise he was sacked after their defeat to Newcastle United.

Frank’s failure to bond with the Tottenham fanbase cost him. Postecoglou’s fast start in 2023, including dramatic victories at home over Sheffield United and Liverpool, helped the fans fall in love with him. It was an intoxicating sense of excitement and although this eventually faded, many supporters clung on to the belief those halcyon days could return. By way of contrast, Frank won twice in 13 Premier League home matches and rarely played the kind of football that set pulses racing.

Tottenham’s awful home form is an issue that predates Frank — they have won five league games at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, stretching back to November 2024 — but he never came close to fixing it. They drew 1-1 with a Wolverhampton Wanderers side that took just one other point from their first 13 matches. They lost at home for the third season in a row against bitter rivals Chelsea, with Frank’s side recording an expected goals (xG) of 0.1, the lowest total by any team in the top flight this season… until Tottenham’s 4-1 defeat at Arsenal three weeks later.

A win over Manchester United after two late goals should have been the moment that united Frank and the fans, but a lapse of concentration from a corner allowed Matthijs de Ligt to equalise in the 96th minute.

Frank’s fragile relationship with the crowd was not helped by a defeat to Fulham (previously winless on the road) in which his team were 2-0 down inside six minutes. Describing their treatment of Guglielmo Vicario, who was jeered after his mistake led to Harry Wilson’s decisive goal, as “unacceptable” and saying that “they can’t be true Tottenham fans” went down poorly.

That was nothing compared to the reaction after the defeat to West Ham United in January. But the most damaging episode was the supporters chanting “you’re getting sacked in the morning” and singing the name of their former head coach Mauricio Pochettino during the second half of their loss to Newcastle.

Frank’s biggest strength at Brentford turned out to be his fatal flaw with Spurs. He constantly tinkered with their formation and starting line-ups. It has been harder to implement tactical plans at Spurs because their time on the training ground is impacted by midweek Champions League games. But even when Spurs had an entire week to prepare for a game, as they did before the home defeat to West Ham, they usually still looked largely aimless and lost.

“It’s limited with what you can coach, how many meetings and how much individual time you can have with the players because it’s just pure recovery as well, but again, it’s just the way it is,” Frank said before the 2-2 draw away to Newcastle United in December. “We need to find a way. Every good team, they found out they have seven, eight, nine players to play when it’s the top matches, if that makes sense, and that is what we are searching for. We need to rotate to make sure we have enough intensity and freshness.”

Frank’s lack of European experience was flagged up during the interview process, which is why Spurs surrounded him with assistant coaches who had worked for teams competing in the Champions League and Europa League, including Fabian Otte, Liverpool’s goalkeeping coach in 2024-25, and former Arsenal and Manchester United set-piece specialist Andreas Georgson. They have reached the last 16 of the Champions League but have performed woefully domestically.

Before he was appointed, Frank enquired about Spurs’ injury problems last season. They had fewer soft-tissue muscle problems in the early months of the season but they have increased rapidly in recent weeks. They had 10 senior players unavailable against Newcastle due to injury and the suspended Cristian Romero. They have also been without Dejan Kulusevski and James Maddison all season. The pair did not play a competitive minute under Frank due to long-term knee injuries.

Club-record signing Dominic Solanke has been restricted to seven league appearances due to a persistent ankle issue, returning for the FA Cup defeat to Aston Villa. With Son Heung-min leaving in the summer to join Los Angeles FC, Frank was unable to call on a quartet of players who scored 49 goals for Spurs last season.

Senior figures at Spurs made a series of poor decisions that did not help. The uncertainty over whether they would be competing in the Champions League this season or have no European football at all impacted their ability to act swiftly in the summer transfer market. Taking two weeks before deciding to sack Postecoglou only truncated this.

Frank wanted to sign Bryan Mbeumo from Brentford but, by the time he had been appointed in mid-June, Mbeumo had decided he wanted to join Manchester United.

Spurs explored a move for Bournemouth’s Antoine Semenyo, but baulked at the £70million ($92m) asking price and switched their attention to Mohammed Kudus of West Ham. Kudus has impressed, at times, but is now injured too. When Spurs returned for Semenyo in January, he decided to join Manchester City.

It is not Frank’s fault that Morgan Gibbs-White, who had wanted to join Spurs, performed a U-turn and signed an improved contract with Nottingham Forest.

The club mishandled negotiations with Crystal Palace’s chairman, Steve Parish, over Eberechi Eze. Eze was keen to rejoin his boyhood club Arsenal, but they did not ramp up their interest until Kai Havertz suffered a knee injury in August. Spurs wasted their opportunity.

Spurs signed Xavi Simons, but he was always going to take time to adapt to the Premier League. Tottenham’s squad is filled with talented, young players, but they need proven quality and experience around them. Although they added Conor Gallagher to the mix in January, many fans believed they needed more.

Just like Postecoglou, losing to Chelsea at home was the moment things started to unravel for Frank. In stoppage time, Vicario played a short free kick to Djed Spence instead of launching the ball into the box in search of an equaliser, which prompted the crowd to boo. At full time, Spence and Micky van de Ven ignored Frank’s plea for them to applaud the supporters and walked straight down the tunnel. Spurs should have been galvanised by winning the Europa League, but that defeat exposed the disconnect between the head coach, players and fans. Frank’s reputation never recovered, and Spurs never regained momentum.

Frank had other, unexpected hurdles to navigate, including the abrupt departure of Daniel Levy in September after 24 years as executive chairman. Fabio Paratici returned as co-sporting director with Johan Lange in October. In the middle of January, Spurs announced Paratici would be leaving for Fiorentina. Chief executive officer Vinai Venkatesham has spoken openly about the challenges ahead. Spurs have undergone a huge amount of change at senior level over the past six months and the lack of stability has not helped.

After the defeat to West Ham, Frank said Spurs were a “super tanker turning in the right direction” and that “there are a lot of good things behind the scenes.” After the Newcastle defeat, Frank said he was “convinced” he would be in charge for the next game against Arsenal on February 22 and he was “1000 per cent sure” he was still the right person to be in charge. Senior figures at the club clearly disagreed.

For both Tottenham Hotspur and Thomas Frank, the grass was not greener.