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We need to talk about hair pulling. Plus: Big wins for Arsenal and Tottenham

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Hello! The Premier League isn’t good at keeping its hair on. And it’s found something new to fight about.

Coming up:

👀 EPL hair-pulling dispute

🧱 Wrexham hit the wall

🗣️ Cracking manager rant

🙏 New hope for Tottenham

Pulling power: Why was Ballard’s tug on Arokodare’s hair a red-card offence?

Tolu Arokodare, the Wolverhampton Wanderers striker, is going to develop a complex at this rate. Twice this season, he’s been the victim of red-card offences — as a result of opponents pulling his hair.

Arokodare has long dreadlocks, meaning he’s more susceptible to having his hair pulled than many others (more susceptible than me, it’s fair to say) but, unintentionally, he’s at the forefront of a hot debate in the Premier League. Should hair-pulling constitute violent conduct? And why, from nowhere, has it become a thing in 2025-26?

Recently, it’s been causing friction in both the men’s and the women’s games. Earlier this month, Chelsea Women’s head coach Sonia Bompastor took umbrage with Arsenal’s Katie McCabe tugging the locks of Alyssa Thompson during a Champions League tie. On that occasion, VAR didn’t want to know. But while pulling hair would seem more likely in women’s football, the Premier League is where it’s becoming a real bone of contention.

Sunderland’s Dan Ballard was sent off on Saturday for that crime against Arokodare, dismissed in the 24th minute of a 1-1 draw with Wolves at Molineux. In January, Everton’s Michael Keane incurred a red card for exactly the same transgression against exactly the same player, and failed with an appeal against his dismissal. Likewise, Manchester United’s Lisandro Martinez had a red card upheld after pulling the hair of Leeds United’s Dominic Calvert-Lewin at Old Trafford three weeks ago.

Michael Carrick, United’s caretaker head coach, called Martinez’s punishment “one of the worst” decisions he’d seen — and football is struggling to accept that hair-pulling ought to be judged as violent conduct (and therefore subject to a three-game ban), particularly if it’s not flagrantly intentional. Having barely been a point of discussion before, we’re experiencing something of an epidemic this year.

Phil Buckingham outlined the relevant laws of the game for us and while hair-pulling isn’t specifically referenced within them, referees and VAR reviews are taking a dim view of it. The dial was turned up after Tottenham Hotspur’s Cristian Romero yanked back Chelsea’s Marc Cucurella by his sizeable mane in 2022, a foul that went unpunished at the time but one which that game’s VAR Mike Dean later admitted should have been reviewed.

Howard Webb, the man in charge of England’s match officials, reckons hair-pulling “crosses the line”. “There’s absolutely no reason to do that,” he has said. “People don’t want to see it happening.” And in principle, he’s right. But in the heat of battle, when defenders and forwards are scuffling for possession and high balls, it’s a contentious grey area and an offence which the sport’s lawmakers might soon have to specifically define. As Sunderland’s head coach Regis Le Bris said on Saturday: “The execution of the rule is very hard to digest” — meaning nobody quite knows where they stand.

News round-up

Inter Miami are still waiting for that elusive first win at their new stadium. The MLS champions raced into a three-goal lead after 33 minutes against Orlando City on Saturday, but then collapsed to a 4-3 defeat. At least Lionel Messi had time to attend the Miami Grand Prix (above) yesterday.

Vancouver Whitecaps, meanwhile, ended a turbulent week with a 1-1 draw at LA Galaxy. Joshua Kloke summed up the mood with the threat to the MLS franchise’s future intensifying.

Inter took the Serie A title last night, having been champions-elect for weeks. Barcelona need a point to wrap up La Liga’s crown, which they could do during El Clasico at home against Real Madrid next Sunday. Convenient timing.

Former Manchester United boss Sir Alex Ferguson, 84, was taken to hospital before the club’s match with Liverpool yesterday. It wasn’t a medical emergency, however, and he has since been discharged.

Newcastle United are backing head coach Eddie Howe. He’ll remain in charge next season, despite the club drifting to 13th place in the Premier League.

This generated plenty of headlines on Friday: Brighton coach Fabian Hurzeler revealing that he had called on the services of an MMA fighter to help his team defend set pieces. Certain boxes can resemble a royal rumble, to be fair.

Big steps: Tottenham’s crucial win in relegation scrap, Arsenal six points clear

Hope springs eternal for Tottenham Hotspur, courtesy of Aston Villa throwing themselves to the wolves. West Ham United must have facepalmed when they saw Unai Emery weakening his line-up with seven changes for yesterday’s game in Birmingham — and double-facepalmed when they saw the state of Villa’s performance.

Emery is, it seems, prioritising Villa’s Europa League semi-final against Nottingham Forest, the second leg of which takes place this Thursday. Satisfaction and silverware lie that way, but the natives at Villa Park are extremely restless, and Spurs’ 2-1 win there last night could have a huge bearing on the Premier League’s relegation battle. Tottenham are now out of the bottom three amid a desperate fight to make the best of their underwhelming resources.

Also in the top flight over the weekend:

Arsenal’s simple 3-0 rout of Fulham on Saturday was a serious step towards the title. Bukayo Saka is back, and there’s huge pressure on Manchester City, who lie six points adrift with two games in hand (the first of them away to Everton tonight). Art de Roché is asking whether it’s better to chase or be chased in these circumstances. I’d take Arsenal’s position all day long.

Manchester United have qualified for the Champions League, which is mission accomplished for Michael Carrick. They got there yesterday by beating visitors Liverpool who, frankly, will be slightly fortunate to make Europe’s top competition themselves. Coach Arne Slot moaned about VAR but his problems lie much closer to home.

In a former life, I spent my time covering Leeds United home and away. I went back to Elland Road on Friday to see the club all but sew up Premier League survival. Manager Daniel Farke deserves his flowers.

“Rob Edwards, you’re a w****r” coming from Wolves’ home support suggests to me that he’s in a bit of trouble there after relegation. In the face of such mutinous fan behaviour, will the Molineux board stick or twist?

Wrexham dream dies: Welsh club miss out on play-offs as Ipswich return to Premier League

Finally, we’ve discovered Wrexham’s ceiling (for now, at least). They fell short of the Championship play-offs on Saturday, drawing 2-2 with Middlesbrough at home and finishing seventh, and they’ve now got a long summer in which to rue a couple of big chances that went begging for them late on.

Ipswich Town, however, made good their return to the Premier League, and there were heartwarming scenes at Sheffield Wednesday, where misery had abounded from almost the first kick of the season to the last.

Wednesday, after multiple points deductions, had no other target to aim for than avoiding the humiliation of a negative final tally — and they got to zero by beating West Bromwich Albion 2-1. More than that, it was announced before kick-off that they’d secured new ownership. And better still, that the EFL has waived a further 15-point penalty which might have been imposed on them in League One next term.

Before the West Brom game, the club used their scoreboard to count down the potential deduction and reveal they had dodged it completely. They wouldn’t ever want to experience a repeat of the past 12 months — but equally, they won’t forget this campaign in a hurry.

Watford sacked head coach Ed Still after finishing 16th in the 24-team Championship. That will make it 23 first-team bosses since 2014 at Vicarage Road, maintaining Watford’s status as the most trigger-happy club going.

Around TAFC

Adam Leventhal has put together a fantastic podcast on the backdrop of war to the 2026 World Cup. It’s free to download and it gets to the heart of various geopolitical issues. You can find it here.

George Wickens amassed four assists for Lincoln City this season. That might not sound like many — except Wickens is a goalkeeper, and his tally equalled an English record. He analysed his game with Eduardo Tansley.

Christian Pulisic has now gone 16 games straight without scoring for Milan. He isn’t coming up with much in the way of assists either. The USMNT will have to count on him finding form from nowhere, just as he did at the World Cup in 2022.

Switzerland’s FC Thun have been on the go for 128 years. At last, they have a trophy to their name after winning the country’s top flight. Not bad for a town with a population of 45,000.

America’s United Soccer League (USL) is getting closer to thrashing out a new collective bargaining agreement with its players. That situation has been a mess and it led to threats of strike action.

Most clicked in Friday’s TAFC: the tendency of Millwall fans to call a spade a spade.

Catch a match

Selected games (times ET/UK)

Premier League: Chelsea vs Nottingham Forest, 10am/3pm; Everton vs Manchester City, 3pm/8pm — both USA Network/Sky Sports.

Scottish Premiership: Heart of Midlothian vs Rangers, 12.30pm/5.30pm — CBS, Fubo/Sky Sports.

La Liga: Sevilla vs Real Sociedad, 3pm/8pm — ESPN, Fubo/Premier Sports.

Serie A: Roma vs Fiorentina, 2.45pm/7.45pm — Paramount+, Fubo, DAZN/DAZN.

And finally…

The weekend’s telling-it-like-it-is award goes to Richie Wellens, the boss of League One side Leyton Orient.

Tottenham believe again – and it’s all down to a midfield most fans really don’t like

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It was Joao Palhinha on the edge of the Tottenham Hotspur box flying in to block Ross Barkley, who looked set to shoot. His celebration afterwards, kneeling and pumping his arms, was met with the travelling support chanting his name.

It was Rodrigo Bentancur floating around the middle of the park, faultless when he had possession and directing traffic and tempo without it.

It was Conor Gallagher, who almost signed for Aston Villa in January, delivering his first decisive moment in a Spurs shirt at Villa Park, firing low and controlled into the bottom corner from the edge of the area to open the scoring.

Much of the discussion leading into Tottenham’s 2-1 win at Villa Park was centred on how they could cope without Xavi Simons, who De Zerbi described as one of their “best” and “most important players” since coming into the starting line-up for the 2-2 draw with Brighton & Hove Albion.

Simons — like James Maddison, who was again named in the matchday squad at Villa but has not played a competitive match for more than a year, and Dejan Kulusevski, who is still without a return date having been injured since last May — is set for a long spell on the sidelines as he recovers from a ruptured anterior cruciate ligament.

Without the creative talents of their injured No 10s, Tottenham needed to be dogged and determined, and deliver just enough quality to win a Premier League game. And in that, it was Roberto De Zerbi’s midfielders who led by example.

Before Sunday, Tottenham had not won back-to-back league games since beating Burnley and Manchester City in their first two games of the season. Perhaps that 2-0 win at the Etihad Stadium was the last time Tottenham played this well in the league. Fittingly, it was the ‘Bentinha’ pivot, which swarmed Nico Gonzalez, Tijjani Reijnders and Rayan Cherki and prevented Pep Guardiola’s side from building from the back, which inspired that win, too.

Justifiably, the Bentancur-Palhinha pairing became one that many Spurs fans were content to see the back of. Before suffering a hamstring injury in January, the ‘Bentinha’ label was synonymous with the elements of Thomas Frank’s football Spurs fans hated: slow, sideways, unimaginative. Particularly at home, where Tottenham have been under par for successive seasons, Bentancur and Palhinha were tasked with hurting the opposition with the ball, but they lacked the invention or tactical direction to progress through the middle of the pitch.

At Villa Park, their roles appeared to maximise their strengths and minimise their weaknesses, with Palhinha dropping back into the defensive line, allowing Pedro Porro, a more gifted technician, to push ahead into the right half-space, while Bentancur relieved pressure on team-mates, providing an outlet in possession.

In Manchester, it was Pape Matar Sarr who buzzed around ahead of them, crunching into every tackle, driving the press and hunting down every loose ball. In Birmingham, Gallagher was the workhorse No 10.

Even when he appeared to be running on fumes, Gallagher drove the team forward with a maniacal press. He led the team in defensive contributions, registering one interception and one block, three tackles and a remarkable six recoveries in midfield.

“When Gallagher plays like this, we play with 12 players because you can find him as a striker, as a midfielder, as a full-back — everywhere on the pitch you can find him,” De Zerbi said in his post-match press conference. “Great player, great passion, great qualities.”

It’s the type of performance Tottenham have been waiting for from the England international since the club spent £35million ($47.6m) on him in January. De Zerbi has consistently namechecked Gallagher in his press conferences, hoping to see the midfield dynamo who impressed him as a Chelsea player. And his faith in his qualities, in and out of possession, was repaid in a man-of-the-match performance.

While it is true that Villa may have had their eyes on the Europa League semi-final second-leg on Thursday, with Unai Emery resting seven players in a manner reminiscent of Ange Postecoglou’s rotation leading to Tottenham’s triumph in Bilbao, Spurs, led by their dominant midfield, were comfortable and convincing in a manner they have rarely been since the Australian’s first season in charge in north London.

“I’m really pleased with the performance with the ball, without the ball,” said De Zerbi. “Without the ball, we showed great courage; with the ball, great qualities. I’m happy with this type of performance, more than three points. OK, we are one point more than West Ham. But the most important thing tonight is to play a great game, to believe more and more in ourselves, to believe in our qualities.”

Ahead of the game, De Zerbi said it would not be a miracle if they beat Villa. But perhaps the miracle is helping a team bereft of confidence, symbolised by a midfield that lacked the vigour to offset an absence of magic, believe in themselves again.

Like Postecoglou, who was sniggered at for his second-season trophy prophecy until it came true, De Zerbi’s suggestion that Tottenham could win all five of their matches this season after the deflating Brighton draw seemed ludicrous.

Now, the fans and the players believe it. And if there are still some doubters, at least they believe he believes it — which is just as important.

The Briefing: Why would Carrick not get the Man Utd job? Did Villa help Spurs too much?

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Welcome to The Briefing, where every Monday this season, The Athletic will discuss three of the biggest questions from the weekend’s football.

This was the weekend when Arsenal got the drama-free win they needed, West Ham United dropped back into the bottom three and Manchester United secured Champions League qualification.

Here, we will ask what is standing between Michael Carrick and the Manchester United job, whether Tottenham Hotspur have fixed themselves or if Aston Villa were just too accommodating, and if Bukayo Saka’s injury might have been a good thing for Arsenal.

What else does Carrick need to do?

Carrick couldn’t have really done anything more to secure the Manchester United job permanently.

Since his appointment on January 13, they have the best record in the Premier League. United have won 10 of his 14 games in charge, including victories over Manchester City, Arsenal, Aston Villa and, on Sunday, Liverpool: or, if you prefer, the other four teams in the top five. Kobbie Mainoo, United’s rejuvenated match-winner yesterday, summed up the squad’s feelings after yesterday’s victory, telling Sky Sports, “You want to die for him.” A bit extreme, maybe, but you get the point.

United were seventh, 11 points behind third-placed Aston Villa, when Carrick signed up. Champions League qualification looked like a long shot, but under him, they’re now six ahead of Villa and have secured their spot with three games to spare.

You would think that at most other clubs, that would be more than enough to get the full-time gig. But there are a couple of other factors at play.

The first is the spectre of what has come before. United have previously fallen into the ‘trap’ of a club playing hero taking over temporarily, achieving impressive results and being given the full-time job.

But this cautionary tale ignores that Carrick is a different figure from Ole Gunnar Solskjaer, and also exaggerates how bad Solskjaer was. Sure, he wasn’t the greatest manager and if United had left things a bit longer during his caretaker spell, then he probably wouldn’t have been appointed, but he still finished third and second in his first two full seasons.

The other factor is what sort of manager minority owner Sir Jim Ratcliffe wants. Since his arrival, Ratcliffe has repeatedly discussed United’s stature, the desire to get them ‘back where they belong’. Usually, what comes along with that is an exciting ‘name’ as manager, which can mean the hot young thing (Ruben Amorim) or an elite big beast: something sexy, either way.

Ratcliffe and United have been burned by the former, so it’s possible that their next move is the latter. The trouble being that those big beasts are rather an endangered species. There are a few at the World Cup, but they won’t be available until mid-July at the earliest. There’s Luis Enrique, but would you leave Paris Saint-Germain for United right now? Unai Emery might fall into that category, too, but the Aston Villa manager succeeds at clubs where he has more control than he would at United. He also struggled at PSG and Arsenal.

Carrick isn’t an especially sexy name and doesn’t have decades of coaching experience, but his record over the last few months means he should get the job.

Did Villa give Spurs too much of a helping hand?

Are Tottenham back? Has Roberto De Zerbi fixed them? Or, at least, fixed them just enough to stay in the Premier League?

Perhaps. The relief among their fans at the end of the 2-1 win over Aston Villa was powerful, unsurprising given they’ve now achieved back-to-back victories for the first time since the opening two games of the season.

They certainly looked much more impressive and should feel much better about life, particularly given West Ham, the team they have just leapfrogged, play leaders Arsenal next weekend.

One caveat is their opponents for those two wins: the first came against Wolves, who have been relegation certainties since the autumn and have reverted to type after their brief revival a couple of months ago.

The second victory was against a Villa side who could not have been more accommodating. With the second leg of their Europa League semi-final against Nottingham Forest on Thursday taking priority, Emery made seven changes, including a rest for Ollie Watkins, and the injury-enforced absences of Amadou Onana and John McGinn.

Some affiliated with Tottenham’s immediate rivals may bleat about the integrity of the league, upset that Villa played a shadow side against a team who desperately needed the win, but that feels pointless.

‘Team rests players for more important fixture’ is not a new concept, and Emery’s responsibility is to his own team’s priorities: it’s not his fault that West Ham lost against Brentford, or that when they played Crystal Palace in a similar situation a few weeks ago (Palace also rested key personnel days after a tough European game at Fiorentina) they could only manage a 0-0 draw.

The team selection was justifiable, but the performance was not. Villa were pathetic, embarrassingly bad, even considering the personnel. They barely offered any resistance in the first half when they went 2-0 down, and at absolutely no stage did they look like mounting a comeback. It was no surprise they were booed off, and perhaps the worst thing you could say about Villa is that they looked like Igor Tudor’s Tottenham.

Villa are six points ahead of sixth-placed Bournemouth, so they should still qualify for the Champions League, but they still have Liverpool and Manchester City to face: if they play like they did against Tottenham, they could still let it slip. Then winning the Europa League would not just be desirable, but essential.

Was Saka’s injury actually good for Arsenal?

It’s not normally good news for a title-chasing team to lose their best player for a month at a crucial stage of the season, but oddly, it might have been for Arsenal.

Saka has not been himself for much of the campaign, which maybe isn’t a surprise given he’s been troubled by an Achilles problem for long stretches. That injury saw him miss five games in April, including both legs of their Champions League quarter-final against Sporting CP and the 2-1 defeat against Manchester City.

It’s an injury that can be a killer for a player whose acceleration is one of his strengths, and after Arsenal’s 3-0 win over Fulham on Saturday, Mikel Arteta hinted that it had been inhibiting Saka.

But not anymore. “I think the pain is gone,” Arteta told the media. “That was always something that was restricting his capacity to deliver certain actions.”

He only played 45 minutes, with Arteta sensibly withdrawing Saka at half-time with Tuesday’s Champions League semi-final second leg against Atletico Madrid in mind. But the winger really did look like himself again, scoring once and creating another against an admittedly dreadful and virus-hit Fulham.

More than that, there was a zip back to his performance, the sort of verve that has been missing for a lot of the campaign. And you can’t help but wonder if that month away has reset Saka, not just in terms of recovering from the Achilles problem but perhaps also serving as a mental refresh, allowing him to become sharp again.

“He’s come back in the most important period of the season,” said Arteta, “and now he’s fresh, his mind is fresh, his hunger is at the highest possible height, and he needed a performance like that to impact the team.”

Perhaps Saka would have made a difference in the defeat against City, but if that time away has perked him up again, being at the top of his game during these last few weeks could be much more beneficial for Arsenal, at home and in Europe.

Coming up

Aston Villa 1 Tottenham 2: Is De Zerbi rescuing Spurs? Why were the home fans so angry?

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Was this the day Tottenham Hotspur pulled themselves back from the brink?

Roberto De Zerbi’s side began the weekend in the Premier League relegation zone but a potentially pivotal set of results means they are out of the bottom three.

Victory at an abject Aston Villa, coupled with West Ham United’s loss at Brentford on Saturday, will surely give De Zerbi, his players and the club’s fans renewed belief they can retain their top-flight status.

First-half goals from Conor Gallagher and Richarlison secured the victory, with boos ringing out from the home fans at Villa Park, four days before their players return to the stadium for the second leg of their Europa League semi-final against Nottingham Forest. Even a stoppage-time consolation from Emi Buendia barely brought a reaction from the home supporters.

There is plenty to dissect for both teams after this game. Jack Pitt-Brooke and Jacob Tanswell analyse the main talking points.

Is the De Zerbi effect taking hold?

The last time Tottenham won back-to-back Premier League games was their first two matches of the season, two managers ago, when Thomas Frank opened with a 3-0 victory against Burnley and then beat Manchester City 2-0.

So much has happened since then that it feels like something from another geological era. But that just underlines the significance of what De Zerbi’s Spurs have achieved in recent weeks.

Remember that when the Italian arrived, just over one month ago, Tottenham had not won in the league since December. The players’ confidence had totally drained out to zero. And that, more than anything technical or tactical, is what he has been working hard on.

After losing his first game, at Sunderland, Spurs were far better in his second and only a 95th-minute equaliser stopped them beating Brighton & Hove Albion.

But then they won 1-0 at Wolverhampton Wanderers and were able to follow that up with this unexpectedly routine success at Villa Park. The spirit, courage and organisation that Spurs showed on Sunday make this one of their best performances of the season, regardless of how poor Villa were. And it shows the impact De Zerbi has had in only a few weeks in charge.

Spurs are up to 17th, a point above West Ham with three games left, and he has put them back in the box seat.

Jack Pitt-Brooke

What was wrong with Villa?

Boos echoed out frequently in the first half of this game. There have been plenty of those directed at Tottenham this season, but on this occasion, it was the home fans who were becoming increasingly angry at the malaise affecting their team.

Unai Emery made seven changes to the starting XI from the first leg of the Europa League semi-final against Nottingham Forest, clearly showing where his priorities lie.

However, it was evident from the outset that Villa were dysfunctional and lacking in intensity, demonstrated by the absence of pressure put on Gallagher for Spurs’ first goal.

Frankly, the 2-0 half-time scoreline was merciful on Villa, whose players looking sluggish and devoid of any inspiration.

Fans expressed their frustration at the slow, laborious nature of their play, particularly when Villa either cheaply gave the ball away in the attacking half — they managed only one touch in the opposition box and zero shots during the first 45 minutes — or were tediously passing the ball around at the back.

Indeed, in the first 36 minutes, 45 per cent of Villa’s overall passes were completed by the two central defenders, Victor Lindelof and Tyrone Mings.

This did not look like a club on the verge of qualifying for the Champions League — Villa sit six points ahead of sixth-placed Bournemouth — with the atmosphere fraught and the fans pleading for more vigour from the players.

Why the ferocity of feeling? Villa have taken 19 points from 16 games in 2026, so have not been in good form for some time, with Emery’s raft of changes only compounding the sense that the team are sleepwalking towards the end of the season. They will need to wake up in time for Thursday’s second leg against Forest.

Jacob Tanswell

Were Spurs’ hard-working front three the difference?

The big fear most Spurs fans had going into this game concerned the quality of their forward line.

With Xavi Simons and Dominic Solanke both getting injured at Wolves last Saturday, De Zerbi was down to the bare bones this time, starting the only three forwards he had available: Richarlison, Mathys Tel and Randal Kolo Muani. None of them could exactly be said to be in good form.

But all three ran hard, pressing Villa, never giving them a second on the ball and creating opportunities in the final third. Gallagher scored the first goal, but the second came from Tel’s perfectly driven cross, which Richarlison headed in.

In truth, Spurs should have scored far more than they did. Tel and Kolo Muani were not perfect and at times they did not make the right decisions, or execute perfectly. But it was still far improved from the norm. That was especially true of Kolo Muani, who delivered his best game for Spurs, running hard, winning 50-50s, looking for the first time like the player the club thought they had signed. It is another testament to De Zerbi’s work on the training ground.

Jack Pitt-Brooke

Where does this leave Villa going into their semi-final?

This latest Villa performance — a third straight defeat — increases the pressure going into Thursday’s home game against Forest. This, unmistakably, is the defining match of the Emery era and there is a shared feeling that the time to win is now.

Villa are struggling to break down low blocks. Players looked lost against Spurs, short of confidence in front of a Villa Park crowd that expects and demands more.

Director of football operations Damian Vidagany called Thursday “the match of our lives”, with the defeat against Spurs showing it should be treated as such.

Villa could not find any impetus in the second half. Emery, tellingly, was at his least extroverted and there was little of his usual intensity. The Spaniard, along with his substitutes, stood either with their hands on their hips or in their pockets for much of the second half.

Villa are vulnerable and the home crowd will be nervy on Thursday. They have to start well and hope Forest do not capitalise on the pressure that is building.

Jacob Tanswell

What next for Spurs?

Monday, May 11: Leeds (Home), Premier League, 8pm UK, 3pm ET

What next for Villa?

Victor Wanyama on Tottenham’s struggles, Pochettino, and his knee injury

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Victor Wanyama has no hesitation when asked to explain Tottenham Hotspur’s catastrophic season.

“They started well, but injuries, you know? Having 10 to 15 key players injured. That’s where I think it went wrong,” Wanyama says.

Wanyama, who has kept close tabs on his former club since leaving Spurs in 2020, has experience of the devastating impact of injuries, which is effectively the theme of his interview with The Athletic.

Speaking shortly after announcing his retirement as a player last month, the Kenyan admitted for the first time that injuries — or rather one specific knee problem — derailed his career.

It came while playing for Spurs in a 2-1 defeat to Chelsea at Wembley in August 2017. Wanyama was coming off the back of what he believes was his best season: Tottenham’s 2016-17 campaign, in which Mauricio Pochettino’s side went unbeaten at home in the final year at White Hart Lane, pushing Antonio Conte’s Chelsea close for the league title.

“I played my best football at Southampton and Spurs, especially the season we were unbeaten at home,” he says. “I was cruising but some things you can’t escape. What happened, happened.

“I did play all the (Chelsea) game but when I went out, I felt like I couldn’t move my knee. It was so stiff and from there they diagnosed the issue. Cartilage defect.”

Does he view that match as a before-and-after moment in his playing career?

“I can say yes,” says Wanyama, who was fleetingly one of British football’s outstanding midfield enforcers for Celtic, Southampton and Spurs.

“I would say before the injury, I was cruising. After, it restricted me. I was changing my game.

“I wanted to play every game but I was cautious, I didn’t want to go into tackles 100 per cent. I wanted to be fit, available for the next games. That wasn’t good for me. Sometimes I had to skip training, ice the knee so much, and do a lot of rehab.

“I couldn’t play back-to-back games. I had to skip games. I wasn’t training because I was rehabbing the knee. It was a really tough time.”

After more than four months on the sidelines, Wanyama returned to action in a win over Swansea at the start of 2018, and four weeks later produced his most memorable moment in a Spurs shirt: a thunderbolt into the top corner in an entertaining 2-2 draw at Liverpool (a goal the club is still fond of reliving on social media).

But he was never the same all-action player who had dominated the middle of the park alongside Mousa Dembele for Pochettino’s hard-running, exhilarating side.

Spurs fans — who have probably never been more reliant on nostalgia — still reminisce about that 2016-17 team, which is widely considered the best of Pochettino’s five-year spell. It began to break up around the second half of that season, with Kyle Walker’s move to Manchester City and a knee injury for Danny Rose, which was arguably just as impactful.

“It feels great (to be remembered that way), but that was the truth, I think,” says Wanyama. “We enjoyed playing together and we played with no fear. We did what we had to do and everybody gave their all on the pitch. We had such a good group at that time. We gelled well as a team on and off the pitch; we were really close. I think we were closer as a team than (our rivals). We emptied the tank on the pitch.

“Off the pitch, Pochettino knew what to tell everyone. All players are different but he knew how to handle everyone individually. He demanded a lot from individuals and knew how to push people to the next level.

“And players listened to him and did everything he asked for. With him, it was special because he improved us as players. He knew how to get the best out of players.

“We needed another year, with all of us, and we could have won something.”

Now he has officially hung up his boots — a year after his last match as a professional during a four-game stint for Scottish club Dunfermline — Wanyama is more open and accepting about his limitations post-injury.

In a previous interview with The Athletic, in 2020, shortly after leaving Spurs for Montreal Impact, Wanyama said the club “should have trusted” him more when he returned from injury and revealed he was “really, really p***ed off” not to start the 2019 Champions League final.

Seven years on, though, he says he understood why Pochettino left him on the bench for Spurs’ 2-0 defeat to Liverpool in Madrid after he had been forced off in the epic semi-final decider at Ajax at half-time with more knee pain.

“(I’m) not at all (pissed off) because I was struggling with the injury in that campaign,” he says now. “Semi-final, going out with the injury, it was a bit tough. So I have no regrets.”

His knee was also the reason for Wanyama’s move to MLS in March 2020, when he left the Premier League to join the Canadian side, then coached by Arsenal legend Thierry Henry.

“There was a plan to go to MLS – because of my knee,” he says. “The league wasn’t as demanding as the Premier League, so there I could manoeuvre easily.”

Wanyama spent four seasons in Montreal, never getting used to the freezing winters or the long flights to matches, but enjoying his football again and working under Henry, who he compares to Pep Guardiola.

Today, the former Kenya international is back in London, taking his coaching badges and eyeing a reunion with Spurs.

“I’ve done B and now I’m doing the A Licence,” he says. “Also, training every day, trying to make the knee stronger! That’s my life now. Hopefully, one day, I can be a manager. Wherever I get the chance in Europe, I’d be grateful. To just get some experience first and then one day be a good manager.

“Hopefully, I can get to a club to get some experience in youth coaching. I haven’t spoken to Tottenham yet but soon we’ll have that conversation.

“I’m happy,” he adds. “For six years, managing my knee was really hard, but I’m proud of what I achieved.”

James Maddison ‘important’ for Tottenham run-in but a doubt to face Aston Villa – Roberto De Zerbi

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Tottenham Hotspur head coach Roberto De Zerbi said James Maddison can play an important role in the relegation run-in but was unsure if he could feature against Aston Villa on Sunday.

Maddison, 29, has missed the entirety of the season after rupturing the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) in his right knee in a friendly against Newcastle United on last summer’s pre-season tour to South Korea. He last featured for Spurs in a competitive match a year ago today, scoring in the 3-1 Europa League semi-final first-leg win against Bodo/Glimt.

De Zerbi named Maddison in his matchday squad for the 2-2 draw against Brighton and Hove Albion and last week’s 1-0 win against Wolverhampton Wanderers, citing his “important” influence in the dressing room. On Friday, the Italian said he does not know whether he will be fit enough to feature against Villa this weekend or in the following league match against Leeds United.

“I don’t know,” De Zerbi replied when asked during a press conference whether Maddison could play against Villa or Leeds. “I would like to play with him, because he is a special player, a different player. But we have to consider the physical condition, a lot of things. But I think he can be important in the next three games.”

There is an increased need for creativity in the team, with Xavi Simons rupturing the ACL in his right knee against Wolves on Saturday, the third time Tottenham have had a forward player ruled out with an ACL injury in the last 12 months, following Maddison and Wilson Odobert in February.

Simons joins Dejan Kulusevski — who has missed the whole season with a patella injury — and Mohammed Kudus on the treatment table, with the Ghana international in a race to prove his fitness to represent Ghana at the World Cup. There is also no timeline yet for Dominic Solanke’s return, after the England international was replaced in the 40th minute of last weekend’s win due to a muscle injury.

Tottenham’s medical department has come under fire from fans on social media when videos circulated of Simons conducting fitness tests on the sidelines after receiving immediate treatment for his long-term injury. According to an expert, these tests are not entirely uncommon when treating a player. But De Zerbi said his focus is on keeping everyone together.

“I think we win together and we lose together,” De Zerbi said. “And it’s not the right time to make polemic or to give responsibilities. Every one of us has to feel the responsibility for a big club, but now we have to stay together, close with just one target on our head, and to move on forward together.”

Destiny Udogie is available after missing the Wolves game with a muscle injury, as is Pape Matar Sarr, who was absent from successive matchday squads with a shoulder issue. Guglielmo Vicario, however, is not yet fit enough to make the squad after undergoing hernia surgery over the March international break.

Despite Simons representing another injury setback, De Zerbi maintains the “most important challenge now is to silence the (negative) voice inside of us”.

“The voice says we are unlucky,” De Zerbi added. “We have too many injuries. We lost Xavi Simons, and he was, in the last two games, one of the best and most important players for us. Our medical staff is not good enough. The pitch of the stadium is not good. The pitch of the turning ground is not good.

“It’s impossible to win two, three games in a row because we have not won too many games in 2026. It’s all negative things, and it’s rubbish. I want to keep my focus on ourselves, on the qualities of my players.”

Spurs face Villa on Sunday, who are fifth in the Premier League and played in the Europa League semi-final first leg against Nottingham Forest on Thursday, losing 1-0.

Mauricio Pochettino on USMNT’s World Cup hopes and ‘very sad’ Tottenham

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United States men’s national team head coach Mauricio Pochettino has spoken on a variety of topics, including the state of football in America and what has happened to his former club Tottenham Hotspur.

Pochettino, 54, took the USMNT job in the summer of 2024 — shortly after leaving another Premier League side, Chelsea, after only one season — and is approaching his biggest challenge in the role: a home World Cup.

Speaking on The Overlap podcast on Thursday, Pochettino revealed his hopes for the tournament, why “women are ahead of men” in the U.S., and his views on why “massive club” Spurs, whom he managed for six years until November 2019, are facing relegation from the Premier League.

World Cup – ‘Why not?’

The USMNT is approaching the World Cup with star player Christian Pulisic out of form, yet to score in 2026, and having lost twice in recent friendlies — or “non-official games” as Pochettino calls them — against Belgium and Portugal.

Unlike the 45 teams travelling to the U.S., Canada and Mexico in the summer, the USMNT has not played any qualification games with real jeopardy — having automatically qualified as co-hosts.

“We knew it would be a problem, how to approach the games, because we have already qualified,” Pochettino said on Thursday. “Friendly games is what you play with your friends.

“We are fighting to change that mindset, (we) need to create that habit that we are fighting.”

Nevertheless, when asked if the USMNT could win the World Cup he said: “Why not? It is all about belief. Look at Morocco (reaching the semi-finals) in Qatar — I think anything is possible in football.”

The American Messi

According to the United States Census Bureau, its population is over 342 million. On the podcast, Pochettino spoke about being asked by people involved in U.S. soccer why America has yet to find its Lionel Messi.

“One of the things that is key is the emotional relationship with the game,” he said. “The kids in America don’t develop (that relationship) until they are 11, 12 or 13 — that is the difference with the other countries.

“I know (in) Argentina, the way that I developed my emotional relationship with football is when I started to walk, before I started to walk. That is a problem because (in the U.S.) you need to go to a school, go to a private school — because the relationship is with basketball, with American football.”

How do you solve that issue? “It’s about creating more spaces for the kids to go and play,” Pochettino said. “That is football, it’s not a factory, the ball teaches you not the coach.”

In the sense of developing elite soccer, “women are ahead of us, of men, in America”, he said, as co-presenter ex-England midfielder Jill Scott raised how the U.S. women’s national team has been dominant on the world stage.

‘Very sad’ Spurs

Pochettino spent six years in north London with highs of a second-place Premier League finish in 2016-17 and leading the club to their first Champions League final in 2019.

Just over six years after his departure, they sit in the relegation zone with only four games left to bridge the two points to safety.

“It is really sad,” he said. “I really love Tottenham; it’s one of the most important parts of my life as a coach and in my personal life too. I can talk from my experience in Tottenham and what I can tell you for me it’s one of the biggest clubs in the world.

“Tottenham is a massive club with a massive following.”

But why was it such a “difficult situation” when he was there? “We went 18 months without one signing, that was a record in the Premier League,” Pochettino said. “We had money to spend but not the type of money to improve to win, we challenged but we missed this last step.

“We wanted to sign (Sadio) Mane and (Georginio) Wijnaldum and for different reasons, we couldn’t achieve that. The problem is the assessment was coming from outside the club not inside — people start to intoxicate things.”

As well as Spurs, Pochettino has also coached Chelsea in the Premier League, and says he has unfinished business in the English top flight.

“One day, yes because I really like England,” he replied, when asked if he wants to return to the Premier League. “I think my human profile and coach profile match very well with the Premier League and with the culture, the idea, the idiosyncrasy, and the philosophy.”

Premier League relegation fight: West Ham’s top-seven form an ongoing headache for Spurs

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Welcome back to The Athletic’s relegation battle tracker, where our data and tactics writers examine the key trends behind the fight for Premier League survival.

The perils of going down were distilled into a single afternoon last Saturday, as the scorelines swung in different directions during Tottenham Hotspur’s trip to Wolverhampton Wanderers and West Ham United’s home game with Everton.

It looks like — although not certain — it is now a straight fight between the two London clubs over who will join Wolves and Burnley in dropping to the Championship, with Nottingham Forest and Leeds United edging further away from 18th in recent weeks. Or are they?

With the help of Opta’s supercomputer, allow our analysts to assess the latest twists and turns as we enter the final four games.

What has changed since the last gameweek?

Desperation kicks in when you are staring relegation in the face.

Points on the board are essential, and each of the four teams fighting to stave off that fate are delivering them. Counterintuitively, they are some of the most in-form sides in the Premier League across recent games.

Each of Spurs, West Ham, Forest and Leeds have only lost three games combined across their previous five, respectively — with three of the four sides hoovering up maximum points last weekend.

Forest kicked it off with a thumping 5-0 away win against Sunderland last Friday, with Vitor Pereira’s side finding their shooting boots with a notable outperformance of their 1.1 expected goals.

The sight of a fit-again Chris Wood leading the line is a welcome relief to Forest fans for the run-in, scoring their second goal in what was only his second Premier League start since October. It was his first in the league since the opening weekend of the season in August, which shows just how much Forest have missed their vastly experienced centre-forward.

Leeds’ FA Cup semi-final with Chelsea on Sunday meant that the remaining drama was between Spurs and West Ham. Ultimately, it is very much as you were at the bottom with Roberto De Zerbi’s north Londoners still two points from safety, but that would be ignoring the peril that enlivened Saturday afternoon.

With both games kicking off at 3pm UK time, the news of each other’s fortunes was drip-fed to the fans — via smartphones rather than the transistor radios of the past — around Molineux and the London Stadium as emotions ebbed and flowed.

Tottenham struggled to break down already-relegated Wolves until Joao Palhinha bundled in an effort in the 83rd minute, with excitement compounded by the news that Everton had equalised late on.

But that was not the end of the drama, as Callum Wilson’s stoppage-time winner saw Nuno Espirito Santo’s side pick up three points and maintain their two-point cushion over Spurs. As we enter the final four games, survival is still in West Ham’s hands.

Who is looking stronger?

Forest’s momentum has come at the perfect time, with an unbeaten run of six league games to sit alongside their ongoing Europa League semi-final against Aston Villa.

Nine goals in their past two league matches is also not to be sniffed at, with a lot of that attacking firepower helped by playing Igor Jesus and Wood together up front.

That has also meant that Morgan Gibbs-White has been deployed closer to the left flank to accommodate those two, which has also worked to wondrous effect. Gibbs-White’s four goals in the two games speak for themselves, but his ability to find those pockets of space is helped by his strikers occupying the opposition centre-backs.

Leeds’ form should not be underplayed either, with just two losses in their previous 10 league games. It is not rubber-stamped yet, but their 40 points already — coupled with a straightforward-looking run-in — should see them steer clear of any potential drama.

If you started the season on January 1, West Ham’s 22 points would see them pushing for a European spot rather than straining to avoid relegation.

That tally is good enough for seventh place in 2026, which only serves to show how poor their start to the campaign was. The clear identity that has been found under Nuno after his late September appointment means that West Ham are doubling down on a style built on improved defensive foundations that maximise the strengths of their speedy counter-attacking threat — not to mention their greater proficiency from attacking set pieces.

Looking at their form across a wider period, that uptick in points-per-game is stark. West Ham are a side on the up, though they are still negotiating the prospect of going down.

Irrespective of their victory at the weekend, it is difficult to make a case that Tottenham are looking stronger when they continue to lose such crucial players to injury.

Winger Xavi Simons’ anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) knee injury will keep him out for some time, with striker Dominic Solanke also pulling up — albeit his ailment appears less serious — at Molineux to cast doubt over Spurs’ attacking firepower in the upcoming weeks.

Saturday’s victory was their first of 2026, but they desperately need more points in the remaining four games. Unfortunately, De Zerbi will be attempting to earn them with a threadbare squad.

Who has the toughest upcoming schedule?

Leeds should feel good about their situation, and a look at their remaining four games will give them confidence that a late dip is unlikely to occur.

Per Opta’s Power Rankings — denoting the strength of each team — Leeds have the second-easiest run-in of any Premier League side, with their upcoming home game against already-down Burnley almost guaranteed to secure safety if they take all three points.

Forest also look set for safety, but have nasty fixtures left against Chelsea, Newcastle, Manchester United and Bournemouth, who are all chasing European qualification of various kinds.

West Ham have been steadily building momentum with just one loss in five league games, but a glance at their remaining matches suggests that they are not out of the woods yet.

Statistically speaking, their fixtures are the third-most difficult among all teams. With things remaining so tight at the bottom, it might go down to the wire for West Ham, with a final-day home game with Leeds looking likely to be a win-at-all-costs fixture that is not to be missed.

None of Spurs’ fixtures look easy, but perhaps the context of their Sunday clash with Villa might calm some nerves in the fanbase — given that it falls between the first and second legs of their opponents’ Europa League semi-final against Forest.

This is the must-win stage for De Zerbi’s side in each of the remaining games. If they can get a helping hand along the way, they will snap your hand off.

What does the supercomputer say?

The dial has not moved too much from last week.

With Leeds not playing in the league last weekend, and three of the other at-risk teams winning, Opta’s supercomputer has stayed strong on the current projections for those who are most likely to face the drop.

Spurs have a 58 per cent probability of relegation going into this weekend, which has barely moved from last week’s 59 per cent. That spike has steadily risen to alarming levels since the turn of the year, but a positive result at Villa Park might see that spike drop — depending on results elsewhere.

The graphic above will be pleasant reading for Leeds and Forest, with a 1.2 and two per cent probability of relegation, respectively. Things remain touch and go for West Ham, who are the closest to Tottenham — in both risk and league position — when assessing their survival chances.

With tricky remaining fixtures, that 38 per cent probability could very easily increase by next week, but Nuno’s side will be keen to keep their destiny in their own hands for as long as possible.

The BookKeeper: Exploring Tottenham’s worsening finances and how much relegation would hurt

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Tottenham Hotspur’s season of glum headlines made a new addition to the canon on March 31, even as their supporters enjoyed the respite of an extended three-week break for international football and the FA Cup quarter-finals.

The release of Spurs’ financials for 2024-25, a season in which they won the Europa League no less, detailed a club-record £120.6million pre-tax loss. Last season generated the club’s sixth consecutive deficit. Their losses since the turn of the decade total £450m.

Tottenham’s income statement is subject to some quirks which don’t apply to other Premier League teams, as we’ll see. But even withstanding those, the club’s financial health has wilted, despite the building of a world-class stadium and record revenues.

Worse could be to come.

Even as Saturday’s trip to Wolves brought a first league victory of 2026, it merely allowed them to keep pace in a relegation battle neither they nor anyone else expected them to be so firmly mired in. With just four games remaining this season, Spurs are third-bottom of the Premier League, two points from safety and flirting with a fate for which the word ‘unprecedented’ cannot begin to suffice.

If that drop down to the Championship happens, it will be seismic, both within and beyond Tottenham Hotspur Stadium. That state-of-the-art venue hosting second-tier football would be a story in itself, vivid incongruence for a club who never expected to find themselves in this position.

Spurs have been one of the Premier League’s ‘Big Six’ for over a decade. A month from now, they may not be members of that league at all.

How have they arrived here? And what might relegation do to their pockets?

Spurs joined Brentford and Nottingham Forest last season in a club of paradoxes: each posted record revenues, but also turned them into record pre-tax losses. At all three, costs outstripped income even as the latter hit new highs, and it is a phenomenon far from limited to those teams. The same happened at several EFL clubs in 2024-25.

At Tottenham, those record revenues totalled £565.3million, a three per cent increase on the previous high set two years earlier. Improvements in both commercial and matchday income ensured dwindling Premier League prize money was offset, as did the financial benefits from winning the Europa League final.

One point which has distinguished England’s ‘Big Six’ from the rest is in how those clubs earn over half of their annual revenues from non-broadcast income (though Newcastle United notably entered that territory for the first time last season). Alongside the two Manchester clubs, Liverpool and Arsenal, Spurs’ matchday and commercial income topped £400million in 2024-25. The gulf to Chelsea’s figure — £287.6m — is stark, and reflects their fellow London club’s limitations while they remain at a Stamford Bridge which houses more than 20,000 fewer spectators than Tottenham’s ground does.

Earning a majority of income from non-TV money has been the case at Spurs since 2019, when Tottenham Hotspur Stadium opened, and their new home has been a strong earner. Matchday income has topped £100million in each of the past four seasons, and last season Spurs jumped past Liverpool to boast the third-highest gate receipts in England, even as the latter played in the more lucrative Champions League.

Tottenham’s stadium has become a coveted venue far beyond football, hosting NFL games annually alongside high-profile boxing events, rugby union matches and a bevy of music concerts.

The financial benefits of doing so are clear: Spurs earned £32.5million from non-football events last season. The average non-broadcast income of Premier League clubs outside the ‘Big Six’ was just £70.8m. That sum pushed their commercial income to £276.7m, an impressive £32m (13 per cent) increase in a year. Sponsorship income rose 11 per cent to £160m, and the club’s commercial revenue has now topped that of neighbours and arch-rivals Arsenal for eight years running.

Revenue should have hit another new high this season. The Athletic estimates Tottenham reaching the Champions League’s round of 16 earned them £74million in prize money, or roughly £40m more than they generated from winning the Europa League last year.

Spurs were football’s second most profitable club in 2018, yet despite revenues improving by £184.6million since then, the club’s pre-tax result has swung from a £138.9m profit to that £120.6m deficit. It is an alarming, quarter-billion-pound adverse swing.

It is also subject to some caveats.

The first stems from the very same factor helping to drive revenues to new heights. The stadium cost over £1billion to build and, as a result, Spurs’ depreciation charge has rocketed. Depreciation is an accounting concept which allocates the cost of an asset over its useful life (think transfer-fee amortisation, but for fixed assets). It is both a paper charge — Tottenham’s £57m depreciation expense in 2024-25 did not translate to cash paid out of the club — and also one reflective of reality, as assets do wear over time.

The cost of depreciating the stadium was always going to be large and, with no other English clubs having spent nearly so much on a new home (other than Everton, who didn’t move into theirs until this season), Spurs’ depreciation charge was always going to stand out.

Yet the club have also employed a rather aggressive depreciation policy. Spurs depreciate buildings over a period between five and 50 years but, based on the 2024-25 ‘Stadium’ charge, their new ground’s structure is being expensed over around 35. Several clubs hew more closely to 50 years; and Manchester United and Sunderland’s stadia are each depreciated over 75.

The shorter timeframe at Tottenham increases the annual charge, thus impacting their bottom line more than might otherwise be the case. When asked by The Athletic why they had opted to depreciate the stadium in such a way, the club did not provide a response.

Spurs’ depreciation charge is now £47million higher than in 2017-18, and last season saw a further £23.4m added to the deficit via the impact of a shift in the fair value of some warrant rights held by owner ENIC.

The warrants arose when ENIC injected cash as equity into the club in 2022, and essentially gifts it a larger shareholding, albeit only upon a change of controlling ownership. Those warrants equated to five per cent of Spurs shares when issued, stepping up by 1.5 per cent per annum between 2025 and 2032. In effect, the warrants increase ENIC’s holding in the club without new money having to be put in by the majority shareholder. The £23.4million charge in 2024-25 stemmed from an increase in the fair value of those warrants, driven by an uptick in Tottenham’s perceived market value.

Yet even after allowing for those non-cash matters, the underlying result has worsened noticeably.

Their EBITD (earnings before interest, tax and depreciation) was positive for 10 straight years, but that changed in 2024-25. With costs soaring, Spurs’ EBITD was £33.7million in the red, and a sharp departure from a record £126.5m positive result in 2018-19 — the season they reached the Champions League final.

In fairness, most Premier League clubs display poor operating profitability, and Spurs’ EBITD last season was still the fourth-best result in the division. But they also carry significant interest costs as a result of building the stadium, so they ideally need to be leaner at the operating level than others.

That they aren’t is exactly why ENIC has been moved to start putting money into the club, ostensibly to fund expenses which have far outstripped income growth. The £184.6million revenue improvement since 2018 has been dwarfed by cost rises; wages, operating costs and transfer-fee amortisation have risen by a collective £327.7m in the same period.

Tottenham remain one of the most careful salary payers in English football, and their wages to revenue figure of 45 per cent was the lowest across the top four divisions last season. For the second year running, they were not among England’s top six wage bills, though being seventh still meant their 17th-place finish in the top flight was a huge underachievement. The same will be true this season, even if relegation is avoided.

Other costs have ballooned. Operating expenses are up across football but their rise is particularly pronounced in north London, where both Spurs and Arsenal racked up over £200million in day-to-day costs last season.

As is the case with their neighbours, specifics have been kept to a minimum. Tottenham’s accounts attribute rising operating expenses to ‘hosting a larger number of football matches’ (31 — nine more than in 2023-24), alongside ‘third-party events and the technology transformation project’. Such costs rose at all but two Premier League clubs last season, but their £43.2million increase trailed only those of Arsenal (£52.6m) and Aston Villa (£56.8m). What’s more, Spurs’ operating costs are proportionally higher than anyone else’s, gobbling up 36 per cent of revenue.

Lack of transparency around operating costs is hardly unique to Tottenham, with a recent UEFA report labelling international financial reporting requirements ‘inadequate’ in understanding such costs, but the opacity does mean it is difficult to determine how much can be scythed in the event of relegation. The stadium is a world-class venue but costs a lot of money to run; the economics of operating it in the Championship are both unknown and unlikely to have been strongly considered in its planning stage.

Spurs will, at the very least, save money on travelling around Europe in UEFA competition next season.

The other big driver of costs, and losses, has been significant transfer spending. That reflects both a ballooning in player fees generally but also a sizeable shift in policy at Tottenham.

In six seasons to the end of 2018-19, Spurs spent £412.3million on new signings but offset it with some big sales, such as Gareth Bale and Kyle Walker. Their net spend in that period was just £68.4m, a figure 23 English clubs went beyond.

In the six full seasons since, £979.7million has gone on new Tottenham players and, despite the sizeable sale of Harry Kane to Bayern Munich in August 2023, only £258.3m has come back the other way. A further £159m net went on transfers last summer.

Since they began ramping up transfer spending in 2019-20, Spurs are England’s fourth-highest net spenders, even remaining ahead of Liverpool after last summer’s record splurge by the champions. In seven seasons, they have spent £880.3million net on players, over £200m more than both Liverpool (£649.7m) and Manchester City (£625.2m). The trio of Chelsea, Manchester United and Arsenal have all spent over £1bn in that time.

The impact on Tottenham’s bottom line has been clear. In 2018-19, a £47.5million transfer-fee amortisation bill was in the Premier League’s bottom half. By last season, that cost had increased to £141.2m, fifth-highest in England and 25 per cent of revenue (2018-19 — 10 per cent).

The strategy hasn’t been particularly successful.

Winning the Europa League shouldn’t be sniffed at, but it was also an outlier rather than the norm. Spurs’ on-pitch performance has dropped off right at the time they’ve plunged deep into the transfer market, which reflects rather badly on their recruitment.

The club made player sales profits of £276.2million between 2013 and 2019, only topped by Chelsea (£398.8m) and Liverpool (£303.0m). In the next six-year period, even as transfer fees have soared and Kane, an academy graduate with minimal book value, was sold, Spurs made £203.9m — less than nine other English teams.

Even in the year of Kane’s departure, Tottenham sold players for less than they had cost them to buy. That has been the case for the past seven years running, reflecting the club’s inability to improve guys’ values while they are in north London.

That’s not out of the norm for the ‘Big Six’, who generally pay big fees for first-team signings which are unlikely to be recouped in full, but since 2019, Spurs have moved players on for £356.7million less than they were originally acquired for. That would be of less consequence if they’d gotten plenty out of them — Hugo Lloris, for example, left on a free in December 2023 after 11 years at the club — but for the most part, Tottenham have just got worse in that time.

Wages are a better corollary for performance, and, after several years of overachieving in the 2010s, Spurs generally began to land around where their salary costs would peg them. But, as of last season, that maxim has been shattered, too.

The Athletic detailed the cash crunch headed Spurs’ way a year ago, and events since have only confirmed them as a club who have departed from the self-sustaining strategy previously emblematic of ENIC’s ownership. For much of its first two decades at the helm, owner funding was neither required nor given. Even a £40million loan from ENIC in 2013-14 was repaid over the following three seasons.

Naturally, the stadium build needed significant lending, and Spurs’ £875.2million debt (£851.7m in borrowings, £23.5m in lease liabilities) at the end of June 2025 was the third highest in world football, only trailing Barcelona and Real Madrid.

Yet that lending was secured at low interest, with most of the debt at fixed rates and not due for repayment until well in the future. The average maturity date lands in the 2040s. Around £30million in annual interest payments flow out of the club, more than at any English side bar Manchester United but, relative to the size of their borrowings, that’s impressively low given current worldwide rates.

Even so, those interest costs bite rather harder when operating performance has tumbled in the manner it has for Tottenham. A once self-sustaining club have increasingly had to turn to others for cash.

As documented by The Athletic when Spurs’ 2024-25 accounts landed, they had just £20.4million in liquid cash on hand at the end of June, a 10-year low and a nearly £180m reduction in just two years. Even as the stadium build and its attendant costs completed, Spurs’ free cash flow — cash generated after covering operating costs and capital spending, like that on transfers — has remained mired in the red.

Last season generated a funding gap of £91.7million, similar to the year before. It was plugged using £58.6million of their existing cash balance, a £35m equity injection from ENIC and a £1.9m increase in borrowings.

While those soaring operating costs have bitten chunks out of operating cash flows that once topped £200million, it is transfer spending which has pushed Tottenham into needing external funding. In 2024-25, net cash out the door on players exceeded £100m for a third year running.

That is likely to have continued in 2025-26.

Even before spending that £159million last summer, Spurs owed a net £242.8m on transfers at the end of last June, almost half of it due inside a year. They now routinely hold some of the highest transfer debt in football, albeit both Manchester clubs topped £300m at the end of last season.

Champions League revenues this season have doubtless helped cash flow, but we already know Tottenham have turned elsewhere for funding again. ENIC injected a further £100million in shares in October, on the back of £35m in December 2024. Ownership has provided £232.5m in four years, against a net £24.6m during the previous 20.

A month before that, they ‘factored’ some of this season’s Premier League prize money distributions with Macquarie, an Australian lender. Such arrangements with Macquarie aren’t uncommon in football, but they are for Spurs. In exchange for a slice of their TV income this season, the club received a slab of money up front, which will then be repaid to Macquarie as the Premier League doles out its distributions.

The sum factored is undisclosed in the accounts. Bloomberg reported an amount of £90million but, when The Athletic requested confirmation from Tottenham, they did not respond. Whatever the number, it points to a club in continued need of external funding, which is a sharp departure from much of ENIC’s reign.

Some belt-tightening is already apparent beyond the field.

Spurs received approval to build a 30-storey hotel next to the stadium two years ago, and up to the end of June 2025 had committed £17.5million to that scheme. However, the build has barely begun; in a meeting with their Fan Advisory Board (FAB) in December, the club confirmed the ‘hotel development project remains on pause’.

There have long been plans to develop the area around the ground, including four residential towers behind the South Stand, but the same FAB minutes detail those moves as under review. The exception is the Printworks, a 287-bed student accommodation scheme on Tottenham High Road which began works last July.

Matthew Collecott, Spurs’ director of finance and operations, is the sole director of the UK-registered entity set up to manage the Printworks, though that business, like several others in their property portfolio, sits beyond the club’s corporate structure.

The Printworks company is ultimately overseen by High Road Holdings Limited, a company registered, like ENIC, in the Bahamas. Other UK-registered property businesses controlled by Bahamas-based companies include High Road West (Tottenham) Limited, Fairgate Tottenham Limited and Goodsyard Tottenham Limited. Across those three entities, all linked to Spurs’ owners but not headed or funded by the club, and now seemingly under review, development property stock totalled £50.7million at the end of June last year.

What would relegation next month do to Spurs’ finances? The obvious answer is ‘Nothing good’, though the extent of the bad is difficult to discern. There are no comparables to draw upon.

Revenue will take a battering. Even if they finish 18th in the 20-team table, Tottenham can expect TV money in the region of £200million this season, inclusive of that £74m from the Champions League. As a Championship side, estimated broadcast income would tumble to just £55m.

The impact on other revenue streams is much harder to determine. Matchday income would take a hit from hosting less lucrative games and, potentially, selling fewer tickets. Premium memberships will also be rather less appealing if they are in England’s second tier.

What exactly will happen to commercial revenues is unclear, although people close to the club say Spurs are relatively well protected. Their kit and merchandising contract with Nike generated £86million in 2024-25, the seventh highest amount in European football. It is unknown what impact relegation would have on that deal, or indeed any other.

Even if some reduction did take place, they would go into the Championship with by far the highest commercial income of any relegated club.

Leeds United, in 2022-23, boast the current record at £48million — nearly six times less than Tottenham’s commercial income last season.

Despite the big drop, Spurs still would boast by far the Championship’s highest income. That £32.5million from non-football events at the stadium last season was higher than the total matchday income of any club in the second tier, and is a revenue stream agnostic of footballing performance.

Parachute-payment clubs already enjoy a revenue advantage over the rest, and Tottenham would be way out in front even without the £50million they’d receive via that route next season. A reasonable estimate of the club’s revenue in the Championship lands at or beyond £300m; the division’s current record is just £137m, and most of its teams reside in the £25m to £40m range.

Of course, Spurs would also be way out in front on costs. As explained earlier, we don’t know the make-up of their £202million operating costs, but they wouldn’t be easily slashed. Record revenues did not translate to profits, and having an income advantage over the rest of the Championship would be of limited value given the expenses involved in running the world-class infrastructure Tottenham boast.

The Athletic reported in March that a majority of the current squad will see their wages halved if relegation occurs, and it is a safe bet plenty of them will be off anyway if the club do land in the Championship. Fees earned from those sales would help offset tumbling revenues, though Spurs’ transfer debts won’t just disappear on relegation and will need to be serviced.

One of the many embarrassments of potential relegation for Spurs is they would record the highest wage bill ever for a side to go down.

The 2025-26 figure there is unknown but their existing wages of £255.8million sit far beyond the average of most relegated teams and indeed the previous record for one to suffer that fate: Leicester City went down in 2022-23 with a wage bill of over £200m but, after adjusting for their 13-month accounting period, the figure was around £190m. Even that was far beyond the second-highest bill: Leicester, again, last season at £152.9m.

Most relegated teams turn to player sales to boost their coffers, and an exodus of first-teamers looks pretty obvious if the worst happens for Tottenham in the next few weeks. Whether they’ve shown it this season or not, plenty in the current squad would be fancied elsewhere, above the level of England’s second tier. How much the club can feasibly recoup is another matter entirely though, and past evidence suggests they’ll struggle to make their money back.

Other costs will remain unmoved; £30million in annual interest payments looks good against £500m to £600m revenues, much less so when income droops to the level it would in the Championship. The benefits of a world-class stadium are reduced if the competition it hosts is of lesser prestige. It is impossible to tell, but it would be interesting to know how much, if anything, the place’s football operations add to Spurs’ bottom line if both Premier League and Champions League matches are absent.

ENIC’s funding of its football club has ramped up in recent seasons, as the cost of investing in the squad has not been rewarded on the field. Even this season, with a return to Champions League football, Spurs were moved to drawing on a reported £190million across funding from ownership and that Macquarie agreement.

If relegation comes, and perhaps even it doesn’t, ENIC will likely have to delve into its pockets once more.

Any pain incurred by having to provide more funding will be compounded by the inevitable impact of relegation on Spurs’ value.

The official line is, and long has been, that they are not for sale. Yet it is also obvious that at just about every large English club, the owners are keen to see their asset appreciate.

A year outside the Premier League would do little to push Tottenham toward the £3.75billion valuation previously desired. More than one season in exile would paint an even grimmer picture.

That valuation, of course, was pushed for by then chairman Daniel Levy, whose departure sent shockwaves through football last September. Levy had widely been admired as one of the sport’s canniest operators, and viewed as instrumental in helping Spurs build a world-class stadium and remain sustainable while competing at the top end of the Premier League. Levy was paid £5.8million during his final full season in 2024-25, which is more than any other director at an English club.

Levy retains a 29.88 per cent holding in ENIC, but is gone from the top table at Tottenham. Whether the club will echo his fall from grace will become clear soon enough, and many are watching closely. A Spurs in the Championship could have an impact far beyond their area of north London.

The consensus has generally been that England’s elite clubs are relegation-proof; Manchester United’s painful mismanagement in the post-Sir Alex Ferguson years has been evidence enough of that. Spurs dropping through the trapdoor to the Championship would render that an illusion.

In turn, valuations of the Premier League’s top teams might be viewed with greater scepticism. The ‘Big Six’ are each dependent on the riches of the Champions League to make their business models work. Falling out of the top tier entirely hardly bears thinking about for would-be investors.

A reason English football clubs already lag behind franchise valuations in North America (where there is no relegation) is revenue uncertainty, even as most assume Premier League status is a given. Removing that assumed floor would hinder valuations further, and, as The Athletic outlined last week, some current ownership groups are particularly in need of a valuation boost in the near future.

That has long been a talked-of aim at Spurs too, but the once-simple task of staying in the top flight now takes on primary importance. Going down should not put them out of business, but it wouldn’t be very welcome either.

Tottenham have gone from England’s most profitable and self-sustaining club to one where costs are racing past revenues and transfer debts have piled up. Winning the Europa League aside — an achievement, without doubt — they have little to show for it. Relegation would be the ultimate indignity.

It might also show the rest of football’s elite that, even in today’s game, not quite everything can be dictated by money. It might remind plenty that football is, always has been, and always should be, a sport at root.

Bad teams, if they’re just bad enough, are vulnerable to the consequences of being bad, no matter how rich they are.

Former Tottenham executive lands new role leading Kazakhstan Football Federation

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Former Tottenham executive lands new role leading Kazakhstan Football Federation - The New York Times
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Tottenham Hotspur’s former chief football officer Scott Munn has been appointed as the general secretary of the Kazakhstan Football Federation (KFF).

Kazakhstan are ranked 110th in FIFA’s global rankings and have never qualified for the European Championship or the World Cup. They finished second from bottom of their European qualification group for this summer’s tournament.

Munn worked as the chief executive officer of City Football Group (CFG) China for four years before he officially joined Spurs in September 2023.

The Australian, 52, left Spurs at the end of last season, as part of a series of senior personnel changes in north London. Munn’s compatriot, Ange Postecoglou, was dimissed as head coach shortly after the end of the campaign, while executive chairman Daniel Levy, executive director Donna Cullen and Rebecca Caplehorn, head of administration and governance, have since left the club.

At Spurs, Munn was responsible for overhauling the scouting and medical departments. At the end of the 2023-24 season, head of medicine and sports science Geoff Scott left after a 20-year spell with the club and is now the director of performance at Nottingham Forest, who are fighting against Spurs to avoid relegation.

Sam Pooley, then head of sports science, also left, with Adam Brett appointed as director of performance services and Nick Davies becoming the new head of sports science.

Spurs suffered an injury crisis during the 2024-25 season which disrupted their season. Brett and Davies both left the club last summer after only a year in their roles, before Munn was placed on gardening leave.

There was more upheaval in the medical department as new head coach Thomas Frank brought several members of backroom staff with him from Brentford including physiotherapists, nutritionists and strength and conditioning coaches. Frank was sacked in February eight months into a three-year contract.

Spurs have been heavily disrupted by injuries for the third season in a row, and Dan Lewindon started work as their new performance director in February.

Munn is listed as a board member on the website of Italian side Parma but is now set for a key role in developing Kazakhstani football.

In a statement on the KFF’s website, president Marat Omarov said: “The federation is at a defining stage. We are building a foundation that will determine the future of football in our country. Achieving high results requires people with experience and discipline.

“Scott Munn brings invaluable hands-on expertise that will directly serve the development of Kazakhstan’s football. His profile meets all the requirements of this role, and I am confident he will deliver the results that our football deserves.”

Munn said: “I am delighted to be joining the Kazakhstan Football Federation at such a pivotal time. I was impressed by the vision outlined by President Omarov and the significant work already undertaken. I look forward to engaging with all of the game’s stakeholders, both at club and international level, to help drive football in the country forward.”