The lessons Tottenham Hotspur can learn from the Premier League’s Great Escapes
“Hours ago… Minutes ago… These men were behind barbed wire, locked in the strongest cage that man could devise. These men plotted, these men dared, these men lived, The Great Escape.”
You can picture it: Roberto De Zerbi standing in front of an interactive whiteboard at Hotspur Way with a video compilation of Tottenham Hotspur’s greatest moments playing in the background, featuring these iconic words from The Great Escape, the 1963 adventure and war film starring Steve McQueen.
In Tottenham’s case, it’s the gilded cage on White Hart Lane that will be the scene for their great escape, should they manage to beat the drop on the final day at home to Everton.
But Spurs are in a race against time to start picking up points — and crucially, wins — if they are to remain as one of the six clubs never to have been relegated from the Premier League. In De Zerbi’s mind, the mountain is clearly surmountable, but they will have to overcome a psychological mountain first.
There have been several so-called great escapes in the Premier League, but none more famous than West Bromwich Albion’s in 2004-05.
Managed by England and Manchester United icon Bryan Robson, who took over from Gary Megson in October 2004, West Brom became the first team in Premier League history to survive after being bottom on Christmas Day.
De Zerbi cannot go to the January market for mid-season reinforcements as Robson did, but uniting the squad off the pitch can help to build camaraderie in the group.
“When I spoke to Bryan about coming in, we never spoke about football,” former West Brom, Arsenal and Everton forward Kevin Campbell told The Athletic in 2020. “We spoke about family and about leadership, and he said, ‘Right, I’ll see you at the training ground tomorrow’. That was it.
“We started to do things as a squad as well. We went to the races and went out for meals. A few beers — nothing in the papers — but we started to do things as a squad, and that helped us grow.”
It was a February trip to Orlando that did the trick for that West Brom squad, who delighted in using Campbell’s American Express platinum card in the Florida nightclubs. De Zerbi took the Spurs players to the Bacchalia restaurant in Mayfair to try to build that unity within a group that hasn’t won a league game in 2026. It was almost as lavish as that West Brom trip, too, with a leg of lamb priced at £130.
There has been a discernible lift at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium since De Zerbi’s arrival. His faith in the team — trusting them to take possession of the ball and building confidence in their technical quality — is being held back only by their lack of confidence in themselves and the unit. More time spent together, both on the training pitch and away from it, and a much-needed three points could give them that psychological boost they need.
“The connection then was great — we just clicked as soon as we got back from the trip and it took off,” said left-back Paul Robinson, part of that West Brom team in 2004-05. “It just took someone like Kev to come in and make us realise what we needed to do. It gave us a bit more leadership, a bit more togetherness and a bit more drive. That’s all we needed.”
West Brom won three of their four games after that Florida trip, boosted by the January loan signing of Kieran Richardson from Manchester United, who brought quality to a midfield short on creativity. Survival remained unlikely going into the penultimate week of the season, when they travelled to face United, needing to avoid defeat to stand a chance. They drew 1-1 at Old Trafford before beating Portsmouth 2-0 on the final day, whose fans delighted in the relegation of rivals Southampton.
Tottenham appear to be in a showdown over the remaining five games with London rivals West Ham United, who are two points ahead of Spurs in 17th. It is a remarkable turnaround from their perspective, considering they were 12 points behind Tottenham on New Year’s Day, with the north Londoners picking up just six points across their 15 league matches in 2026.
After Monday’s 0-0 draw with Crystal Palace, West Ham face Everton and Brentford, who are both chasing European spots, before hosting title-challengers Arsenal. It’s a difficult run, but they can take inspiration from the 2006-07 side, who won seven of their final nine games, including a 1-0 win at Old Trafford on the final day, to beat the drop.
“We looked doomed at one point, and people outside the club didn’t think we’d stay up,” Teddy Sheringham, a Spurs legend who played for West Ham between 2004 and 2007, told The Athletic last month.
“There’s a saying in football that when you’re winning games, you can’t see yourself losing, and when you’re losing games, you can’t see yourself winning. That’s how it felt, because we went on an 11-game winless run, then won seven of our last nine.”
The final game of that winless run was against Tottenham, who beat West Ham 4-3 at Upton Park. Spurs came back from 2-0 down and 3-2 down to get back on level terms, before Paul Stalteri scored an added-time winner for the visitors.
“I think most of the fans were convinced we’d get relegated,” says former West Ham midfielder Hayden Mullins. “The loss to Tottenham was another blow, but we just felt there was nowhere else for us to go. It united the team, and I remember we had a chat among ourselves in the training ground afterwards. We were in a really bad place.”
It’s a position Tottenham can surely relate to. They are without a win in 15 league matches, and will match the club’s longest winless run in history (16 in the 1934-35 season) if they fail to beat Wolverhampton Wanderers on Saturday.
Through all the league’s great escapes, there is an individual whom fans point to as the inspiration for their survival. In West Brom’s case, it’s Richardson; in West Ham’s, it’s Carlos Tevez. For Everton, there have been multiple saviours over the years, from Richarlison to more unlikely heroes such as Barry Horne.
Even for a club with a history as rich as Everton’s, beating Wimbledon 3-2 on the final day of the 1993-94 season to secure Premier League status remains one of the most fondly remembered days at Goodison Park.
Like Spurs now, Everton were firmly established as one of the biggest clubs in England at the time, having been crowned champions of England just seven years earlier. Their slide towards a relegation scrap was more gradual than modern-day Tottenham’s, but that didn’t make it any less of a shock for them to be in the drop zone with one game to play that season.
Everton were 2-0 down after 20 minutes that day, before Graham Stuart pulled one back to go in level at the break. On the 67th minute, Horne brilliantly levelled for Everton, firing in on the half volley from 30 yards.
“Anyone who’s played sport will understand,” Horne told The Athletic in 2025. “If you’re not confident, you don’t do things like that. At this point in the season and in the game, I was playing well after a poor start at Everton.
“But the fact that it was such a ridiculous goal — I say ridiculous because I only scored three for Everton in my four years — the effect it had on the crowd and on Wimbledon meant it was more than just a goal.”
With the wind in their sails, Everton got the winner in the 81st minute through Stuart, who sidefooted into the back of the net from the edge of the box, but it was Horne who went down in club folklore.
“Now we’re leaving Goodison, and people are starting to put books and videos together,” Horne said as the club prepared to move into Hill Dickinson Stadium. “You realise it’s been 133 years (at Goodison Park) and when people talk about events, that’s usually one of them. It means I’m part of Everton’s history and that’s brilliant.”
Judging by his performance on the weekend, perhaps Xavi Simons is the character to stand tall for Spurs, a side who are not a typical ‘great escape candidate’.
However, Tottenham, in their current situation, would love to have their name alongside the league’s famous great escapers.