The New York Times

Desperate Spurs now have one task left this season: to survive in the Premier League

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Igor Tudor used “fragile” and “weak” in his post-match press conference. Inept, embarrassing, or dreadful also work. You’d be hard-pressed to find a team in Europe that is performing further below expectations than Tottenham Hotspur right now, but against Atletico Madrid on Tuesday night their floor somehow caved in again.

Tudor announced before the game that, in Tottenham’s desperate state, the Premier League would take precedence over the Champions League — the one competition where Spurs have not been totally calamitous this term. In publicly prioritising their Premier League status — which is growing ever more perilous by the week — Tudor allowed himself to experiment. It could be the last time the boardroom let him cook.

Goalkeeper Antonin Kinsky was handed his first start since October in place of Guglielmo Vicario, an underperforming squad leader. The 17 minutes he played before he was substituted are ones he won’t ever forget, confirming Vicario’s undisputed place in goal for the remainder of the season by default. Sandwiched either side of an equally calamitous slip by Micky van de Ven, allowing Antoine Griezmann in for Atletico’s second, mishit passes by Kinsky led to two easy goals for the hosts — putting them far out of sight before they had the opportunity to attempt to gain a foothold.

A fourth was added soon after, with Pape Matar Sarr misdirecting his header towards Vicario, drawing a good save from the Italian, before Robin Le Normand converted the rebound.

“I’ve been coaching 15 years, I’ve never done this thing,” Tudor said in his post-match press conference, referring to substituting his goalkeeper. “It was necessary to preserve the guy, preserve the team. Incredible situation. Nothing to comment. It was, before the game, the right choice to do in the moment like we are. Pressure on Vicario. Another competition. Toni is a very good goalkeeper. It was, for me, the right decision. After happened this, of course, it’s easy to say that it was not right decision. So I explained to Toni speaking after. He’s a right guy and good goalkeeper, unfortunately happened in this big game, these mistakes.”

According to former Manchester United goalkeeper Peter Schmeichel, speaking on CBS Sports, it was a “moment that everybody in football will always remember every time they see or hear his name”. On TNT Joe Hart slammed Tudor’s lack of humanity in failing even to acknowledge Kinsky, who will turn 23 on Friday, as he left the pitch. Paul Robinson described it as “selfish” on BBC Radio 5 Live, claiming that Tudor, the supposed specialist firefighter, was acting in “self-preservation”.

Aside from his employment, it’s hard to imagine Tudor wants to preserve anything from his dire 24-day, four-game spell as Tottenham head coach. And when asked whether he is the right man for that job, one he faces incessant questioning on his suitability for a role he has yet to show any promise in, he replied “no comment”. Words, he realises, count for precious little without substance.

Similar questions should be asked of those who hired him. Tudor has a reputation for improving faltering clubs on the continent, but it’s becoming increasingly apparent with every exasperated attempt to make sense of Tottenham’s “amazing” situation that he underestimated, or was undersold, the extent of the challenge.

And misplacing long-term planning over the club’s pressing short-term needs no longer stands up to scrutiny. For that, sporting director Johan Lange, chief executive Vinai Venkatesham and the controlling Lewis family, headed by Nick Beucher and Vivienne Lewis, bear responsibility.

Had they acted after Mohammed Kudus sustained a hamstring injury on January 4, perhaps Ademola Lookman, who started for Atletico and assisted their opening goal, might have been a Tottenham player. Had they identified the immediate, pressing need for a midfield playmaker, perhaps Spurs would have been more successful in keeping the ball.

This inaction, not just in January but over several windows and key junctures, is more to blame for the collapse at the Metropolitano than the hapless Tudor’s choice to give Kinsky a go.

Yet it’s the Croatian who seems most likely to be heading for the exit door in the immediate future. With Tottenham sitting 16th in the Premier League, just one point above the relegation zone, the decision to stick or twist has rarely, if ever, had greater consequences. Tudor appears out of ideas at a time when Tottenham need them most, but, given the circumstances, the list of possible alternatives is significantly shorter than the long line of injured players they will have to make do without.

One of their unavailable players is Van de Ven, whose red card in the 3-1 defeat to Crystal Palace rules him out of the trip to Anfield to face Liverpool on Sunday. He might be joined on the sidelines by Joao Palhinha and Cristian Romero, who both finished the game off the pitch after colliding heads in injury time.

Losing Romero, who played his first game since earning a four-match ban for a second red card due to a late tackle on Manchester United midfielder Casemiro, for any more than the trip to Liverpool would be a hammer blow, with a true relegation six-pointer coming up against Nottingham Forest the following weekend.

Because if Tudor has got anything right as Tottenham coach, it’s that the Champions League didn’t matter before the 5-2 defeat on Tuesday, and definitely doesn’t matter now.

Tottenham have lost six games in a row for the first time in their history, and can hardly afford to lose many more — but they’d surely trade another sound beating next Wednesday for four points in their next two Premier League matches in a heartbeat.

Atletico Madrid 5 Tottenham 2 – A brutal substitution, calamitous defending, what now for Spurs?

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There are many things this match will be remembered for. The goals, the errors, the disbelief that Tottenham Hotspur could be 4-0 down within 22 minutes. But mainly, it will be for the sight of goalkeeper Antonin Kinsky walking down the tunnel, a comforting hand over his shoulder, after he was brutally substituted in the 17th minute after two calamitous slips.

Kinsky’s Champions League debut went horribly wrong, leaving Tottenham not only needing to overcome a 5-2 deficit in the second leg against Atletico Madrid but also likely facing an inquisition over head coach Igor Tudor’s call to haul off his 22-year-old goalkeeper.

At fault for the first and third goals, Kinsky looked devastated. A slip allowed the home team to work the ball to Marcos Llorente, who lasered a first-time shot into the bottom-left corner in the sixth minute. After a Micky van de Ven slip had led to Antoine Griezmann’s goal and Atletico’s second, Kinsky botched clearing a back pass a minute later to give Julian Alvarez the easiest of chances.

Worse was to come as Robin Le Normand scored from a rebound after substitute goalkeeper Guglielmo Vicario had initially made a great save. But Atletico are yet to keep a clean sheet in this Champions League campaign and with Pedro Porro’s 26th-minute goal, there was hope. But then came the second half and a sublime Atletico goal.

An unmarked Richarlison forced a save from Jan Oblak but Atletico’s lightning-quick counter-attack, which included a sumptuous Griezmann back heel, culminated in Alvarez putting the hosts 5-1 ahead. Dominic Solanke reduced the deficit but Atletico will take a handsome lead into the second leg as Tudor became the first Spurs head coach to lose their opening four games.

Elias Burke, Jay Harris and Dermot Corrigan analyse an incredible match at the Estadio Metropolitano.

Should Kinsky have been substituted?

With Vicario failing to convince Tudor that he should be Tottenham’s undisputed No 1, Kinsky’s first start since October had been rumoured for several weeks. And with Tudor suggesting the Champions League offers the opportunity for experimentation in his pre-match press conference, Kinsky was given the chance to prove he could step up.

But having been at fault for two of Atletico’s opening three goals, he was on his way down the tunnel after a calamitous 16 minutes that he won’t forget easily.

Distribution has been touted as one of Kinsky’s biggest strengths. In his run as starting goalkeeper in Vicario’s absence last season, his ability to play short, medium and long passes was clear. But after mis-kicking an attempted chipped ball over the Atletico press, leading to Llorente’s opening goal, it would have been advisable to take the Vicario approach — eliminate risk and send the ball long — at least until he had the opportunity to rebuild confidence in his passing.

But after another howler in possession, allowing Alvarez to tap what has to be the easiest goal he will ever score, Tudor had enough, replacing him with the Italian without offering any sympathy or support as he left the pitch.

It was a decision received with jeers by the Atletico faithful — but don’t think they were expressing solidarity with the Spurs goalkeeper. Every time Vicario touched the ball, Atletico fans whistled loudly, hoping he would make a similar mistake.

Half of the Spurs bench followed Kinsky down the tunnel, presumably offering words of comfort. For better or worse, the shirt now unquestionably belongs to Vicario, and Tudor’s biggest experiment yet proved a miserable failure.

Elias Burke

How did Spurs concede four goals so quickly?

Spurs imploded for the second time in six days. They conceded three goals in 13 minutes during last week’s defeat against Crystal Palace but went a step further in the Spanish capital and found themselves 4-0 down after 22 minutes.

Their collapse was triggered by Kinsky’s initial slip. He received a pass inside his own box from Cristian Romero but slipped as he struck the ball with his right foot and it bounced off his left, straight to Ademola Lookman. The ball ended up with Llorente, who drilled a shot into the bottom corner

This squad does not know how to respond to setbacks and the situation spiralled from there. Somehow, even though they lined up with a back five, holes were popping up throughout their defence.

Atletico’s second goal encapsulated everything wrong with this side. A simple long ball forward caused chaos as Djed Spence mistimed his header and then slipped before Pape Matar Sarr was weak in his duel with Llorente. Van de Ven slipped and Griezmann rolled the ball past Kinsky.

Kinsky’s second mistake presented Alvarez with one of the easiest goals he will ever score. Kinsky received a back pass from Van de Ven under no pressure but his left-footed pass towards Kevin Danso bounced off his right foot straight to the unmarked Alvarez, who had an open goal to aim for.

The goalkeeper, who turns 23 on Friday, was substituted afterwards, adding to the drama. It felt like interim head coach Tudor had just completely broken Kinsky by handing him his Champions League debut and then dragging him off so quickly.

The brutal sequence was completed in the 22nd minute when Vicario made a good save from a free kick but Le Normand pounced on the rebound. It was the end of the goals but the damage could have been much worse. Van de Ven escaped punishment for a rash challenge on David Hancko and Llorente fired wide from a great position inside the box.

Jay Harris

Is the tie over?

Atletico were aware of Tottenham’s struggles in the Premier League but their coach, Diego Simeone, said before the game that he did not see his own side as favourites in the tie, pointing to Spurs’ fourth-place finish in the league phase.

But things very quickly went in Atletico’s favour as they took advantage of Spurs’ complete defensive collapse. At 4-0 up, most observers — and the players on the pitch — must have thought the tie was over. But Simeone’s temper flared when poor collective defending allowed right-back Porro to pull one back for Tottenham within four minutes.

After half-time, Atletico ‘keeper Oblak was sharp to parry Richarlison’s header, and seconds later, Griezmann’s sublime touch sent Alvarez haring away behind the Tottenham defence. The former Manchester City striker calmly carried the ball clear and finished for 5-1.

That appeared to be that, but then Oblak passed the ball straight to Porro, leading to Solanke’s goal.

Simeone and his players should need no reminding that Atletico were 4-0 up by half-time against Barcelona in their recent Copa del Rey semi-final first leg, only to end up hanging on for a 4-3 aggregate victory after conceding three times in the return at the Camp Nou.

Given all Tottenham’s problems, Simeone’s side should still progress from next week’s second leg. But he will still be making sure between now and then that nobody thinks the tie is over yet.

Dermot Corrigan

What will Spurs do now?

Tudor, who replaced Thomas Frank on an interim basis, was supposed to stabilise the team and make them defensively solid.

But Spurs have lost all four games with him in charge — a club first. The decision-makers need to accept he was the wrong choice and sack him before it is too late.

Tudor has persisted with a variation of a 3-4-3 system in every match. Archie Gray has bounced from right wing-back to left wing-back to central midfield. Xavi Simons and Conor Gallagher have been left on the bench.

He has handled the squad poorly and it is no surprise the players are making erratic decisions on the pitch. The 47-year-old’s decision to haul off Kinsky, without even acknowledging him, was brutal.

The pressure and scrutiny also need to be cranked up on sporting director Johan Lange and chief executive officer Vinai Venkatesham. Tudor is the wrong fit but much of the blame should land on the people who hired him.

What did Tudor say?

We will bring you this after he has spoken at the post-match press conference.

What next for Spurs?

Why did Tottenham substitute their goalkeeper after 17 minutes in the Champions League?

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Why did Tottenham substitute their goalkeeper after 17 minutes in the Champions League? - The New York Times
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Tottenham Hotspur goalkeeper Antonin Kinsky was substituted after just 17 minutes of their Champions League last-16 first leg against Atletico Madrid after his mistakes led to two goals for the home side.

Kinsky was a surprise pick in the starting XI ahead of Spurs’ usual No 1 Guglielmo Vicario, making his first appearance since October.

The 22-year-old was hauled off by Spurs interim head coach Igor Tudor before the 20 minute mark, however, with Spurs already trailing 3-0 and the goalkeeper at fault for Atletico’s first and third goals.

Only three goalkeepers have been substituted earlier in Champions League history, the most recent of which being Peter Gulacsi for RB Leipzig in 2022.

For U.S. viewers:

After just six minutes, Kinsky slipped while taking a goal kick, gifting the home side possession on the edge of the box, and Marcos Llorente finished from Julian Alvarez’s pass to open the scoring.

Kinsky’s second mistake came as he mis-kicked a simple back pass, allowing Alvarez to effectively walk the ball into the empty net.

Tudor immediately called for the benched Vicario, and Kinsky was applauded off the pitch by the majority of the Wanda Metropolitano. The goalkeeper headed straight down the tunnel with no acknowledgement from his coach.

Within minutes, Vicario had conceded Spurs’ fourth, with Robin Le Normand nodding over the line after the Italian had made a sharp save.

Pedro Porro pulled one back for Spurs a few minutes later to make it 4-1 and give the visitors a degree of hope.

How did the football world react?

“It broke my heart,” former Manchester City and England goalkeeper Joe Hart said to TNT. “He’s had a bad 14 minutes, there’s no getting away from it.

“Even the stadium is feeling sorry for him. Tudor doesn’t even acknowledge his goalie. If that’s man management, then I’m flabbergasted. He’s acting like that isn’t the 14th minute. That doesn’t happen at any level. Not even Sunday League.”

Steve McManaman echoed Hart’s reaction on the same coverage: “That’s man management at its very worst. He’s managed not to even acknowledge him … that is cold as cold can be.”

“I blame the manager,” Jamie Carragher said on Paramount. “He put him there. He’s as much at fault as anyone.”

“No one who hasn’t been a goalkeeper can understand how difficult it is to play in this position,” Fiorentina and former Manchester United goalkeeper David de Gea said on social media. “Keep your head up and you will go again.”

A disastrous collapse

Analysis by Tottenham Hotspur correspondent Elias Burke

The Atletico faithful were in full voice well before kick-off, but by the time Julian Alvarez put their team three ahead inside 15 minutes, thanks to calamitous mistakes from Antonin Kinsky and Micky van de Ven, the Metropolitano reached fever pitch.

Understandably, the travelling Tottenham support stood motionless in the top tier above the Spurs goal, in complete disbelief in how Spurs had collapsed so disastrously, all entirely of their own doing.

Then, when Igor Tudor substituted Kinsky — who was making his first start since the 2-0 defeat to Newcastle United in the Carabao Cup — the Atletico crowd whistled the decision. And if anyone may have thought it was in solidarity with the Czech goalkeeper, Atletico then loudly whistled Guglielmo Vicario every time he touched the ball, hoping he’d make a similar mistake.

Atletico Madrid vs Tottenham Hotspur: Which club are the most ‘cursed’?

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Can a football club really be cursed?

It is a question many long-suffering fans of certain teams have asked themselves. And while Atletico Madrid and Tottenham Hotspur, who meet in the Champions League round of 16, have both won multiple trophies over their history, they have also experienced their fair share of bad fortune.

In Atletico’s case, it led to them being known as ‘el pupas’ — the jinxed one. Diego Simeone’s team have been knocked out of the Champions League by city rivals Real Madrid five times from the 2014 final onwards, giving that ‘jinx’ fresh meaning.

For Tottenham, the word ‘Spursy’ has come to symbolise their recent struggles. The north London club won the Europa League last season — their first title in 17 years — but are now one point outside the Premier League relegation zone in 16th. The threat of a first top-flight demotion since 1977 is very real.

Do Atletico have the worst luck? Have Spurs been struck by the most misfortune? Should both fanbases just look at Sheffield Wednesday and get over themselves? La Liga writer Dermot Corrigan and Spurs fan Dan Kilpatrick argue their case…

Where does the idea of the club being ‘cursed’ come from?

Corrigan: The idea of Atletico being jinxed in this competition goes back to their 1974 European Cup final against Bayern Munich, when they were leading 1-0 in extra time thanks to a goal from club legend Luis Aragones.

In the 120th minute, Bayern defender Hans-Georg Schwarzenbeck sent a 35-yard speculative shot past an apparently distracted Atleti goalkeeper Miguel Reina to force a replay (penalty shootouts had yet to be introduced). Four days later, Bayern won the replay 4-0.

Thus began the ‘pupas’ curse, a millstone Atletico seemingly cannot shake — particularly against their richer, record 15-time Champions League/European Cup-winning neighbours.

In the 2014 final, Atletico were seconds away from winning the trophy until Sergio Ramos headed home a 93rd-minute equaliser for Real Madrid, who ran out easy 4-1 winners in extra time.

Two years later, at the same stage of the competition, Antoine Griezmann missed from the spot in normal time and former Real academy product turned Atleti right-back Juanfran missed the decisive penalty as Simeone’s team lost the shootout 5-3.

The jinx appeared to return last season in the round of 16, a tie that went to penalties in the second leg at Atletico’s Metropolitano stadium. Atleti forward Julian Alvarez saw his spot kick disallowed after the officials spotted an — arguably negligible — double touch. Former Real player Marcos Llorente also missed his kick and Atleti lost the shootout 4-3.

After an official club complaint to UEFA over the Alvarez decision, the game’s lawmakers, IFAB, changed the rules so that if a taker accidentally makes contact with the ball with both feet and the kick is successful, it must now be retaken instead of counting as a miss. You can imagine how that went down with Atletico fans.

Kilpatrick: From years of Tottenham snatching defeat from the jaws of victory.

A whole new term has entered the modern footballing lexicon — ‘Spursy’ — to mean their uncanny ability to shoot themselves in the foot or underachieve. There is also a particularly strong fatalism within the fanbase, born of an overwhelming feeling that the world is against them.

Consider, for example, ‘Lasagnagate’ in 2006 — when supposed food poisoning, which turned out to be norovirus, spoiled their Champions League hopes on the final day of the 2005-06 season — or when Spurs finished fourth in 2011-12 but still missed out on Europe’s top competition because London rivals Chelsea won the competition. Or when UEFA changed the handball law after Moussa Sissoko had been penalised in the 2019 Champions League final defeat to Liverpool at Atletico’s Metropolitano stadium. The list goes on.

Is there anything that shows they aren’t ‘cursed’?

Corrigan: During Diego Simeone’s 15 years as coach, Atletico have won every other trophy they have played for apart from the Champions League — La Liga (twice, in 2014 and 2021), the Europa League (twice, in 2012 and 2018), the Copa del Rey, the Supercopa de Espana, and the UEFA Super Cup.

They are also through to this season’s Copa del Rey final after eliminating Barcelona in a rollercoaster semi-final in which they were 4-0 up by half-time in the first leg at the Metropolitano, but still ended up hanging on in the final stages of a 3-0 second-leg loss at the Camp Nou.

Atletico will be happy not to be facing Real Madrid in the decider, but instead Real Sociedad in Seville on April 18.

Kilpatrick: Even Spurs’ historic Europa League triumph last season is beginning to feel more like a curse than a blessing.

In desperately pursuing a European trophy, Spurs have seemingly forgotten how to win domestically, and could still suffer the ultimate ignominy of being relegated from the Premier League this term.

That said, success and failure are relative: Spurs are still one of the Premier League’s ever-presents, playing in a £1billion, state-of-the-art stadium, and there are countless clubs up and down the country who would gladly swap places with them.

What other similarities or differences are there between these sides?

Corrigan: Over the years, Atletico have had to deal with a lack of respect from their counterparts in the Madrid Derby. Many fans (and executives) at the Metropolitano also feel as if they suffer from local-media bias towards Real Madrid.

While the ‘derbi’ is always the biggest fixture for Atletico, many at Madrid have viewed Barcelona as their main rivals through recent decades — just as (maybe) Arsenal fans have often looked past Tottenham to worry more about the threat posed by Manchester United, Chelsea or Manchester City in the Premier League.

Kilpatrick: The most obvious similarity is their struggles to emerge from the shadow of a more successful city rival.

The Spurs-Arsenal rivalry is historically on more of an even footing than Real-Atleti, but Spurs have been far less successful than their neighbours in the modern era — and it hurts. There are plenty of differences, but the stability Atleti have fostered in sticking with Simeone stands in stark contrast to Spurs’ habit of lurching between managers, styles and approaches.

What are their chances of success in the Champions League looking like this season?

Corrigan: Atletico have been on a rollercoaster this season. They took just two points from their first three La Liga games, but then hammered Real Madrid 5-2 in September’s La Liga derbi.

Over the past month, their focus has narrowed to the cup competitions after back-to-back defeats to Real Betis and Rayo Vallecano (a 3-0 loss) ended any faint hopes of a title challenge.

Their Champions League campaign has also had its ups and downs, with a loss to Bodo/Glimt in the final league-phase game meaning they had to navigate a play-off against Club Brugge. Simeone’s team rode their luck at times in both games, but a superb second-leg hat-trick by striker Alexander Sorloth saw them through 7-4 on aggregate.

Atletico have shown, by hammering both Real Madrid and Barcelona in domestic competition this season, that they are capable of beating top opposition in one-off games, and the draw has been quite friendly to them. So maybe, just maybe, this is the year they finally put the ‘pupas’ moniker behind them.

Kilpatrick: Bleak. There is a compelling case that Spurs should effectively throw the Champions League, so perilous is their situation in the Premier League. They are still without a domestic win in 2026 and this season bears every possible hallmark of a shock relegation.

So, whose club is the most ‘cursed’?

Corrigan: From here in Spain, Atletico appear the most cursed — especially in the Champions League, where they have experienced some terrible fortune through cruel defeats to their much richer and more powerful neighbours.

You do not have to buy into any conspiracy theories — although some Atletico fans do — to believe that somebody, somewhere just does not want them to finally win that long-sought-after first European Cup.

Kilpatrick: Sorry, Dermot, but frankly, it is not even close.

Atleti may have fallen short on a number of occasions, but they can point to two La Liga titles in the past 12 years while competing against Real and Barcelona. They have also been consistently competitive in the Champions League over the same period. Spurs fans would kill to be ‘cursed’ in the same way!

Row Z: Tottenham vs reality, Arsenal play it safe – and could a striker decide a team-mate’s future?

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Welcome to Row Z, The Athletic’s weekly column that shines a light on the bonkers side of the game.

From clubs to managers, players to organisations, every week we’ll bring you the absurdities, the greed, the contradictions, the preposterousness and the oddities of the sport we all love…

Tottenham: redefining what a modern club can be

Tottenham Hotspur, a version of reality: the ninth-richest club in the world with revenues of £581million ($778m), the third-highest attendances in the Premier League (60,900 average), millions of pounds made per home match (matchday revenue exceeds £100m per season) as well as hosting money-spinning NFL matches, boxing, rugby and concerts featuring the likes of Beyonce, Bad Bunny and K-pop stars.

Tottenham Hotspur, an extension of that version of reality: on Friday, the club’s chief revenue officer Ryan Norys will tell an audience at the exclusive Austin Marriott Downtown hotel in Texas about how the club are “building a cultural powerhouse”, how they have “redefined what a modern football club can be” and how they emerged “as a globally recognised brand built on sport, culture, and partnerships”.

Norys will share Spurs’ “innovative partnership strategy and global stadium vision” during the event, titled ‘Beyond the Pitch’ (what is beyond the pitch? Empty seats, of course). A Spurs player will then appear on stage as a hologram. Reasons unknown.

Tottenham Hotspur, actual reality: 16th in the Premier League table, one point above the relegation zone and mocked by League One leaders Lincoln City…

All in it together at Forest (so long as you’ve got a spare £70)

Also perhaps living in an alternative reality are Nottingham Forest, who have a big Europa League tie this Thursday against Danish side Midtjylland, with a place in the quarter-finals on offer for the winners.

For a club like Forest, with its rich history in European competitions, you’d expect the City Ground to be absolutely bouncing for that one. Should be good!

Hang on, though: as of Monday, thousands upon thousands of tickets remained unsold, with many Forest fans baulking at the prices; up to £70 in the Brian Clough Stand, £60 in many other areas and the ‘cheap seats’ behind the goals are £55.

Forest didn’t sell out for their last European home match against Fenerbahce, with an attendance of 26,883, when tickets were £50-£70.

What to do to rectify this situation and shift a few more tickets? Wheel out a club legend to speak over an emotive montage of course!

Stuart Pearce gave the rabble-rousing cry on social media: “The City Ground. Under the lights. Nothing like it. The Garibaldi unite on Trentside for another special night. Stronger as one, we’re in this together.” Yep, we’re all in this together… as long as you’ve got a spare £70.

All 27 quote-tweets and the vast majority of replies mentioned the exorbitant price of tickets. Incidentally, Midtjylland are charging €21 (£18.41, $24.35) for away tickets for Forest next week, so if you get a decent Ryanair flight, it’s probably cheaper to fly to Denmark to watch that one.

The aptly-named Sarcastic Forest said it best on X: “The City Ground, under the lights. Save on fuel and don’t see your relatives, forget your kids’ birthday presents, don’t worry about your mortgage, reduce your family’s food bill and tell your kids to go a bit hungry, spend 55 quid on #nffc. There’s nothing like it.”

Broking news at Chelsea

If ever a sentence summed up modern football, it might be this one from a recent Chelsea press release: “Chelsea Football Club and TMGM, the club’s Official Regional Online Forex and CFD Trading Partner in Asia-Pacific, today announce an enhancement to our multi-year partnership which sees the Australian-based broker unveiled on the back of the team’s shirts.”

Safety first for Arsenal

In other partnership-based news, Arsenal have joined forces with a new ‘Official Community Security Partner’ (their capital letters, not ours).

Arsenal told supporters they can expect new initiatives, educational content and opportunities to engage with ADT’s latest smart home security innovations.

It seems ADT is also being lined up to help with the football team’s bid to end a six-year wait for a major trophy.

The club’s chief commercial officer Juliet Slot said: “They are a brand that share our deep connection with community, with their support and investment helping to drive our ambition to win major trophies.”

We like it…. everyone at the club is in this together and if Manchester City steal the title away from Arsenal, maybe it won’t just be Mikel Arteta and the players who are to blame.

Evann’s future? It’s anyone’s Guess

Evann Guessand, one of the worst signings the Premier League has seen this season, is also one of the best signings the Premier League has seen this season.

Risible at Aston Villa, the Ivory Coast forward has been great for Crystal Palace on loan, with two goals and one assist in his seven appearances to date.

Given he scored two in 21 (with no assists) for Villa, Palace probably weren’t expecting their reported obligatory clause to buy Guessand to come into force, with Sky Sports reporting this week that if Guessand contributes eight goal involvements, they’ll have to buy him for £28m.

The notion of assists contributing to an obligatory transfer raises a few questions. One, come on, the data nerds at The Athletic will tell you an assist is not a definitive barometer as to how good a player is. Surely key chances created or xA (expected assists) would better reflect Guessand’s performances?

Also, it raises the possibility of Guessand being on seven goal involvements on the last day of the season, squaring a tap-in for Jorgen Strand Larsen and the striker having the decision to score for Guessand, or miss if he doesn’t like him.

Still, as any Wolves fan who watched Strand Larsen earlier this season will tell you, he’d probably miss anyway.

Six play-off teams: what will they think of next?

To the Championship now and what do you do if you have one of European football’s most exciting, thrilling, must-watch end-of-season climaxes year after year, with five games culminating in the world’s richest match at Wembley?

You tinker with the format of course! For decades, the third-plays-sixth and fourth-plays-fifth format has produced some of the most iconic matches in modern English football history.

The EFL is changing that from next season, inviting teams who finish as low as eighth to the party. The sides in fifth and sixth will host the teams in seventh and eighth in one-off matches, which definitely won’t lead to dull low blocks and smash-and-grab wins from the away side.

It throws up the possibility of a team in eighth place putting together a run of results to reach the Premier League. On average over the past five seasons, the team finishing eighth has lost 16 games per season (a third of their total matches) and finished 18 points behind the team in third, or as high as 24 points behind, as Millwall (66 points, 16 defeats) did last year.

It all feels a bit unnecessary. Next it’ll be the top 10 in the play-offs, then the top 12, then eventually they’ll come up with a brainwave of all 24 teams playing each other twice, with the top few teams earning promotion. Decent idea, to be fair, someone should try it.

Andy Robertson: Focus ‘never’ left Liverpool after Tottenham January approach

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Andy Robertson: Focus ‘never’ left Liverpool after Tottenham January approach - The New York Times
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Andy Robertson says his commitment to Liverpool never wavered after Tottenham Hotspur made an approach to sign him in the January window.

The Scotland captain, who is out of contract at the end of the season, admits talks took place over a possible move to north London, but he opted to stay at Anfield.

“There was obviously interest there — there was discussions had with both sets of clubs,” he said. “But the decision was that I wanted to stay. I was never not committed. I’ve been committed to Liverpool for the last eight and a half or nine years now and I’ll be committed until I’m no longer needed.

“That’s always been my mindset. This club has given me everything and I’ve given this club everything.

“It’s been a fantastic relationship so hopefully that continues and obviously January happened, but it is now gone. Now we move forward.

“My focus never came off trying to help the lads on the pitch and in training.”

The 31-year-old left-back has seen his game time reduced since the signing of Milos Kerkez from Bournemouth last summer.

However, the vice-captain’s performance in Friday’s 3-1 FA Cup win over Wolverhampton Wanderers when he scored the opener and then created the second goal for Mohamed Salah underlined how much he still has to offer.

Asked about his future beyond this season, Robertson said: “I’ve always said that will stay between me and the club. I don’t think it will get played out in public. It is not one of them.

“I have got an amazing relationship with Richard (Hughes), Mike Gordon and Michael Edwards. These people brought me to the football club. They have helped make me who I am.

“I think out of respect to them, and they have respected me, then the conversations will be in-house. When a decision is made, and we’re getting to the point where I only have three months left on my contract, it will be announced to you guys.”

If Robertson’s ninth season at Liverpool proves to be his last he’s determined to help Arne Slot’s side secure more success.

He added: “My thought process is I want to win trophies at Liverpool.

“It’s not gone the way that we wanted in the league — that is clear.

“If we have more performances like we did at Wolves (in the FA Cup) then we have a chance. If we play like Tuesday (in the Premier League loss to Wolves) then we have no chance. So we need to try and find that consistency.

“Hopefully at the end of the season we can all have a smile on our faces and that is obviously what we are working towards.”

Tottenham decided not to spend big in January. Now it may cost them far more

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Tottenham decided not to spend big in January. Now it may cost them far more - The New York Times
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Tottenham Hotspur’s hierarchy entered the January window with a decision to make.

Should they strengthen a depleted side in the glaringly obvious key areas of weakness in defensive midfield and wide attack, and have a chance at salvaging a season that appeared to be slipping away by the week? Or should they trust that relegation was so absurd a nightmare that prioritising long-term planning over an increasing need for a quick fix would better prepare the club for success in the future?

As it transpired, the club’s hierarchy naively gambled their chips on the long-term plan. Evidenced by their atrocious league form in 2026 — with Thursday evening’s 3-1 home defeat to Crystal Palace one of the most deflating in the club’s recent history — that miscalculation could lead to a first relegation since 1977, a collapse with far greater consequences to the club’s long-term standing and finances than any transitional impact signing.

Having just completed a deal worth £35million ($46.8m) for Conor Gallagher, club chief executive officer Vinai Venkatesham addressed the fans in the programme for the home match against West Ham United. Tottenham were winless in four, but signing an England international, signalling an intent to improve the squad, brought a refreshed optimism, even if sections of the fanbase questioned his fit within a squad already well-stocked with similar profiles.

In his statement, Venkatesham said he and the hierarchy “believe in our current squad, but must add more quality, experience and leadership to compete consistently at the highest level”. He added that the club was open to additions in January “where the right opportunities exist,” and were prioritising “signings that genuinely move us forward”.

But as key players relentlessly picked up injuries, leaving then-head coach Thomas Frank with the bare bones of the squad he inherited last summer, Venkatesham, sporting director Johan Lange, and the Lewis family were blind to the grave consequences of inaction. On top of project players, such as 19-year-old Souza, their only other January signing, there became a desperate need for first-team reinforcements at some point over that month.

If it wasn’t evident before, the 2-1 home defeat to West Ham indicated that Tottenham were not in a false position and had the potential to continue sliding unless something changed.

That change eventually happened in the technical area, with Igor Tudor replacing Frank, but the coach with a reputation for breathing new life into faltering clubs on the continent is having no such impact in north London. After the 4-1 loss to Arsenal, the first of three successive league defeats on his watch, Tudor acknowledged that this was the most difficult job he’d ever taken, and let loose on the players’ effort and quality in an explosive post-match press conference as they were beaten 2-1 away to Fulham the following week.

While Tudor must take some responsibility for failing to make his 3-4-3 formation work, the players available to him are an awkward fit. But those who hired a coach with a documented track history of using a certain system, without identifying that they do not have the players to fulfil it effectively, deserve the greater share of accountability.

Truthfully, however, the odds were stacked against whoever succeeded Frank — regardless of style, system or character. While Brennan Johnson may not have fit the club’s long-term vision, the decision to let him depart without a replacement — amid an injury crisis — is proving negligent. Due to injuries already accounted for in Dejan Kulusevski and Mohammed Kudus, as well as an anterior cruciate ligament injury to Wilson Odobert sustained in February, Gallagher and Randal Kolo Muani have been pushed to the right wing, where they have been ineffective.

Souza started his first game for Tottenham on Thursday, but was replaced after Micky van de Ven’s red card, having picked up a yellow card inside seven minutes. While he could prove an important player in the future, he is not up to speed yet with the Premier League’s pace and physicality — nor should he be expected to be.

With Tottenham just one point above safety, their reasons for inactivity in the January window are inadequate. In an interview with The Athletic and other reporters, Lange reiterated the difficulty of doing business in the January market, suggesting there were “very few players who could make a difference for us now or in the future” as well as asserting that it “doesn’t make sense” to “bring in players that cannot help us now or we don’t believe have potential for the future”.

In an ideal world, Antoine Semenyo would have been that player, but who would have advised him to ignore the advances of title-challengers for a side slipping towards relegation? But what about Rayan, the Brazilian winger Bournemouth signed from Vasco da Gama, who has scored two goals in his first six games in the Premier League? Or Crysencio Summerville, who has registered nine goal involvements in 10 matches? He, along with January signings Pablo, Taty Castellanos, and Axel Disasi, has re-energised West Ham’s season, proving that smart work in the notoriously tricky window can turn a season on its head.

Or even Harry Wilson, the scorer of Fulham’s opener last week, who looks set to run his contract down in west London. With hindsight, Tottenham would take any of those in an instant.

While January additions may have proven ineffective, Tottenham’s recruitment team’s inaction in addressing glaring issues could result in the most improbable Premier League story since Leicester City’s title win in 2016. Should Spurs narrowly avoid the drop, perhaps Lange, Venkatesham, and the Lewis family will reflect on the decision with gritted teeth, appreciating the headroom it gives them for the summer window.

If they don’t, it will cost the club hundreds of millions and set them back years.

‘The night Tottenham died’ – How Spurs fans feel as threat of relegation grows

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‘The night Tottenham died’ – How Spurs fans feel as threat of relegation grows - The New York Times
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Tottenham Hotspur’s home defeat to Crystal Palace on Thursday evening left the club teetering on the precipice.

This week’s results have left Spurs just one point above the Premier League’s relegation zone with nine matches to play. Having not won a league match in 2026, and just two since the end of October, momentum is clearly not in their favour.

Months of woeful performances have left fans disconsolate and fearing the worst. The Athletic spoke to some who attended last night’s match to gauge the mood.

“It’s like watching an elderly relative pass away”

Walking up to the ground, I thought that it actually felt like a decent atmosphere. There were songs outside. I was a little bit late, so I don’t know what it was like on the concourses before the game, but walking up, it seemed pretty full, people were singing, and there were no protests outside the ground, which you’ve seen a fair bit in the past few months.

Getting in, the people around me were nervous. As the game started, the fans were definitely behind the team and there was plenty of noise. But I just think, teams like Newcastle have had six corners in every home game by the time the fans have sat in their seats. Everybody is up, you can tell they’re on it.

Palace came to Tottenham and nearly scored after 52 seconds. We barely touched the ball for 10 minutes and you could see slowly, again, that nothing had changed.

The Arsenal and Fulham games were both bad, but this was (Igor Tudor’s) first home game against someone we should really be beating or taking the game to, and nothing had changed. So I was already getting frustrated. Then we scored, and for two minutes, you’re like, OK, maybe everything’s going to be alright.

But before you know it, we’re 2-1 down. I’ve watched us win two home (Premier League) games all season, I think four in nearly 30 Premier League home games.

And I just couldn’t do it again. When Strand Larsen scored the second, I turned to my mate and said I’m sitting in the car.

I take my mate, David, and my dad and his mate, who sit somewhere else, and as I got out my phone to text my dad to say I’m going to sit in the car, my dad text me saying: “I’m going, so is Malcolm”. So we all left.

I thought to myself, walking down the stairs, ‘What happens if we win this?’. I’d have been so pleased that we turned it around and won, but by the time we got to the bottom of the stairs, it was 3-1.

I just knew it wasn’t coming and I’m just so sad — that’s the word — and I’ve had enough of watching us lose. I love this football club so much, too much, and it’s depressing.

It’s like watching an elderly relative pass away. And yeah, in those circumstances I’d be by their side — I’ve done it — but I wanted to be by Tottenham’s side last night, but they had to show me something, and they didn’t.

Like a lot of fans, I move my work schedule and my life around to watch this football club. And I know I should be there supporting the team, but I don’t know if I have the fight in me because I don’t see anything coming back.

There are so many people to blame. I’m so tired of shouting at everybody and blaming everyone. I’m desperate for them to stay up. I kind of felt yesterday before the game that it was on us, the fans, “let’s get them over the line”. But it’s not on us, really. It’s on them and I’m seeing nothing in return. And so the very short answer is the reason I left was that I can’t do it anymore. I can’t watch them lose. It is just so sad.

Jonny Blain, Echo of Glory podcast

“There is so little for fans to believe in right now”

I stayed until the end of the game, as did most of the people around me, but mainly out of a sense of obligation.

The decision makers at the club are getting exactly what they deserve right now; it’s just a shame the paying fans also have to suffer even more.

The most painful thing is watching this team and knowing there are players out there who have been giving us less than 100 per cent for so long. For over a year, we’ve seen this team go through the motions in Premier League matches and then suddenly turn up for European games.

If the team were bad but giving everything, it would be far, far easier to rally behind them, but the reality is, although some of them are nowhere near as good as they seem to think they are, we should still be better than this.

Some of these players don’t seem to care enough about the club or the fans. I suspect there are some who think they’ll just get a nice move in the summer and get on with the rest of their careers.

There are bigger problems at the club than the players out on the pitch, but they are the ones who have the opportunity to at least stave off this looming threat of relegation. Some of them — senior players who should be setting standards — just don’t look motivated.

There is so little for fans to cling to or believe in right now.

Our only hope is the younger players, such as Archie Gray and Mathys Tel, somehow digging us out of trouble, but it feels like a big, big ask.

Alan Wallace, season ticket holder

“Last night felt like the night Tottenham died”

It was quite an odd atmosphere last night. At the beginning, it really felt like the crowd were trying to get behind the team and the atmosphere was quite good.

Both Thomas Frank and Tudor have used ship metaphors in recent times and last night felt like the moment the iceberg was hit. Of course, our captain, for the second time in recent games, abandoned ship (when Micky van de Ven was sent off late in the first half) and what transpired was like seeing the team you love die in front of your eyes. The five-minute spell from the penalty onwards felt terminal and any hope that we would survive this season, let alone this game, almost disappeared completely.

It was like the conclusion was drawn from the second the penalty incident happened, so I felt no point in staying. I don’t feel guilty for abandoning the team as a fan in this instance because we’ve been abandoned by our owners year after year.

Last night felt like the night Tottenham died.

Billie Thorp, The Whistle Blows YouTube channel

“A true supporter has got to stay with a team, but it is painful”

I’m a Spurs supporter and have been for almost 50 years now. I’ve never seen it so bad at Tottenham.

I was at the game last night and I contemplated leaving at half-time. A true supporter has to stay with a team, but it is painful. What we’re seeing at the stadium right now is really depressing.

Who do I blame? It would start from Daniel Levy, but Daniel Levy is gone. The problem with Spurs is we just do not pay enough money to or for players, so we’ve been shopping at the bargain basement.

But there are problems elsewhere. The players all seem to have a big ego or think they are better than they are.

What we’re watching is terrible: No creativity, no courage, no fight. The goalkeeper is absolutely shocking and never comes out for a cross, and the defenders cannot stay on the field — either they’re injured or they get sent off. I don’t know what the midfield does and even the strikers seem too scared to move forward now. The midfield yesterday was all on Archie Gray’s shoulders. He was the best player yesterday and he’s only 19. We have to hope that we survive on the back of a 19-year-old’s efforts.

I am sick and tired and I’m contemplating not even renewing my season ticket. That’s how bad it is. I hope things get better if we do get relegated, which I suspect we might, the way we’re going. That could be it for me with Spurs.

Ade Joseph, season ticket holder

“The atmosphere is too toxic”

I left on 77 minutes, basically because I couldn’t see us getting back into the game and the atmosphere is too toxic at the moment. I didn’t actually take my children last night because I knew the atmosphere was going to be quite vile and I just don’t want to expose them to that. I only went because I’ve got a season-ticket.

The frustration that the fans are feeling… they can only sort of vent their frustration by screaming and shouting. And it’s just angry faces, the language is choice. It’s not a good place to be for adults, let alone children. And as long as the atmosphere remains that vile, I won’t be taking the kids again.

They’ve been going for years, normally it’s a pretty good atmosphere. But the minute something goes wrong, the crowd turns instantly and I just don’t wanna expose them to that kind of behaviour and atmosphere at the moment.

Tony Parsons, season ticket-holder

“The speed at which this has happened is difficult to comprehend”

I was quite confident before the game, not based on much more than the thought that you probably can’t just lose every game forever, so we’d have to win eventually. Palace didn’t need a win as much as we did and I hoped we could play on that and be aggressive and get the result we needed. That quickly dissipated when I saw how negatively we were set up and then chose to play.

The atmosphere around me was pretty good — everyone around me was behind the team, there wasn’t any booing, there was limited frustration, but the way we played didn’t lend itself to getting the fans really up and at them. Being on the back foot in a game like that at home was disappointing — we were all probably hoping for more of a front-footed performance that you could really get behind.

I left in stoppage time at the end of the game. I go with my dad and a few mates and none of us really thought about leaving earlier.

I just have a profound feeling of sadness right now. Giving up that buffer we had on the teams in the relegation zone has really sharpened the focus in terms of what could happen and how bad it really is.

We’ve lost games relatively consistently for two and a half years now, so maybe we should have seen this coming, but the speed at which this has happened is just something that is difficult to comprehend. Even in our wildest joking nightmares of ‘we could go down’ in January, I didn’t actually think it would happen; I just thought it could be a problem next year if we didn’t sort ourselves out.

I feel completely let down by those who claim to be custodians of this club. It would be great if we could find a way to get rid of these people, but unless we’ve got £4billion down the back of the sofa, that’s going to be difficult.

I’ve had discussions with friends about feeling betrayed and if you go down, can you ever feel the same about the club again? I don’t know how I’m going to feel if it happens. I hope we all live 50 more years and we can look back on it as just a blot. We got relegated in the 70s, then four years later we won the FA Cup, and three years after that we won the UEFA Cup, so I’m clinging to that as a possibility, but that might just be copium.

It’s hard not to feel incredibly bleak about the way things are going.

Adam Nathan, season ticket holder

Appointing Igor Tudor has backfired. Tottenham look more toxic than ever

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Appointing Igor Tudor has backfired. Tottenham look more toxic than ever - The New York Times
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Tottenham Hotspur appointed Igor Tudor as an interim head coach until the end of the season because he had a track record of fixing broken teams. He was an emergency solution. Someone with no affiliation to the club who was hired to stabilise the team before vacating the dugout in the summer.

Three defeats, nine goals conceded and one red card later, it looks like that decision has backfired. Losing the north London derby was painful but just about forgivable. Rolling over to Fulham and Crystal Palace was not. Faith in Tudor appears to have completely eroded. It is a ludicrous situation but Spurs only have themselves to blame.

Following West Ham United’s 1-0 victory over Fulham and Nottingham Forest’s 2-2 draw with Manchester City on Wednesday, Spurs were only one point above the relegation zone before they hosted Crystal Palace. It should have provoked a reaction but they were only saved from conceding first by a VAR intervention which ruled Ismaila Sarr was in an offside position before he scored.

There was a brief 60-second spell of happiness after Dominic Solanke gave them the lead, but then Spurs imploded.

They conceded three times in a chaotic seven-minute period, which led to large groups of supporters leaving the stadium before half-time. Some of them turned around in their seats and vented their anger towards the director’s box. Things have somehow become even more toxic than the final few games under Thomas Frank.

The numbers make for grim reading. Tottenham are winless since December and have lost five top-flight games in a row for the first time since 2004. They have conceded at least two goals in nine successive matches. They have earned 10 points at home this season, which is the second-worst record across the top four divisions of English football after Sheffield Wednesday — a second-tier side mired in financial distress who have become the earliest EFL side in history to be relegated as early as February.

As Spurs fans booed, Crystal Palace supporters responded by chanting “Say hello to Millwall.”

Tudor was supposed to restore discipline and defensive structure after this team unravelled towards the end of Frank’s reign. Comical defending and disorganisation have been a constant theme throughout all of his three fixtures. Tudor had no previous experience of the Premier League and his dedication to a back three has proven costly.

He made the bold call of dropping Xavi Simons and Conor Gallagher against Crystal Palace, which meant that Spurs’ two most expensive recent signings were left out of their biggest game of the season. Top goalscorer Richarlison was left on the bench too. Spurs’ recruitment department deserves criticism for that situation as Tudor clearly felt they were not influential enough.

The signs were there from the first whistle that Spurs were feeling nervous. Souza, making his first start in the Premier League after joining from Brazilian side Santos in January, was booked in the sixth minute for a lunging tackle on Daniel Munoz. It was a risky decision to start a 19-year-old with limited experience of English football in a game of this magnitude. Dominic Solanke uncharacteristically screamed at the referee after he accidentally blocked the forward’s attempt to tackle Daichi Kamada, and Pedro Porro vented his frustration when Evann Guessand won a free kick. It was 0-0, but the tension was palpable.

Micky van de Ven was the biggest villain. The Netherlands international’s decision to pull down Sarr in the box had huge ramifications on the outcome of this game and Tottenham’s next top-flight fixture against Liverpool. Van de Ven has been wearing the captain’s armband while Cristian Romero serves a four-match ban for a tackle on Casemiro in last month’s defeat to Manchester United.

Spurs have been sorely let down by their senior players. Van de Ven, one of the heroes of last season’s success in the Europa League for his acrobatic goalline clearance in the final, has seen his stock drop drastically. The centre-back pair have set a poor example for their team-mates.

Tudor’s decision-making was questionable, too. He brought on Gallagher and Yves Bissouma for Souza and Randal Kolo Muani after Van de Ven’s dismissal. Spurs had five defenders and three central midfielders on the pitch, but within five minutes had conceded twice. Could Tudor have held out from making any changes until half-time? Adam Wharton took advantage of the confusion and carved Spurs apart with his exquisite passing range.

Mathys Tel, who has been a rare bright spark for Spurs this year, was moved to left wing-back and his sloppy pass to Pape Matar Sarr led to Jorgen Strand Larsen’s goal. Tel made a mistake but he was shunted into an unfamiliar position by the coaching staff.

Spurs tried to launch a comeback in the second half but the damage had already been done. Solanke weaved past a couple of defenders but Dean Henderson saved his shot. Archie Gray made a few darting runs into the box. Spurs played with a lot of energy and desire but there was a distinct lack of quality. Palace wasted a couple of opportunities on the counter to make the night more humiliating. Porro argued with the fourth official, smashed a water bottle and punched a chair when he was substituted. There were boos at full-time but barely any fans had stuck around.

Where do Spurs go from here?

Sacking Tudor has to be a plausible option but it would be a damning indictment of the chief executive officer Vinai Venkatesham and sporting director Johan Lange to remove him after three games. Trust among the supporters is so thin that many would question whether the duo would be able to hire the right person to replace Tudor anyway.

Next week’s Champions League tie against Atletico Madrid is an unwelcome distraction. All that matters is avoiding relegation. By the time Spurs next play at home, they could find themselves in the bottom three. Maybe it is the shock this squad needs to realise the gravity of the situation they find themselves in.

Tudor insisted afterwards that “I believe more after this game than I believed before.”

“I saw something,” he added. “I need to choose the right guys because the boat is going in the direction that I want to go and needs to go and who is in the boat can stay. Otherwise, they can bow down, or how do you say that, leave the boat.”

The problem is that Tudor’s boat is full of holes and looks like it is destined to sink.

Appointing Igor Tudor has backfired. Tottenham look more toxic than ever

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Appointing Igor Tudor has backfired. Tottenham look more toxic than ever - The New York Times
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Tottenham Hotspur appointed Igor Tudor as an interim head coach until the end of the season because he had a track record of fixing broken teams. He was an emergency solution. Someone with no affiliation to the club who was hired to stabilise the team before vacating the dugout in the summer.

Three defeats, nine goals conceded and one red card later it is clear to everyone that decision has backfired. Losing the north London derby was painful but just about forgivable. Rolling over to Fulham and Crystal Palace was not. Faith in Tudor appears to have completely eroded. It is a ludicrous situation but Spurs only have themselves to blame.

Following West Ham United’s victory over Fulham and Nottingham Forest’s draw with Manchester City on Wednesday, Spurs were only one point above the relegation zone before they hosted Crystal Palace. It should have provoked a reaction but they were only saved from conceding first by a VAR intervention which ruled Ismaila Sarr was in an offside position before he scored.

There was a brief 60 second spell of happiness after Dominic Solanke gave them the lead but then Spurs imploded. They conceded three times in a chaotic seven minute spell which led to large groups of supporters leaving the stadium before half-time. Some of them turned around in their seats and vented their anger towards the director’s box. Things have somehow become even more toxic than the final few games under Thomas Frank.

The numbers make for grim reading. Tottenham are winless since December and have lost five top-flight games in a row for the first time since 2004. They have conceded at least two goals in nine successive matches. They have earned 10 points at home this season, which is the second worst record across the top four divisions of English football after Sheffield Wednesday — a second-tier side mired in financial distress who have become the earliest EFL side in history to be relegated as early as February. As Spurs fans booed, Crystal Palace supporters responded by chanting “say hello to Millwall.”

Tudor was supposed to restore discipline and defensive structure after this team unravelled towards the end of Frank’s reign. Comical defending and disorganisation have been a constant theme throughout all of his three fixtures. Tudor had no previous experience of the Premier League and his dedication to a back three has proven costly. He made the bold call of dropping Xavi Simons and Conor Gallagher against Crystal Palace which meant that Spurs’ two most expensive recent signings were left out of their biggest game of the season. Top goalscorer Richarlison was left on the bench too. Spurs’ recruitment department deserves criticism for that situation as Tudor clearly felt they were not influential enough.

The signs were there from the first whistle that Spurs were feeling nervous. Souza, making his first start in the Premier League after joining from Brazilian side Santos in January, was booked in the sixth minute for a lunging tackle on Daniel Munoz. It was a risky decision to start a 19-year-old with limited experience of English football in a game of this magnitude. Dominic Solanke uncharacteristically screamed at the referee after he accidentally blocked the forward’s attempt to tackle Daichi Kamada and Pedro Porro vented his frustration when Evann Guessand won a free-kick. It was 0-0 but the tension was palpable.

Micky van de Ven was the biggest villain. The Netherlands international’s decision to pull down Sarr in the box had huge ramifications on the outcome of this game and Tottenham’s next top-flight fixture against Liverpool. Van de Ven has been wearing the captain’s armband while Cristian Romero serves a four-match ban for a tackle on Casemiro in last month’s defeat to Manchester United. Spurs have been sorely let down by their senior players. Van de Ven, one of the heroes of last season’s success in the Europa League for his acrobatic goalline clearance in the final, has seen his stock drop drastically. The centre-back pair have set a poor example for their team-mates.

Tudor’s decision-making was questionable too. He brought on Gallagher and Yves Bissouma for Souza and Randal Kolo Muani after Van de Ven’s dismissal. Spurs had five defenders and three central midfielders on the pitch but within five minutes had conceded twice. Could Tudor have held out from making any changes until half-time? Adam Wharton took advantage of the confusion and carved Spurs apart with his exquisite passing range.

Mathys Tel, who has been a rare bright spark for Spurs this year, was moved to left wing-back and his sloppy pass to Pape Matar Sarr led to Jorgen Strand Larsen’s goal. Tel made a mistake but he was shunted into an unfamiliar position by the coaching staff.

Spurs tried to launch a comeback in the second half but the damage had already been done. Solanke weaved past a couple of defenders but Henderson saved his shot. Archie Gray made a few darting runs into the box. Spurs played with a lot of energy and desire but there was a distinct lack of quality. Palace wasted a couple of opportunities on the counter to make the night more humiliating. Porro argued with the fourth official, smashed a water bottle and punched a chair when he was substituted. There were boos at full-time but barely any fans had stuck around.

Where do Spurs go from here? Sacking Tudor has to be a plausible option but it would be a damning indictment on the chief executive officer Vinai Venkatesham and sporting director Johan Lange to remove him after three games. Trust amongst the supporters will be very thin that the duo would hire the right person to replace him anyways.

Next week’s Champions League tie against Atletico Madrid is an unwelcome distraction. All that matters is avoiding relegation. By the time Spurs next play at home, they could find themselves in the bottom three. Maybe it is the shock this squad needs to realise the gravity of the situation they find themselves in.

Tudor insisted afterwards that “I believe more after this game than I believed before.”

“I saw something,” he added. “I need to choose the right guys because the boat is going in the direction that I want to go and needs to go and who is in the boat can stay. Otherwise they can bow down, or how do you say that, leave the boat.”

The problem is Tudor’s boat is full of holes and looks like it is destined to sink.