Thomas Frank has failed to do what he was brought to Tottenham Hotspur to do
It feels like a lifetime ago now, but when Ange Postecoglou was sacked as Tottenham Hotspur manager last June, the official statement insisted that it was “crucial” that Spurs were “able to compete on multiple fronts”.
On the surface it made sense. Tottenham’s Europa League glory had come with the cost of a 17th placed finish in the Premier League. Tottenham did not want to pick and choose between competitions any more. They wanted to compete twice a week every week, and who could blame them?
But over the course of Thomas Frank’s first season in charge of Spurs — and especially this month — it has become undeniably, unarguably clear that he has failed to deliver this. The pattern of last season, the pattern that cost Postecoglou his job, has continued unabated.
Spurs are still good in Europe, having beaten Borussia Dortmund on Tuesday night, leaving them an implausible fifth in the Champions League league phase table. But they are still utterly miserable in the Premier League, no better than they were in the second half of last season.
Any hope that they might be improving, that Frank’s medicine might be doing its work, has been eroded by the events of this month. Over the course of January the case for keeping Frank has collapsed.
This month Tottenham have faced Brentford, Sunderland, Bournemouth, West Ham United and Burnley in the Premier League. From those five games against modest opposition, Tottenham have taken just three points. It would have been two without Cristian Romero’s brilliant last-minute header here at Turf Moor which rescued a draw on Saturday afternoon.
The arguments that Frank would make Spurs stable, consistent, efficient and hard to beat now look paper-thin.
From Tottenham’s last 14 league games, they have won just two. They are 14th in the table and are now destined to spend the rest of the season anxiously following the results of Leeds United, West Ham United and Nottingham Forest.
This looks like it will be their second consecutive historically bad league campaign. And with Manchester City, Manchester United, Newcastle United and Arsenal in February, it is likely to get worse before it gets better.
But ultimately the result was only a small part of the story here. What mattered more was the overwhelming feeling that almost no one believes in this anymore.
The defining story of 2026 so far has been the Spurs fans turning on Frank in a way that has been more direct and personal than anyone could have expected. They singled him out for booing at Brentford and Bournemouth. They chanted for his dismissal against West Ham and booed him in bigger numbers than ever.
And at Burnley he got the full songbook. “Thomas Frank your football is s**t”, “we want Frank out”, “sideways and backwards, everywhere we go” and then of course “sacked in the morning” too.
After the final whistle, the Spurs fans pointedly applauded the players who went over to them, Romero getting a fantastic reception. It felt as if they were consciously drawing a contrast with their treatment of Frank, who got booed with more anger and force than ever before.
It was a reminder that Frank is now plumbing new depths of unpopularity with the fanbase. He can quieten them by winning, as happened against Dortmund on Tuesday. But winning those fans back round to the manager feels like a lost cause.
You might argue that this is old news, that the fans have made their feelings about Frank clear for some time. But the other newly worrying thing about this week is how fragile the players’ confidence looked over the course of the game.
Spurs started fairly well, and took a 1-0 lead before conceding a stupid goal, Burnley’s first real chance, just before the break. They looked so thrown by this in the second half they could never regain a proper foothold. Burnley went 2-1 up and it took Romero producing yet more late heroics to stop this from being yet another defeat. Tottenham were the better team, at least in terms of chances created, but they still came so close to another defeat.
It was not that different from the West Ham game last Saturday. Spurs started that pretty well, but then conceded from West Ham’s first attack and then lost their footing. They did get back into the game, but got picked off at the end.
There has been a strange pattern to Spurs in recent weeks. Bournemouth had not won in the league since October when Spurs went there. West Ham had not won in the league since November 8 when they travelled to Tottenham. And Burnley had not won in the league since October going into today.
And yet in all three cases Tottenham looked more fragile, more nervous, more vulnerable to things going wrong than their opponent. They lost to Bournemouth, lost to West Ham and they were minutes away from losing to Burnley too.
Frank afterwards praised the “character and running power and will-power” of the players to keep pushing until the end. That is often the way Spurs games go. They pushed for a winner against West Ham before Callum Wilson got one at the other end. They forced an equaliser at Bournemouth before Antoine Semenyo won the game.
The problem is that there is a difference between conviction and desperation. Spurs have enough good players that if they throw everything forward at the end, something may come off.
But when the game is in the balance, before the very end, Tottenham are incapable of playing with any confidence or belief. Every setback throws them off course. Frank said afterwards that they are “working very hard” on how they respond to setbacks, and thinks that they are doing “better and better”.
The good news is that Spurs are back in Europe on Wednesday night, playing away at Eintracht Frankfurt, knowing that a win will seal their place in the Champions League top eight, and with it a ticket to the last-16. This remains the strongest argument for keeping the manager, which is more or less where they were this time last year.
The bad news is that the Premier League is back next Sunday, in the form of Manchester City. Then Old Trafford, then Newcastle at home, then Arsenal. So far the Tottenham hierarchy have been resolute in their support for Frank but more bad days will surely push that to the brink.
Because nothing that Spurs have done this month, largely against easier opposition, will convince anyone that Frank’s side are about to master competing on multiple fronts.