Igor Tudor style of play: Tottenham can expect pressing, organisation and daring football
Tottenham Hotspur’s playing style has been like a rollercoaster ride in recent years.
The breathless approach taken by Mauricio Pochettino made way for the pragmatism of Jose Mourinho, while a low-block-and-counter-attack approach was short-lived under Nuno Espirito Santo. Antonio Conte’s regimented methods were initially effective, but entertainment was lacking. Enter Ange Postecoglou as the perfect antidote to that.
Thomas Frank was hired to be the man who could balance all of the above attributes into a single, coherent system, but things did not go to plan during his eight months at the helm, leaving Spurs with the task of finding their sixth manager in seven years.
To avoid a further slide down the league table, Spurs have acted quickly after verbally agreeing a deal to appoint Igor Tudor as interim head coach until the end of the season. Tudor was most recently the head coach of Juventus, but parted ways after just seven months and 24 games in charge in October on the back of a winless streak of eight games in all competitions.
Tudor has a penchant for firefighting, with his last two roles coming in the latter stages of a season. His appointment in Turin came last March after Thiago Motta’s sacking, almost one year after a similar short-term role as Lazio head coach in 2024 following Mauricio Sarri’s resignation.
Spurs fans will be pleased to know that the former Croatia international had an immediate impact on results after his previous appointments. At Lazio, his 18 points from a possible 27 were bettered only by Atalanta in that period, while he suffered just one loss in the remaining nine league games at the end of the 2024-25 season at Juventus.
Crucially, what kind of coach are Spurs getting? More Conte than Postecoglou? More Mourinho than Frank? Allow The Athletic to break things down.
The first point of note is how Tudor typically sets up his team.
Across his recent spells at Marseille, Lazio and Juventus, the 47-year-old prefers a back-three formation — most commonly using a 3-4-2-1 shape with narrow forwards supporting a central striker.
Spurs employed a back-three system on occasion under Frank, so the system change would not be an overwhelming change for their centre-backs. Cristian Romero, Radu Dragusin and Micky Van de Ven would be the most likely trio in the centre of defence, at least until Kevin Danso returns. The Austria defender is set to be sidelined for several weeks, having snapped a ligament in his big toe during Tottenham’s 2-0 win over Eintracht Frankfurt in the Champions League two weeks ago.
Tudor will also be without Romero for his first three league matches in charge, with the club captain serving a ban for his red card challenge on Casemiro in the 2-0 defeat to Manchester United.
With a fit and firing wing-back partnership of Destiny Udogie and Pedro Porro, Spurs have the right profiles to suit Tudor’s preferred system. However, the pair are sidelined with injuries, which look set to keep them out of action for more than a month. Djed Spence has only just returned from the physio’s table for Tuesday’s defeat to Newcastle United, but is a capable alternative on either flank. Archie Gray deputised at right wing-back under Frank, but is more comfortable in central midfield, while January signing Souza, 19, from Brazilian side Santos, lacks top-level experience.
The biggest questions are in Spurs’ attack. Injuries mean any interim coach would have faced a lack of options across the front line, but the shortage of right-sided players may prompt a change of system from Tudor’s preferred 3-4-2-1.
Mohammed Kudus, Frank’s first-choice option on the right wing, will be out of action until at least the March international break. Dejan Kulusevski — arguably Tottenham’s brightest creator — has been sidelined for the entirety of the season with a complicated patellar injury. In Kudus’ absence, Frank used Wilson Odobert from the right, with the France Under-21 international enjoying his best stretch of form since joining Spurs in August 2024 — but he sustained an anterior cruciate ligament injury on Tuesday.
Until Kudus returns, there is no natural right-wing alternative. Mathys Tel is primarily a left-sided attacker or centre-forward. Conor Gallagher, who replaced Odobert on the right after his injury against Newcastle, is more comfortable in central midfield.
That brings us to Randal Kolo Muani, whose loan spell has been disastrous. He has made 18 appearances in the league without registering a goal or an assist. He is, however, Spurs’ top scorer in Europe (three goals in seven games), netting twice against Paris Saint-Germain and once against Eintracht — clubs he has represented (he is contracted to PSG).
The good news is that the France international enjoyed a good loan spell at Juventus in the second half of last season — mostly under Tudor — scoring 10 goals across 19 matches in the league and Club World Cup, occasionally playing beside or behind Dusan Vlahovic. Perhaps the potential to partner Kolo Muani with Dominic Solanke, who has scored four goals since returning from a long-term ankle injury in January, will prompt Tudor into considering a change in formation.
Whatever the system, Tudor’s principles are predominantly centred around front-foot, aggressive football that is grounded in strong physicality.
This can be seen most clearly in Tudor’s last full season in management during the 2022-23 campaign with Marseille. From their playstyle wheel below, dominance in possession and territory (Field tilt, 86 out of 99) shows that Tudor prefers his side to be the protagonists on the ball, but what is most notable is their out-of-possession approach.
Few teams across Europe’s top seven leagues could match the defensive energy that Tudor asked of his side (Intensity, 97th percentile).
While his 3-4-2-1 system will fall into a back five when retreating into a lower block, Tudor is keen to impose a high-pressing defensive approach when he can.
As evidence of this, no Ligue 1 side won possession in the final third more frequently than Marseille’s 6.0 per 90 in 2022-23, with a man-to-man press often at the heart of their smothering recovery of the ball.
Converting those high regains into goalscoring chances did not quite marry up with their volume, with just one goal scored in a sequence following such an action — good enough for the joint-second lowest return in the division that season.
An example of Tudor’s aggressive approach with Marseille is shown below against Lyon.
A sideways pass is the trigger for Marseille to step up, with the head coach standing with his arms out wide in expectation within frame one.
It’s a risky sequence, but the kind of press that Tudor often encourages, where players must be switched on and prepared to follow the opposition aggressively up the pitch. Balerdi, the wide centre-back, has to step far from his position and engage in a critical defensive duel, but the reward is an overload in attack.
In another example against Troyes, Tudor’s team are slow to get up the pitch after a clearance, but a lung-busting run from Cengiz Under kickstarts the team-wide press.
Again, the pass out wide is the trigger; within seconds, the Turkish winger is applying pressure to the receiver, with his two midfielders and wide centre-back Chancel Mbemba tearing forward in support.
Yoann Salmier has limited options — each of his team-mates are being marked — and plays a risky pass into midfield, where Marseille’s Valentin Rongier steps in to win the ball, before slipping it through to Under to score.
At its best, Tudor’s out-of-possession approach is suffocating, a full-blooded style that excites fans and sets adrenaline pumping through the team. But such a daring press is prone to moments of misjudgement, and can just as easily unravel as energy lulls and tackles aren’t followed through.
There are familiar patterns during Juventus’ 2-2 draw with Villarreal, as Teun Koopmeiners charges out of midfield to apply pressure after the sideways pass in frame one. Wing-back Joao Mario also steps up, but as Villarreal move the ball back inside, we can see how stretched the midfield has become, with Koopmeiners still high up the pitch.
Villarreal midfielder Dani Parejo points to the space in frame three, and Rafa Marin obliges, firing the ball through to Santi Comesana and taking six Juventus players out of the game. After a quick one-two, the ball breaks for Georges Mikautadze, who opens the scoring.
In a more extreme example later in the first half, Juventus use an opposition goal kick as a chance to step up, leaving acres of space between the midfield and the back four.
Sure enough, Villarreal clip the ball over the top and skip the press. And although Pierre Kalulu does well to jump from defence and concede the foul, it’s a sequence that demonstrates the unnecessary pressure that Tudor’s sides can sometimes find themselves under after committing too high.
If they don’t make meaningful challenges in the final third, they leave themselves a few good passes away from being picked apart.
Despite its flaws, many facets of Tudor’s tactical style suit this Tottenham squad, and there is the potential to implement an effective high-pressing strategy when everyone is fit.
Van de Ven, Romero and Danso are capable of playing that proactive wide centre-back role, while Porro and Udogie can press high from the wing-back roles and offer plenty in attack. The midfield will need to be switched on, energetic, and physically capable, but Pape Matar Sarr, Lucas Bergvall, Conor Gallagher and Joao Palhinha seem to fit the bill.
Tudor will reinstate rigorous organisation and demand plenty from his players, and may inspire a short-term response. But with a stretched squad and morale on the floor, there are no guarantees that the coach’s adventurous style won’t be misplaced.
Tudor’s arrival might well be the closest appointment to Spurs’ “To dare is to do” club motto in recent years.