Daily Mail

Vinai Venkatesham's sorry Spurs reign: The 'Arsenal agent' jokes, surprise at the Emirates at his promotion, what he's copied from north London rivals, why he stuck with Thomas Frank for so long and w

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Why even Arsenal were surprised that Spurs promoted Vinai Venkatesham - Daily Mail
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Unlock more from Matt Barlow inside the Tottenham camp with a DailyMail+ subscription - brilliant exclusives, in-depth insight, analysis and more

An Arsenal past is hard to shake at Tottenham. Particularly when plans go awry and results fail. Particularly when a flurry of personnel disappear to leave you exposed, front and centre of attention.

Life has become distinctly uncomfortable for Vinai Venkatesham in the space of six months since he assumed responsibility for day-to-day affairs at Spurs after the exit of chairman Daniel Levy. His promises of good sense and stability have heralded nothing more than turbulence and mayhem.

First Levy’s exit triggered a major executive reshuffle, then came Fabio Paratici’s brief return as one of two sporting directors before desertion mid-crisis, then the sacking of head coach Thomas Frank with the team dangerously close to the relegation zone.

Now the north London derby looms with Igor Tudor taking interim charge and Venkatesham shaping up as both the chief target for angry Spurs fans and the butt of jokes at the other end of Seven Sisters Road about an 'Arsenal agent' sent undercover to sabotage the neighbours.

Ten months have passed since Venkatesham was appointed chief executive of Spurs, less than a year after vacating the same role at Arsenal. He replaced Scott Munn, shunted aside having made little impact during two years as chief football officer.

And, after sacking Ange Postecoglou, the new dawn was launched with a joint interview featuring Venkatesham and Levy in June, after Frank’s appointment, joshing awkwardly about their shared love for red wine and hard work, selecting their new manager and promising to build on the success of winning the Europa League.

Levy said he wanted to win the Premier League and the Champions League only to be dethroned by September, forced out of the club after nearly 25 years as chairman.

Peter Charrington became non-executive chairman but Venkatesham quickly surfaced as the front man, running day-to-day affairs under the watch of Vivienne Lewis, daughter of the club’s billionaire former owner Joe, and her son-in-law Nick Beucher.

This raised a few eyebrows at Emirates Stadium, where Venkatesham was well liked and admired for his decency and diligence, but seen essentially as a corporate executive.

He joined Arsenal having worked previously on London 2012, and different roles led him to the post of commercial officer, then managing director when Ivan Gazidis left in 2018 and chief executive two years later before stepping down in 2024.

At Spurs, he was thrust into a triumvirate of power with two Danes, Frank and sporting director Johan Lange. Together they were three logical minds, advocates of stability and sustainable growth. One of their first moves in the post-Levy era was to reappoint Paratici as a second sporting director, once the ban for his part in the Plusvalenza financial scandal in Italian football during his time at Juventus had expired.

Paratici resigned as managing director of Spurs in April 2023 when the ban was confirmed, although was seldom far from the club, retained on a consultancy basis. His return seemed on one hand to be Venkatesham, Lange and Frank accepting there was a gap in their expertise, and they would probably need Paratici’s vast network of contacts and deal-making influence in the transfer market.

On the other hand, it seemed to be a recipe for disagreement. And so it proved. Quite quickly, in fact.

Paratici had pushed for Roberto De Zerbi as head coach when Frank got the job and was later suggesting Frank ought to be sacked, claiming the job was too big for him and that he could still get De Zerbi out of Marseille or Tudor, who had been out of work since his sacking by Juventus in October.

Venkatesham and Lange were keen to hold their nerve and back Frank despite deteriorating form, insisting it was vital Spurs broke the culture of hiring and firing. Venkatesham had overseen Arsenal's transformation by staying loyal to Mikel Arteta despite teething troubles at the start when he was unpopular among many fans.

Frank, like Arteta had at Arsenal, identified culture as the key to success and Venkatesham, like he had at Arsenal, set about re-engaging with the fans’ groups disenfranchised under the Levy regime, in the hope of repairing lost connections and creating a better atmosphere inside the stadium. But the Tottenham Hotspur Supporters' Trust have expressed their irritation at the lack of clarity, following meetings with the club, over a direction of travel.

Levy had always been dead set against statues of heroes around the stadium, but Venkatesham was open to the idea - Arsenal legends dot the surrounds of the Emirates after all, with Thierry Henry, Dennis Bergkamp and Tony Adams among those cast in bronze.

A singing section was trialled at Spurs' FA Cup tie against Aston Villa. Arsenal created an area at the Emirates for the 'Ashburton Army' to improve the atmosphere at the ground.

Spurs in the past have been accused of having an unhealthy obsession with their neighbours. Postecoglou thought it indicated the ‘foundations’ of the club were ‘fragile’ when fans celebrated losing to Manchester City in May 2024 because it damaged Arsenal’s title hopes.

This was reinforced in the wake of the departure of Frank - pictured holding an Arsenal coffee cup before a recent Spurs match at Bournemouth - when it was suggested he had been undermined because he repeatedly made his admiration for the Gunners clear during his eight months at Spurs. So much so that it reportedly annoyed the Spurs players.

Of course, results trump everything, even the best intentions, and as a decent start faded and Frank’s team plunged down the league, Paratici grumbled about the way the club was being run post-Levy and leapt at a chance to leave when Fiorentina approached in December.

Spurs demanded that he stayed in post until the end of the January transfer window, although his mind seemed to be elsewhere. Fiorentina made five loan signings in January after all.

Meanwhile, Spurs, despite Frank’s claims that they had been busy making plans since September, spent £35million on Conor Gallagher when Rodrigo Bentancur was injured and signed teenage left back Souza from Santos in Brazil.

The transfer window became another disappointment for Spurs fans. They wanted to see more activity to arrest the slide, especially as more injuries piled up. There were five serious injuries in five games in January. Claims that they were ever serious contenders for Antoine Semenyo or Marc Guehi hinted at a misguided recruitment policy when both those players ended up at Manchester City.

Spurs considered testing West Ham with a bid for Crysencio Summerville and the idea of Raheem Sterling as a free agent was discussed as the injuries took hold, but Frank said they decided not to interfere with summer recruitment plans.

Paratici started at Fiorentina on February 4, one week before Frank was sacked and yet his lingering influence was clear when Tudor was appointed interim head coach. The Croat and the Italian know each other well from Italian football and worked together at Juventus in 2020-21 when Tudor was assistant to Andrea Pirlo.

Spurs had drawn up contingency lists of interim managers at the start of this season when Paratici was part of the committee, so Lange and Venkatesham simply turned to the working list of options when they sacked Frank after losing at home to Newcastle.

Hardly a case of Venkatesham and Lange thinking on their feet and the whole episode has served to enhance what Paratici had been telling his contacts, that the new Spurs regime did not have much of a plan without him.

Tudor comes in with a clear challenge to keep Spurs safe from relegation. Three wins from 12 games should be enough and that is achievable, especially when players start to return from injury over the next month and onwards.

Venkatesham, though, must prove he has what it takes to run one of London’s finest and most illustrious clubs without Levy or Paratici there at his side. Not only to escape relegation but to hire a new head coach to launch a long climb back to respectability and convince fans there can be better times ahead in N17.

Unfortunately, it begins against Arsenal, the club where his reputation was built and their fiercest rivals, who just happen to be top of the Premier League and chasing four trophies.

All of it adds to the heat on Venkatesham. And without Levy, Paratici or Frank, he is exposed front and centre. Vinai and dry you might say.

The ex-Arsenal man who led Spurs into a relegation fight. He needs the Tudor spell to hasten success and find some solutions fast.

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Tottenham's deal with new sponsor INFINOX under scrutiny after online trading platform was first in UK to be FINED under new laws and is part of an ongoing probe into scam traders

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Tottenham's deal with new sponsor INFINOX under scrutiny after online trading platform was first in UK to be FINED under new laws and is part of an ongoing probe into scam traders - Daily Mail
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Tottenham have signed a sponsorship deal with an online trading platform which was the first in the country to be fined under new reporting laws - and which featured in an investigation into scam traders.

Earlier this month Spurs said they were 'delighted' to announce 'a multi-year partnership' with INFINOX.

The club added that they would work with the company to 'engage our supporters through educational initiatives to promote informed participation and performance around online trading'.

Chief revenue officer Ryan Norys added that INFINOX 'brings a strong international presence and a clear focus on regulated financial services'.

However, Daily Mail Sport's attention has been brought to a number of matters which may raise eyebrows.

In 2021, the BBC carried out a probe named 'Scam Land' which uncovered how investors lost millions after they were caught up in foreign exchange schemes.

Many of the investments were made via a broker, who then used INFINOX, with those caught out unaware that Spurs' new partner - despite having an office near the Bank of England - were actually based in the Bahamas and not subject to UK regulation or under the control of the Financial Conduct Authority.

The broker, a well-known influencer by the name of Gurvin Singh Dyal, was subsequently reported to Action Fraud having lost an estimated £3.5m.

Singh Dyal, then 28, also admitted a civil charge of contempt of court and was sentenced to eight months in prison suspended for two years. The fraud investigation remains ongoing.

A year ago, INFINOX became the first to be fined by the Financial Conduct Authority for failing to submit 46,053 transaction reports which it said 'increased the risk of market abuse going undetected' under new Markets in Financial Instruments Regulation (MiFIR) rules, which are aimed at improving protection for investors. The FCA found that while the company identified the failure through a third-party review, it then failed to 'proactively report the breach' until prompted by the FCA.

As a result, it was fined a total of £99,200.

Currently, a visit to INFINOX's website delivers the message: 'This website does not provide services to UK clients'.

A spokesperson for Tottenham suggested that they had carried out checks before penning the deal. They said: 'We don't disclose the commercial terms of our agreements with partners, this approach to confidentiality is standard in most industries. Due diligence will happen on all high-value contracts.'

INFINOX failed to respond to a request for comment.

Meanwhile, the value of a 'Fan Token' released by the club in 2023 has collapsed. In January 2024 the token, five of which were offered for free to season ticket holders and members, was priced at $4.67. However, as of last week its value had fallen per cent to a paltry $0.19.

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Tottenham assistant coach leaves after just 32 DAYS - on new boss Igor Tudor's FIRST DAY in charge

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Tottenham assistant coach leaves after just 32 DAYS - on new boss Igor Tudor's FIRST DAY in charge - Daily Mail
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Tottenham's new era under Igor Tudor has begun in earnest with the interim head coach making some key changes on his first official day in his new surroundings.

On Friday it was announced that Tudor had agreed to be Spurs' interim head coach until the end of the season, replacing the sacked Thomas Frank.

Tudor flew to north London over the weekend ahead of beginning work on Monday, when the squad returned to training.

And there have been a few changes to the coaching staff.

Assistant coaches Justin Cochrane and Chris Haslam have departed, as has John Heitinga - who only joined last month on a two-and-a-half-year deal, with his time at the club lasting just 32 days.

It is understood that the Dutchman did not wish to remain part of the new coaching structure under Tudor.

Heitinga arrived at Tottenham on January 15 with Frank hailing the former Ajax manager.

'John is a great addition to our coaching staff. His ability, personality and character will add huge value both on and off the pitch,' he said.

'As a former defender, that will be one of his main responsibilities on the training pitch and he brings great coaching and management experiences from all levels of the game, which will really help us moving forward.'

However, Heitinga's time at the club didn't help turn their poor form around. Spurs failed to win any of their five Premier League matches - losing three and drawing two. They did taste success in the Champions League though, beating both Borussia Dortmund and Eintracht Frankfurt 2-0.

With Heitinga, Cochrane and Haslam all leaving Tudor has brought in three new members to his backroom staff.

The 47-year-old will be supported by assistant coach Ivan Javorcic, physical coach Riccardo Ragnacci and goalkeeping coach Tomislav Rogic.

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Igor Tudor appointed Tottenham interim boss: Former Juventus manager replaces Thomas Frank amid alarming slide towards the drop zone

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Igor Tudor appointed Tottenham interim boss: Former Juventus manager replaces Thomas Frank amid alarming slide towards the drop zone - Daily Mail
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What Igor Tudor will bring to Tottenham: Why his 'Jurgen Klopp' style of play was too attacking for Juventus, success with Randal Kolo Muani and a new mantra

Igor Tudor has been appointed the interim manager of Tottenham Hotspur, replacing Thomas Frank.

Frank was sacked on Wednesday, less than 12 hours after a defeat at home to Newcastle.

Former Croatia international defender Tudor, 47, fits the Spurs brief with vast experience and a reputation for making an impact at short notice, and will have the opportunity to compete for the job on a permanent basis should he impress during his short trial.

Former Juventus and Croatia defender Tudor has been a manager since 2013 but has worked in 12 jobs in the last 11 years - at Hajduk Split (twice), PAOK, Karabukspor, Galatasaray, Udinese (twice), Hellas Verona, Marseille, Lazio, Juventus and now Tottenham.

Spurs chief executive Vinai Venkatesham and sporting director Johan Lange, who have led the search, want to consider a wider pool of candidates in the summer for the next permanent head coach.

'We are pleased to confirm the appointment of Igor Tudor as Men's Head Coach until the end of the season, subject to work permit,' a Tottenham statement read.

'Igor joins us with a clear focus: to improve performances, deliver results and move us up the Premier League table. His mandate is straightforward – bring organisation, intensity and competitive edge to the squad at a decisive stage of the campaign.'

Tottenham also highlighted that Tudor has 'regularly delivered improvements following mid-season appointments.'

'It is an honour to join this Club at an important moment,' Tudor said.

'I understand the responsibility I have been handed and my focus is clear. To bring greater consistency to our performances and compete with conviction in every match.

'There is strong quality in this playing squad, and my job is to organise it, energise it and improve our results quickly.'

Tudor takes charge with Tottenham just five points above the relegation zone after going eight matches without a win in the Premier League, their worst run since 2008.

His first match in charge will be the North London derby against Premier League leaders Arsenal on February 22.

'Igor brings clarity, intensity and experience of stepping into challenging moments and producing impact,' Lange added.

'Our objective is straightforward – to stabilise performances, maximise the quality within the squad and compete strongly in the Premier League and Champions League.'

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Chelsea and Aston Villa 'launched surprise move for Tottenham star in January'

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Chelsea and Aston Villa 'launched surprise move for Tottenham star in January' - Daily Mail
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Chelsea and Aston Villa reportedly made a surprise enquiries for Tottenham midfielder Lucas Bergvall during the January transfer window.

Bergvall was Tottenham's player of the season in 2024-25, with the Swedish international enjoying a memorable debut campaign in North London.

The midfielder made 45 appearances in all competitions for Ange Postecoglou's side, as Tottenham's season concluded with Europa League glory.

Bergvall had been forced to miss the final due to injury.

His progress during the season led to the midfielder, 20, being rewarded with a fresh six-year contract.

Despite the extension, the Athletic reported that Chelsea and Aston Villa made approaches to Tottenham in January about Bergvall's availability.

According to the report, the clubs had been alerted after Bergvall had been used less frequently under Thomas Frank.

Bergvall had also been used out wide at times during Frank's tenure, rather than his favoured central midfield role.

Aston Villa's approach was said to have been made after Tottenham had beaten them to the signing of Conor Gallagher from Atletico Madrid.

Tottenham were reported to have quickly rebuffed the approaches from Aston Villa and Chelsea.

Bergvall is currently out of action after suffering an injury in Tottenham's win over Borussia Dortmund last month.

Crisis-hit Tottenham currently lie just five points about the Premier League's relegation zone in 16th, leading to Frank's dismissal this week.

Igor Tudor is expected to be confirmed as Tottenham's interim manager on a deal until the end of the season.

Tudor will be tasked with leading Tottenham away from trouble in the Premier League, along with continuing their progress in the Champions League.

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Igor Tudor has had 12 jobs in 11 years and never managed in the Premier League. That's why he's Tottenham's £100m gamble, writes OLIVER HOLT

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Igor Tudor has had 12 jobs in 11 years and never managed in the Premier League. That's why he's Tottenham's £100m gamble, writes OLIVER HOLT - Daily Mail
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Igor Tudor was a fine player and an uncompromising defender. He was tough and he was smart. He was a component of the formidable Juventus side of the late 90s and early 2000s and played alongside some of the best in the game, including Zinedine Zidane, Didier Deschamps and Edgar Davids.

His playing career is a distant memory, though, and his managerial achievements pale beside it.

As a manager, he is nowhere near the aristocracy of the game and yet on Friday afternoon, it was announced that Tottenham Hotspur have chosen him as the man to lead them away from the looming spectre of relegation from the Premier League.

The truth is that Spurs have entrusted their top-flight survival to a here-today-gone-tomorrow serial under-achiever who has won one trophy in his 13 years as a club manager. And that was the Croatian Cup with Hajduk Split in 2013.

They have not, it would be fair to say, gone for the cream of the crop. If Tudor’s managerial record was to be described as ‘uneven’, that would be distinctly generous to a boss who has gone through Hajduk Split, PAOK, Karabukspor, Galatasaray, Udinese, Hellas Verona, Marseille, Lazio and Juventus like a dose of salts.

It seems hard to believe but what Spurs have done is taken a £100m gamble on a managerial non-entity, rather than try to attract a coach of the calibre of Roberto de Zerbi or Andoni Iraola, so that they will be free to appoint their dream candidate, Mauricio Pochettno, this summer.

They know that Pochettino, the USA coach, will not be free to join them until after the co-hosts’ involvement in the World Cup is over. Rather than appoint a permanent coach of quality now and abandon the Pochettino dream, they have taken a huge risk on Tudor helping them to retain their Premier League status in the months ahead.

It may turn out to be an inspired move. There is some statistical support for the claim that he has an instant positive impact at a new club before things turn sour. But it might also turn out to be one of the most egregious examples in top-flight history of a club putting the cart before the horse.

Because if Tudor reverts to type and the results he achieves are ordinary, then Spurs will be relegated and when Pochettino arrives in the summer, it will be to take charge of a Championship team. His California tan will wear off quickly on visits to Preston and Portsmouth.

Because this is not an easy job. In fact, Tudor, 47, faces a hellishly hard task to keep Spurs out of the bottom three. When Thomas Frank was fired earlier this week, Tottenham were just five points clear of the relegation zone and they are trending down.

The fixtures that await him are tough. First up is a home game against league leaders Arsenal a week on Sunday and if that will be a free hit and a chance, perhaps, to prey on some uncertainty creeping into the minds of their north London rivals, the fixtures that follow do not offer much respite.

They go like this: Fulham away, Crystal Palace at home, Liverpool away, Nottingham Forest at home and Sunderland away. A couple of those games are against fellow strugglers but Tudor’s task is complicated by the fact that the pressure of the drop will weigh more heavily on Spurs than on rivals who are less grand.

That is the way it goes in a relegation fight. The bigger they are, the harder they fall. And Spurs and their crowd are feeling the ignominy and the shame of being sucked into a relegation battle while teams like West Ham and Leeds United are scrapping for all they are worth.

In the circumstances, it is hard to see why Spurs would not have gone for De Zerbi, who is available, or Iraola, the Bournemouth manager, who might be. De Zerbi would have sent a blot of lightning through the club and shocked them away from the bottom three with his intensity and his brightness. Iraola is a top class coach who would have all but guaranteed survival.

But the choice of Tudor is another worrying hint that the hierarchy at Tottenham is struggling to forge a path through a game it does not understand in the wake of last summer’s departure of former chairman Daniel Levy.

Levy was the centre of the club. Everything went through him. And even if he was deeply unpopular with many fans because of a perceived lack of ambition, things never got this perilous on his watch. And they did win the Europa League in the last months of his tenure last year.

Now, there is a more amorphous group in charge, a collection of people that has started to look like a coalition of the damned, a group that includes various members of the family of billionaire owner Joe Lewis, chief executive Vinai Venkatesham and sporting director Johan Lange.

The appointment of Tudor is another step towards the cliff-edge. If fortune favours them, he will pull them back from the precipice but even a year in the Championship could cost the club £100m in lost revenue. It is a lot of faith to put in a man who won the Croatian Cup 13 years ago.

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Her boyfriend Conor Gallagher has just signed for Spurs, but Cork dancer Áine May Kennedy has her sights set on a title of her own - Queen of the London Influencers

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Her man is at Spurs, now Áine May Kennedy aims for queen influencer - Daily Mail
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With her stunning good looks, lavish lifestyle and prolific Instagram presence, Cork model Aine May Kennedy is poised to become the queen of London influencers following the return of famous footballer boyfriend Conor Gallagher to the Premier League.

The former professional dancer is set to shoot to the top of the list of most influential WAGs in the city, now that Conor has signed a €40million deal with Tottenham Hotspur, after turning down Aston Villa.

The England international and former Chelsea academy graduate – who actually holds an Irish passport – is back on familiar territory 18 months after moving to Spain to play for Atletico Madrid.

As the 25-year-old settles into his new club, his girlfriend of six years, who relocated to Madrid with him, will be back in London by his side.

Aine May, who is in her late 20s, has more than 65,000 followers on Instagram and regularly gives them a glimpse into her glamorous life with her footballer beau and their chow chow pup Freddy. The pet pooch even has his own Instagram account, with over 2,500 followers delighting in his adorable antics.

With Aine May expected to appear in the stands during the rest of the 2025/26 Premier League to support Conor, her WAG profile is likely to rise.

Given her penchant for designer fashion, jet-setting lifestyle to glamorous destinations across the globe and date nights at top restaurants, her social media following is expected to increase too, adding to her star power.

So, who is the model set to shine in London’s influencer circles?

Aine May was born and raised in Cork but moved to England to pursue a career as a dancer and model. She began to create content on Instagram, giving followers an insight into her life as a WAG and posting from locations such as Val D’Isere, Beverly Hills, Ibiza, Cannes, Mykonos and Paris.

Her account also shows she has a love for luxurious brands and designer fashion, often striking a pretty pose in labels including Dior and Chanel.

She is also not shy of sharing her love for Conor with her followers, posting images of public displays of affection and referring to him as her ‘hero’, her ‘best friend’ and her ‘ray of sunshine’.

In the late summer of 2024, the couple moved to Madrid, with Aine May posting a photograph and an accompanying caption saying: ‘Our little family on our next adventure together. Home isn’t a place, it’s a feeling.’

She and Conor bought a home early last year in the Spanish capital and the model outlined how she had ‘about 40 different sketches for each room’ and plenty of plans in her head.

But just a year after the purchase and only two months since she unveiled extensive renovations, Aine May took to social media to announce that their time in Spain was over and that they were on to their next big adventure.

Unexpected moves are part and parcel of life for top footballers and their families. Thanking Atletico for their support and for treating the couple ‘like we were your own family’, she said she had fallen in love with Spain, even though it challenged them in so many ways.

She wrote that she had to put herself ‘out there’ to make new friends, something she had never had to do before as their friends had always been so close. She also wrote about learning the language, taking up hobbies and adapting to the Spanish culture, like eating dinner later at night.

‘Madrid, I am so lucky to have experienced everything you have to offer,’ she gushed. ‘And I feel so emotional that it ended so soon.’

Following Conor’s quick switch to Spurs, Aine May shared a photograph of them boarding a private jet on her Instagram stories, captioned: ‘It was just a normal Monday morning until the phone rang.’

A second picture showing them seated on the jet read: ‘Life is crazy. We are going home, while leaving a city that we will also call home forever.’

She added: ‘You’re the best CG, this is going to be so good. I’m so happy and excited for you to start a new chapter. COYS [Come on you Spurs].’

Aine May also shared a picture of Conor wearing his new Spurs kit.

The long-haired midfielder, who has over one million followers on Instagram, has also documented his move home to London and his gratitude to his former club in Madrid and the fans. He shared a photograph holding hands with Aine May at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, along with the caption: ‘London, we are back.’

Back, indeed. Now long-time WAG Aine May will be hoping to see her profile and profits boosted in the UK.

She won’t be the only new face in the Premier League stands either, with several additions to the WAG cohort during the January transfer window.

Greek fashionista Athina Keskinidou, fiancée of Bournemouth’s new signing Christos Mandas, will join the partners cheering on the teams from the stands. She regularly posts about her life as a WAG on social media, and has much in common with Aine May, sharing a love for travel and dogs.

Leah Monroe, girlfriend of Aston Villa’s new signing Tammy Abraham, is also expected to attend her partner’s matches. She is a popular influencer with 132,000 followers on Instagram and has carved out her own career as a beauty, fashion and lifestyle vlogger with a YouTube channel.

Back in London, meanwhile, one of the best-known WAGs and influencers is former beauty queen Indira Ampiot, who went public with her Spurs man Mathys Tel in 2024. Indira, who was Miss France and Miss Guadeloupe, is a familiar face in both fashion circles and football terraces, and boasts an Instagram following of 415,000.Perhaps the most successful of the WAGs/influencers, however, is former Love Island winner Dani Dyer, who went on to find love with West Ham’s Jarrod Bowen. The mum-of-twins has 3.7 million Instagram followers and a net worth of €6.6 million.

In 2024, the experts at Live Football Tickets collected data based on Instagram followers, net worth and global search volumes to determine the most successful and influential WAGS, with Dani leading the pack. Aine May was also named one of the most popular, placing tenth on the list. Indeed, could her desire to raise her profile have made up Conor’s mind about moving to Spurs rather than Birmingham-based Aston Villa, who are on a much better on-pitch trajectory than their London cohorts.

Instead, her recent relocation to London shows the Cork woman is ready to make her bid for the crown as the queen of influencers.

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Igor Tudor - who's had 12 jobs in 11 years - set to take over as Tottenham's new manager on interim basis after they sacked Thomas Frank

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Igor Tudor - who's had 12 jobs in 11 years - set to take over as Tottenham's new manager on interim basis after they sacked Thomas Frank - Daily Mail
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Tottenham have struck a deal with former Juventus boss Igor Tudor to take over until the end of the season.

Former Croatia international defender Tudor, 47, fits the Spurs brief with vast experience and a reputation for making an impact at short notice.

He is expected to be in the role by the time the players return on Monday for training for the first time since Thomas Frank was sacked.

If he can provide the bounce that would lift them clear of the relegation battle he will be a candidate for the job on a permanent basis in the summer.

Former Juventus and Croatia defender Tudor has been a manager since 2013 but has worked in 12 jobs in the last 11 years - at Hajduk Split (twice), PAOK, Karabukspor, Galatasaray, Udinese (twice), Hellas Verona, Marseille, Lazio, Juventus and now Tottenham.

Spurs chief executive Vinai Venkatesham and sporting director Johan Lange, who have led the search, want to consider a wider pool of candidates in the summer for the next permanent head coach.

Frank was sacked on Wednesday, less than 12 hours after a defeat at home to Newcastle.

Venkatesham and Lange have no margin for error in the first managerial appointment since Daniel Levy was ousted as the club’s executive chairman.

Spurs are five points clear of the relegation zone. Their next game is at home to Arsenal on Sunday week, by which time West Ham will have closed the gap to two points if they beat Bournemouth at home, 24 hours before the North London Derby.

Tudor was sacked by Juventus in October after seven months at the helm. He replaced Thiago Motta and led Juve to finish fourth in Serie A and qualify for the Champions League.

But things turned sour this season and he lost four straight matches without his team scoring a goal before his reign was abruptly ended.

Spurs have lost a strong network of football connections with the exit of Levy in September and co sporting director Fabio Paratici, earlier this month.

Former RB Leipzig boss Marco Rose and ex-Borussia Dortmund manager Edin Terzic were among the names being linked to the job prior to Tudor's appointment.

Rose was fired by Leipzig in March after two-and-a-half years which included winning the German Cup in 2023. He has also coached Borussia Dortmund, Borussia Monchengladbach and RB Salzburg.

Terzic, a former West Ham coach, quit Dortmund after leading them to the Champions League final in 2024.

Meanwhile Roberto De Zerbi, another manager linked to the Spurs vacancy after his exit from Marseille this week, was ignored by Tottenham because of his combustibility in previous roles.

There were also concerns about his role in enabling Mason Greenwood to repair his career after leaving Manchester United in disgrace.

Tudor, who chalked up 55 caps as a player, has tended to adopt an aggressive and attacking brand of football during his managerial career.

During his 11-month spell at Marseille in 2022-23, the Italian said: 'I want courageous and intensive football, not only uniquely based on the defence. I want people who come to the stadium to be entertained and not disappointed.'

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Tottenham closing in on new interim manager with THREE top European bosses on their list after sacking Thomas Frank

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Tottenham closing in on new interim manager with THREE top European bosses on their list after sacking Thomas Frank - Daily Mail
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Tottenham remain confident of appointing an interim head coach by Monday when the players will return to training for the first time since Thomas Frank's sacking.

Former Juventus boss Igor Tudor is a prominent candidate, with former Leipzig boss Marco Rose and former Borussia Dortmund boss Edin Terzic also among the latest names to be linked to the role.

Spurs want someone with the experience of stepping in and a track record for making an impact at short notice to provide the bounce that would lift them clear of the relegation battle.

It would enable them to make a permanent appointment in the summer from a broader pool of options, which will include the interim.

This rules out Frank's assistant John Heitinga and former striker Robbie Keane, who is currently in charge of Hungarian league leaders Ferencvaros and not likely to want to leave quit that job for one that might only last four months.

Roberto De Zerbi, who left Marseille this week, is another linked but Spurs are put off by his combustibility. There are also concerns about his role in enabling Mason Greenwood to repair his career after leaving Manchester United in disgrace.

Spurs, with chief executive Vinai Venkatesham and sporting director Johan Lange leading the search, appear to have moved on to other targets.

Frank was sacked on Wednesday, less than 12 hours after a defeat at home to Newcastle.

Spurs are five points clear of the relegation zone. Their next game is at home to Arsenal on Sunday week, by which time West Ham will have closed the gap to two points if they beat Bournemouth at home, 24 hours before the North London derby.

Venkatesham and Lange have no margin for error in the first managerial appointment since Daniel Levy was ousted as the club's executive chairman.

Spurs have lost a strong network of football connections with the exit of Levy in September and co sporting director Fabio Paratici, earlier this month.

Tudor was sacked by Juventus in October after seven months at the helm. He replaced Thiago Motta in charge of the club and led Juve to finish fourth in Serie A and qualify for the Champions League.

Rose was fired by Leipzig in March after two-and-a-half years which included winning the German Cup in 2023. He has also coached Borussia Dortmund, Borussia Monchengladbach and RB Salzburg.

Terzic, a former West Ham coach, quit Dortmund after leading them to the Champions League final in 2024.

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Ange Postecoglou names the four now-top stars he wanted to sign for Tottenham - and brutally says: 'We ended up with Dom Solanke and three teenagers'

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Ange Postecoglou names the four now-top stars he wanted to sign for Tottenham - and brutally says: 'We ended up with Dom Solanke and three teenagers' - Daily Mail
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Ange Postecoglou has revealed how he wanted Tottenham to chase Pedro Neto, Bryan Mbeumo, Antoine Semenyo and Marc Guehi after finishing fifth in the Premier League but had to settle for Dominic Solanke and three teenagers.

Postecoglou was talking on the Overlap’s Stick to Football podcast after Spurs sacked his successor Thomas Frank on Wednesday, and his words rang like a warning to the next man settling into the hot seat in N17.

The 60-year-old Australian said: 'At the end of my first year, when we finished fifth - for me, OK, how do you go from fifth to really challenging? Well, we had to sign Premier League-ready players.

'But finishing fifth that year didn’t get us Champions League, we didn’t have the money. So we ended up signing Dom Solanke - I was absolutely keen on him, I really liked him - then three teenagers.

'I was looking at Pedro, Mbeumo and Semenyo at the time, Marc Guehi, because I said if we’re going to go from fifth to there, that’s what the other big clubs would do in that moment.'

Solanke was effectively a replacement for Harry Kane, who had left Spurs for Bayern Munich a year earlier in the summer Postecoglou was appointed.

The teenagers in question are Lucas Bergvall, Archie Gray and Wilson Odobert, who all arrived in the summer of 2024 for a combined total of nearly £80million.

'Those three teenagers are outstanding young players,' added Postecoglou. 'Brilliant young players. They’ll be great players for Tottenham, but they’re not going to get you from fifth to fourth or third but what’s coming out from the club is, "We’re a club that can compete on all fronts".'

Chelsea signed Neto for £54m from Wolverhampton Wanderers in August 2024. Manchester United signed Bryan Mbeumo from Brentford for £71m last summer.

Guehi, with only six months remaining on his Crystal Palace contract, joined Manchester City last month for £20m. City also signed Semenyo for £65m from Bournemouth last month. Frank, before his sacking, claimed Spurs had been ready to match the fee and compete financially for Semenyo but his choice was City.

'It’s not so much what they tell you, it’s what goes out publicly,' said Postecoglou. 'I still felt Tottenham as a club were saying, "We’re one of the big boys" and the reality is I don’t think they are in terms of my experience.

'When Arsenal need players they’ll spend £100m on Declan Rice, I don’t see Tottenham doing that. Not just my history, even predating me. A lot of that was, "OK we’re building a stadium" so obviously finances were a challenge.'

Postecoglou admits there might have been more to spend on transfers if Spurs had finished fourth in 2024 and boosted the coffers by qualifying for the Champions League, rather than fifth and going into the Europa League, which they won.

'When was the last time Tottenham really signed somebody who you go, wow?' he asked.

'People underestimate the role Harry played over the last 10 years. He’s unbelievable. I only worked with him for a couple of months but he’s the best player I’ve worked with close up in my career.

'We played the last friendly game and I was still hoping against hope he would stay and he scored four goals.

'We played Shakhtar, the next week were playing Brentford and I know he’s not going to be there. And it’s not like he leaves and we go and sign Erling Haaland.'

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