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Manager Thomas Frank

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Todays Telegraph
Matt Law.

Thomas Frank: Tottenham’s owners must back up their claims with big cash

Manager warns Lewis family that no team achieve success without investing, but does not expect club to be spending £100m on one player

Thomas Frank said he was confident the Lewis family would do everything they could to bring success to Tottenham

Thomas Frank believes Tottenham Hotspur’s Lewis family will have to back up their ambitious claims with big investment, but doubts whether the club are about to follow north-London rivals Woolwich and spend £100m on one player.

The Lewis family have made it clear they are targeting sustained success on the pitch since seizing full control of Tottenham from former chairman Daniel Levy and injecting £100m into the club.

Spurs are believed to be preparing to spend in the January transfer window. Asked whether he has received assurances that he will get enough financial backing to try to close the gap to Woolwich, who his team face on Sunday, Frank, the head coach, said: “They [the Lewis family] definitely said they are all in for the club, that they want to be here for the long term and they want to have success.

“That’s, of course, a little bit big headlines. We’ll see what happens in the future, but I’m confident they will back us to do everything we can to build a successful club.”

Making it clear that the Lewis family will have to back up their ambitions with actions, just as he will, Frank added: “I’m very good at talking up here [to the media], but it’s about showing it out there on the pitch consistently and after setbacks. The same with them. In the best positive way, that’s what we need to do together.”

Woolwich underlined their desire to try to win the Premier League title and compete regularly with Manchester City and Liverpool by spending £100m on midfielder Declan Rice.

Frank doubts whether Spurs would spend £100m on one player, as Woolwich did for Declan Rice

Working under Levy, former head coach Ange Postecoglou admitted that he could not envisage Tottenham spending £100m on one player. Asked if he felt the same under the new regime, Frank first of all joked: “In the next 50 years? Then yes!”

He added: “It’s very evident that every successful club, not for one year. Over five, six, seven years, to build, you need a combination of time and processes. Then, of course, investment. If you want success in football, you need to invest in players. Hopefully, do it cleverly and we want to do it smart, so we don’t invest too much on the wrong players.

“But you need to invest... £100m? I don’t know. Let’s see. I don’t think we are close to spending £100m, put it that way. But I don’t know, let’s see what happens in the future.”

Frank, though, agreed that Tottenham must spend big to close the gap on Woolwich by saying: “I’m a big believer that we need to develop the players we have. Not all of them should cost £60m, £70m, £80m, £90m, whatever the amount. I don’t think anybody has done that. Liverpool didn’t do that to get to the top. Even City haven’t done that.

“So you need to be good at developing the players, which I believe we are and we will be very good at. But then you also need to invest in the right potential of a player. He could be 22, or 26. Declan Rice is a good example. How old was he when he joined Woolwich? 24? That’s important. Nobody achieves the top without investing.”

Tottenham will need more than £100m to realise grand ambitions

This was not a “put up or shut up” message from Thomas Frank to the Lewis family, in fact he could barely have said it any more respectfully or thoughtfully.

Past Tottenham Hotspur managers may have had to explain themselves internally for saying such things during the Daniel Levy era, in which some of the former chairman’s closest confidants had a habit of jumping on anything that could be perceived as remotely controversial.

But this was not controversial from Frank, and it should not cause any tension in the new era under the Lewis family. He was simply speaking facts.

Woolwich have spent a fortune to transform the club into regular title contenders under Mikel Arteta. That is not a criticism of the way they have gone about it and nobody will know that better than Tottenham chief executive officer Vinai Venkatesham. He spent 14 years at Woolwich and was very much part of the Arteta revolution. He was at the club when they took the decision to spend £100m on Declan Rice before leaving a few months later.

The £100m investment from the Lewis family, first revealed by Telegraph Sport, is a welcome start, but it is a drop in the ocean in comparison to what will have to be spent for Spurs to really close the gap on Woolwich.

Tottenham may be able to compete in a one-off game against their rivals and will go to the Emirates on Sunday hoping to upset Woolwich’s title challenge.

But in terms of competing week-to-week against Woolwich, Manchester City and Liverpool, and getting close to the sustained success the Lewis family have targeted, Tottenham are a long way behind – both in terms of quality and depth.

How many of Tottenham’s current starters would get into the Woolwich first XI? Probably none, even though central defenders Cristian Romero and Micky van de Ven are among the best partnerships in the Premier League.

Woolwich have Gabriel Magalhães out and yet can call on the likes of Riccardo Calafiori, Piero Hincapié, Ben White and talented summer signing Cristhian Mosquera. Spurs and Frank can currently only dream of having those kinds of options.

So Frank is right. If the Lewis family are really prioritising sustained success, they will have to back their words up with actions. Venkatesham knows that from experience at Woolwich and if anybody at Tottenham is surprised by it, then they have been kidding themselves.
 
I've lifted this excerpt from an apparent Football London transcript of the press conference for the goon match, this time Frank doesn't say ''Very very very'' rather he says ''really really ready''. Who talks that way? Someone doing entertainment at an under 7s children's party?

I also think it's fair to say that it took probably three seasons for Arteta. So the fourth season, that's where he competed, now he's in the seventh season. So he's really, really ready to compete in his fourth season.
Like his tactics his answers to simple questions are a complete mess
 
Like his tactics his answers to simple questions are a complete mess
It's clear to me, I don't know if others on here agree, but instead of saying something like ''I'm here to talk about Tottenham, and the upcoming derby match. Woolwich's history is of no concern''. He's taken the opportunity to cite how Arteta's tenure has gone, to use as a marker for himself. It's the speaking of a man under pressure.
 
It's clear to me, I don't know if others on here agree, but instead of saying something like ''I'm here to talk about Tottenham, and the upcoming derby match. Woolwich's history is of no concern''. He's taken the opportunity to cite how Arteta's tenure has gone, to use as a marker for himself. It's the speaking of a man under pressure.
Spot on... like a few posters on here he is readying his excuses. Whilst I accept Arteta's first two seasons were poor in terms of league finishes, he got the Covid cup win and that bought him time. Frank won't get that because he isn't inheriting a mess like some posters think he is. This squad is good enough to finish top 5 and if we don't, Frank has underperformed and should go back to keeping teams in the PL on low budgets.
 
It's clear to me, I don't know if others on here agree, but instead of saying something like ''I'm here to talk about Tottenham, and the upcoming derby match. Woolwich's history is of no concern''. He's taken the opportunity to cite how Arteta's tenure has gone, to use as a marker for himself. It's the speaking of a man under pressure.

He's always spoke favourably about Arteta, did it a lot when he was Brentford coach, he's just repeating the same things he's always said.
 
Spot on... like a few posters on here he is readying his excuses. Whilst I accept Arteta's first two seasons were poor in terms of league finishes, he got the Covid cup win and that bought him time. Frank won't get that because he isn't inheriting a mess like some posters think he is. This squad is good enough to finish top 5 and if we don't, Frank has underperformed and should go back to keeping teams in the PL on low budgets.
We was in a complete mess last season mate.

So much so that the manager, his staff and the boss/part owner got sacked.

Add in the long term injuries to 3 of our better players for the first ¼ of his first season.

i think he has done ok points wise but performances particularly at home need improving.
 
Definately but I don't see this particular quote as praise although he was guilty of doing that when he first got the job.
Well he's either using Arteta's tenure at Woolwich to nudge our supporters into thinking if he's given three seasons, our club could be where they are now, in other words using Arteta as a means of support for his own job, and is under pressure. Or he's talking about Arteta's tenure because he's impressed by it, and has chosen our press conference as a platform to do so.

Either way, I don't like it.
 
Well he's either using Arteta's tenure at Woolwich to nudge our supporters into thinking if he's given three seasons, our club could be where they are now, in other words using Arteta as a means of support for his own job, and is under pressure. Or he's talking about Arteta's tenure because he's impressed by it, and has chosen our press conference as a platform to do so.

Either way, I don't like it.

OR he's just making a valid point that people criticising the performance of a manager that is 11 games into the job are being ridiculous.
He's not plucking Arteta out of thin air - it is contextual because he's about to line up against him, with said team proving to be a good example of the point, whether people like it or not.

The only "pressure" being created is from fans who were bafflingly ok with nearly getting relegated, using injuries as an excuse, but are now not ok competing for the top 4 with a similar handicap of injuries.
 
Well he's either using Arteta's tenure at Woolwich to nudge our supporters into thinking if he's given three seasons, our club could be where they are now, in other words using Arteta as a means of support for his own job, and is under pressure. Or he's talking about Arteta's tenure because he's impressed by it, and has chosen our press conference as a platform to do so.

Either way, I don't like it.

I think there's more nuance that that and probably should just watch the video seeing as he was asked whether he'd be able to repeat the same trick as Arteta in a press conference about the NLD, he was simply answering a question put to him...


View: https://youtube.com/shorts/x41IYjaZ5N4?si=XyI0SZHNesnlF5aL
 
I've lifted this excerpt from an apparent Football London transcript of the press conference for the goon match, this time Frank doesn't say ''Very very very'' rather he says ''really really ready''. Who talks that way? Someone doing entertainment at an under 7s children's party?

I also think it's fair to say that it took probably three seasons for Arteta. So the fourth season, that's where he competed, now he's in the seventh season. So he's really, really ready to compete in his fourth season.
You do know that in Denmark, English isn't the first language?
 
OR he's just making a valid point that people criticising the performance of a manager that is 11 games into the job are being ridiculous.
He's not plucking Arteta out of thin air - it is contextual because he's about to line up against him, with said team proving to be a good example of the point, whether people like it or not.

The only "pressure" being created is from fans who were bafflingly ok with nearly getting relegated, using injuries as an excuse, but are now not ok competing for the top 4 with a similar handicap of injuries.
He was asked about Arteta and chose to elaborate, I just don't like using our press conference as a means to make a point about Arteta being given time in his job to enable where the goons are now, and by comparison Frank has only been given 11 games in the PL so far, we all know this already don't we?

It's my opinion Frank should have focused on the actual match, our injuries, and things about our club, Arteta hasn't got anything to do with us. It's even worse doing it on cusp of aa NLD. It's as though he's already making an excuse for a defeat.
 
I think there's more nuance that that and probably should just watch the video seeing as he was asked whether he'd be able to repeat the same trick as Arteta in a press conference about the NLD, he was simply answering a question put to him...


View: https://youtube.com/shorts/x41IYjaZ5N4?si=XyI0SZHNesnlF5aL

Sure I know about the question and his answer, but I have seen many a manager asked questions and directed the answer back to the job at hand, the next match. A press conference isn't about the history of the opposing team's manager.
 
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