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Management Who should be Tottenham's next manager after Frank?

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If Frank gets sacked in a near future, who would you like to see as his permanent replacement?


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Would sooner give it to Homer Simpson than Sherwood , but I tend to agree with him for the first time ever.
 
We lost 34 times in the league in 2 seasons under him.

We won't do these numbers again.

He's a massive part of why we are where we are.
That's got nothing to do with my point or Ange's point about the lack of ambition ENIC have shown in the market.

How many managers is it going to take you to get the reason we are where we are?

With the squad Frank has and the injuries I would say say par is mid table. And while he's failed that par and has us in a relegation scrap is that acceptable to you?
 
I don’t want him back but reality is we were a lot better with him that season than AVB, Ryan Mason got us playing much better than Jose Mourinho. I suspect Sherwood and Mason would be a lot better than Frank in our final games.

A temp manager is often better than an elite perm because the perm has alienated the players with his personality or playing unsuitable style/tactics. So all a temp has to do like Carrick is play players in their correct positions, play a brand of football that fits the players and motivate. It’s never a long term fix but it works short term.

That’s why De Zerbi might be better than Heitinger but he also might be worse. We are hiring to cover a short run of games not impose a long term style of play.

Sherwood in these circumstances normally would be perfectly fine but he's outspoken and he's a prick and quite frankly we don't need anymore PR fails at the club right now.
 
That is probably true. We need an elite temp, strong character, good motivator and someone who will play a style to suit the players strengths not impose a philosophy.

I doubt anyone knows who that is........ The game's moved on from Fat Sam (even more so the Redknapps of this world).

Maybe Heitinger & Mase is the most sensible option....?
 
The Athletic


Should Roberto De Zerbi be in the frame for Premier League jobs?
https://archive.ph/o/CKeB7/https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/author/tim-spiers/
By Tim Spiers
Feb. 11, 2026Updated 7:11 pm UTC

Roberto De Zerbi’s exit from Marseille adds yet another intriguing subplot to a managerial market bubbling over the side of the saucepan with stellar names and fascinating narratives.

The list of high-profile coaches who are available right now, or are due to be looking for work in the summer, feels much weightier than usual. This year’s manager market is probably more interesting than the next transfer window for players.

There are title-winning bosses who have left sizeable clubs, such as Xabi Alonso, Enzo Maresca and Ruben Amorim.

In international football, England head coach Thomas Tuchel could be on the market in July after the World Cup, given that’s when his 18-month contract ends. Ditto Mauricio Pochettino, who you would imagine is unlikely to stay with the United States, whatever happens in what is largely a home tournament. World Cup winner Didier Deschamps, who managed Juventus, Monaco and Marseille before moving into international management in 2012, has stated he will not extend his France contract beyond the summer.

In the Premier League, Oliver Glasner has confirmed he will leave Crystal Palace, while the contracts of Marco Silva (Fulham) and Andoni Iraola (Bournemouth) expire at the end of this season. There will inevitably be other departures, too, perhaps a couple of high-profile ones with Pep Guardiola’s Manchester City future looming ominously in the background. Arne Slot may be vulnerable if Liverpool’s poor form continues.

Four big names have been lurking without a management job since 2024: Xavi remains available following his departure from Barcelona, as does Jurgen Klopp, who is in semi-retirement for now with the Red Bull organisation.

Gareth Southgate took England to back-to-back European Championship finals in 2021 and 2024 and is still busy exploring other career opportunities, while Edin Terzic guided Borussia Dortmund to the Champions League final in the latter year but then left the club and hasn’t managed since.

There’s even the guy who won last season’s Europa League… what was his name again, mate?

It’s a crowded market and, in terms of the wish list for the biggest clubs in Europe who may be looking for a new manager, due to career histories, probable availability and readiness, you would put Alonso, Tuchel and maybe Pochettino towards the top end of the market.

Does De Zerbi fit into that bracket? And if not, where does he land next?

Well, the answer to the first question is easy and brief: no. With zero trophies to the 46-year-old’s name, other than the 2021 Ukrainian Super Cup with Shakhtar Donetsk, De Zerbi would be of interest to clubs for his exceptional tactical acumen, much more than his actual results, albeit Marseille were by far the biggest team he has managed in his 13-year career, meaning trophies have never really been part of his remit.

Still, this is a man linked with Barcelona, Manchester United and Bayern Munich when he was flying high with Brighton & Hove Albion not so long ago.

It was around this time that Guardiola gushed with effusive praise on De Zerbi’s influence not just on Brighton, but the whole Premier League.

“Roberto De Zerbi is one of the most influential managers in the last 20 years,” Guardiola said. “There is no team that plays the way they (his Brighton side) play; it’s unique. I had the feeling when he arrived, I had an idea the impact he would have on the Premier League would be great, but I couldn’t expect him to do it in such a short time.”

To be now sacked by Marseille, 12 points off the Ligue 1 lead and having suffered a feeble Champions League first-phase exit by losing 3-0 to Club Brugge last month, represents a climbdown for the Italian, whose reputation has taken a sizeable knock.

Why? Because a pattern has formed, which in the simplest terms can be summarised as: initial tactical uplift puts his team on the rise, then disagreements and infighting sour things the next season.

Tottenham Hotspur want a new head coach having parted ways on Wednesday with summer appointment Thomas Frank, and they have been linked with De Zerbi in the past. In 2023, it was queried on these pages why on earth they wouldn’t go for him.

“If Tottenham want a manager who can produce attractive football, win lots of matches, make a favourable impression on Harry Kane and bring together a near-mutinous fanbase, why are they missing what seems so blindingly obvious?” Daniel Taylor wrote. “Or to rephrase the question: what more evidence did they need during this tortuous, sometimes torturous, search for a new manager to understand that Roberto De Zerbi is the real deal?”

While De Zerbi’s tactical know-how borders on footballing genius, leading to that initial upsurge at Brighton where they finished sixth and qualified for Europe for the first time in their history, or at Marseille where they were runners-up behind Paris Saint-Germain, his combustible side has come to the fore in season two. At Brighton, disagreements over transfer policy led to his departure, while recent results in the south of France point to a not-entirely-happy camp.

Managerial changes at Marseille are nothing new — they have had 36 managers (including caretaker spells) this century — but, allowing for that Champions League exit or even the 5-0 defeat away to PSG at the weekend, it didn’t have to be this way for De Zerbi, whose win percentage of 57 per cent is the best of those aforementioned 36 managers.

Marseille supporters would probably say: ‘Rightly so’, albeit in French, on that win ratio, given they have Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang, Mason Greenwood, Benjamin Pavard, Nayef Aguerd, Timothy Weah, Pierre-Emile Hojbjerg, Igor Paixao and Woolwich loanee Ethan Nwaneri in their ranks.

However, a penchant for constantly changing the starting XI and arguments with players — he initially loved Amir Murillo so much he invited him round for dinner at his house, before selling him last week shortly after a poor throw-in helped allow Paris FC come from two goals down to draw 2-2 in a game at the end of January which led to him questioning the full-back’s commitment — have created unstability.

Ironically, at a club known for being haphazard and chaotic, the conditions De Zerbi has worked under at Marseille have been relatively serene, with plenty of backing in the transfer market. He has been supported, given time and given players. But he has been the one to generate that volatility, with incidents such as when he threatened to leave the club last season after a defeat to Auxerre, had an altercation with midfielder Ismael Kone, provoked a training-ground stand-off with his players and unleashed regular outbursts.

It should be remembered that De Zerbi is not a new upstart in the management game; he turns 47 this summer and has taken charge of 462 matches at eight clubs.

Premier League sides, perhaps even Spurs, will undoubtedly consider him in the coming weeks and months. He’s a huge personality, is now available, and his tactical prowess is undeniable.

Hiring De Zerbi has serious upsides.

Just don’t expect them to last too long.
 
6 (six) laugh emojis. Read them and weep. I’m taking this as a great victory. Generations to come shall talk of this.

And no you really don’t. Think the last post of mine you responded to, you told me to “get to fuck” or “fuck right off”. One of them anyway.
You said people can't suggest Redknapp as a interim.
I said suggest someone else OR STFU.
 
I doubt anyone knows who that is........ The game's moved on from Fat Sam (even more so the Redknapps of this world).

Maybe Heitinger & Mase is the most sensible option....?

Was thinking the same both were successful temp managers and assistants but not amazing long term. Ole is a very good example, brilliant temp but couldn’t evolve into a manager suited for the longer haul.
 
Was thinking the same both were successful temp managers and assistants but not amazing long term. Ole is a very good example, brilliant temp but couldn’t evolve into a manager suited for the longer haul.

Without being able to invoke 'the spirit of 92', say "This is Manchester United Football Club" or name-check Roy Keane every other sentence, Ole would be powerless here.
 
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Something happened when Heitinga was appointed as assistant. Our football showed some glimpses of attacking patterns and the pressing was at times.. better? Obviously not enough, and maybe a coincidence and inevitable in relation to how bad we have been most of the season.

But i got a feeling that he would be at least enough for us to stay up this season.
I thought Heitinga is a defensive coach? I could be wrong
 
Something happened when Heitinga was appointed as assistant. Our football showed some glimpses of attacking patterns and the pressing was at times.. better? Obviously not enough, and maybe a coincidence and inevitable in relation to how bad we have been most of the season.

But i got a feeling that he would be at least enough for us to stay up this season.

One point raised RE Heitinga by LilywhiteLab was fair, which was - a large part of sacking a manager/getting someone in is the new voice/new face/fresh start sidfe of it. You lose that when someone comes takes over who has been there through the prior managers downfall

In Heitingas defence, its only a month or so, but still

The thing with Heitinga for me is - while I agree he appears to have made an impact - how much of it is him, and how much of it was held back by Frank?

As in - was that minor uptick all he can offer? Or was Frank really handicapping the work he was doing?

I mean, in a question of Heitinga or Frank, Id say Heiting all day long. I just think its a very big question on him.
 
He wasn't backed properly - UCL final should have been a springboard to strengthen the squad. Plus the two consecutive transfer windows with zero incomings.
If he came, do you really think he'd be backed this time? Not a chance. He'd be in exactly the same position as he was when he was sacked. Until the owners are gone, I can't see us being much better under any manager.
It's sad but true imo. These are difficult days for our supporters but we got through a relegation once so we can get through anything. Keep the faith obviously but lower expectations until such a time is appropriate....
I'll be a spurs suppoter forever no matter what happens...
 
Without being able to invoke 'the spirit of 92', say "This Manchester United Football Club" or namecheck Roy Keane every other sentence, Ole would be powerless here.

probably true but we have Mason and Heitinger who could command respect. Heitinger is a hardman and Mason is a club man. Those two as a manager and assistant manager might be enough.
 
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