I've explained why I think this (know it's not a post directed to me but no doubt I'm in your thinking re Levy diehards)
Lewis's stepped in > appointed Charrington > internal review > RC and other team-Levy staff leaves > Vinai comes in > Vinai front & center of all the presentation of Thomas Frank talking up the process of his appointment > Levy is shuffled off once season is underway > Vinai sticks with manager despite long run of poor form
I think it's a fairly uncomplicated take on that run of events that the Lewis's wanted Levy gone and the summer was essentially a handover process from the old guy to the new guy (Levy to Vinai) and that if that was the plan that they would want their guy making the big calls vs the man they are moving on.
I mean alternative to me takes more suspension of belief/raises more concerns...
Internal review is conducted but they don't pin point Levy as a problem so allow him to carry on making the biggest decisions then after one summer window they pull a 180 and realise he's the problem? I mean how thorough was the review in that case and why should we believe that any plans made since are any more well thought through? If Vinai wasn't the main man in waiting upon appointment what makes him the man to do the job now?
The first scenario is surely the preferable reality, no? They conducted their review and moved quickly to make the changes at the top level that they wanted to
First of all, your assumptions are off as to why the Lewis family stepped in, as with some of the points
Charrington stepped in in March, the club had no huge problem from their perspective re on field success (we had just finished 5th with a manager seen as very attacking, were advancing in EL, had made CL football, previous manager had made a cup final, and previous to that 4th place. The decent from "normal" Spurs finishes were not yet landed)
Yes, Levy (by plan or pressure) had been shedding some of his duties and that included the CEO role. Vinai is 100% a Levy hire, go take a listen to Simon Jordan on it, he paints Vinai as a snake in the grass precisely because he was a Levy hired who instantly pivoted once the issues surfaced. Frank at best is a Lange/Levy/Vinai/Charrington hire, at worst a Lange mostly hire.
You gave two scenarios, so I will give two
- After 25 years of seeing an asset appreciate from 40M to 3B, a business become a top 10 club in the world, facilities and infrastructure become the best in Europe if not the world, all while you invest nothing, your father takes no action and implicitly trusts the CEO, you decide (the month after the club actually achieves on-field success) to fire said CEO because you believe the club hasn't has enough success?
- Or, after 25 years of success, you have decided now is the right time to sell, and said CEO has been a little too difficult to deal with in sale evaluations, price expectations (he's also a major shareholder) and more importantly, clauses post sale?
Which one is genuinely more believable? Joe Lewis daughter is her fudging 60s, now she wants football success? daddy could have given her Spurs as a plaything 20 years ago. Again, there is reasonably credible statements that the club received a bid in the 2.5B - 3B range that Levy closed down
No doubt there is some nepo baby delusions that "how hard could it be to run a football club" born out by their first year of stumbling, no doubt they may have to invest because selling a club that finished 17th twice is very different from selling a club in the champions league but the idea that a group of nepo babies in their 60s have suddenly become football fans and want success for Spurs is so laughable it worries me that people buy in to brick like this.
It make take 2-5 years, but they stepped into sell, and Vinai staying on in his role is classic, good to have a yes man there when the next bid comes in.