• Dear Guest, Please note that adult content is not permitted on this forum. We have had our Google ads disabled at times due to some posts that were found from some time ago. Please do not post adult content and if you see any already on the forum, please report the post so that we can deal with it. Adult content is allowed in the glory hole - you will have to request permission to access it. Thanks, scara

Next Spurs manager mega-thread

who would it be?

  • Jose Mourinho

    Votes: 110 48.0%
  • Guus Hiddink

    Votes: 29 12.7%
  • Louis Van Gaal

    Votes: 3 1.3%
  • David Moyes

    Votes: 20 8.7%
  • Brendan Rodgers

    Votes: 40 17.5%
  • Alan Pardew

    Votes: 3 1.3%
  • Tim Owl Face Sherwood

    Votes: 3 1.3%
  • Fabio Capello

    Votes: 3 1.3%
  • Seb Bassong

    Votes: 3 1.3%
  • Sandra Redknapp

    Votes: 15 6.6%

  • Total voters
    229
well AVB still has a lot to prove from this point of view as well.....he went into meltdown at Chelsea and someone as inexperienced as RDM had to come in and save the day

and i really dont see how you can make that assessment of Martinez when he hasnt even had the chance

His mistake was his handling of the big egos in the Chelsea changing room imo. If he'd had a cull of the players he didn't want to work with I think he would have got on better than he did by leaving big names like Lampard and Drogba to the bench.

I was surprised to see Moutinho's quotes saying that, actually, as a young manager it makes him approachable and that he was a good man manager, the best he'd worked with in fact. This flys in the face of what I thought of him at Chelsea, so maybe he does have the skills to handle the players, just not with a team of jetset egos all being led by the snarling prick John Terry. If that pack of dogs turns on you, you've got no chance.

That's what I'm hoping anyway, seeing as it looks like we'll owe him over £10m compo if he bombs here!
 
His mistake was his handling of the big egos in the Chelsea changing room imo. If he'd had a cull of the players he didn't want to work with I think he would have got on better than he did by leaving big names like Lampard and Drogba to the bench.

I was surprised to see Moutinho's quotes saying that, actually, as a young manager it makes him approachable and that he was a good man manager, the best he'd worked with in fact. This flys in the face of what I thought of him at Chelsea, so maybe he does have the skills to handle the players, just not with a team of jetset egos all being led by the snarling prick John Terry. If that pack of dogs turns on you, you've got no chance.

That's what I'm hoping anyway, seeing as it looks like we'll owe him over £10m compo if he bombs here!

hopefully Levy sees the sense to do what Chelsea did and write into his contract that if he is sacked, his compensation is limited to continuing to receive his full Spurs salary until he takes up another job...no lump sums, no huge pay offs.
 
Dont know if this has been posted already, have to say I tend to agree with the article.

The Tottenham column: It's hard to escape the feeling that Levy is gambling with the club by replacing Redknapp with Villas-Boas
image
By Darren Lewis |

Early next week, everything will become a lot clearer.

The Tottenham's players will return from their summer holidays and Daniel Levy will reveal the identity of the man he believes can do a better job of taking the club forward than Harry Redknapp.

And yet it will be hard for the fans to escape the feeling that their chairman is gambling with the club.

As pointed out elsewhere on MirrorFootball, Andre Villas Boas couldn't handle it at Chelsea .

He couldn't handle the players. He couldn't handle the expectation and he couldn't handle the media.

Yet Spurs have traded a man famed for his man-management skills for a man who showed very little at Stamford Bridge.

And, just as Roy Hodgson and his derided, archaic 4-4-2 has the spectre of Harry Redknapp hanging over him, so too does Villas-Boas.

To be fair, it is not only rival fans of other clubs whose tribalism has branded Redknapp much of a muchness. Spurs fans have done it too.

They have refused to accept the scale of Redknapp's achievement in taking a club with the sixth-biggest wage bill in the Premier League (and, by definition, the country) to fourth, fifth and fourth.

POZNAN, POLAND - JUNE 14: Luka Modric of Croatia looks on during the UEFA EURO 2012 group C match between Italy and Croatia at The Municipal Stadium on June 14, 2012 in Poznan, Poland. (Photo by Claudio Villa/Getty Images)

They refuse to accept that Luka Modric, now so sought after, was treading water at White Hart Lane until Redknapp arrived.

They scoff at the fact that Gareth Bale was going backwards until he worked with Redknapp to become one of the most valued wingers in European football.

And they refuse to accept that Levy had a plan all along. The Spurs chairman didn't invest in the squad and the team in January as he should have done because even then he had been planning for life without Harry.

Had Levy backed Redknapp's big to bring in Carlos Tevez and Gary Cahill back then Spurs surely would have had the solidity at the back and the goals up front to snatch third place.

But then why fund big signings and huge wages when you know you want to ease the man in charge out six months later?

So good luck Daniel Levy with the bold bid for a brave new world at Spurs that few people are convinced by.

Harry Redknapp and Daniel Levy

And maybe those Spurs fans who agree with Levy that the club can do better without Redknapp - and the investment he should have had - need to careful what they wish for.

Villas-Boas has everything to prove and Spurs have everything to lose.

The ex-Porto coach didn't fancy Lampard, Drogba or Ashley Cole. As soon as the door slams shut behind him, all three come back into the Chelsea team and help the club to their first-ever Champions League alongside the FA Cup.

Little wonder then that Spurs fans will be rightly apprehensive about the man who will take the chair next week.

They will look to see which players are in AVB's plans and which are left kicking their heels when the club kick off the new Premier League season at Saudi Sportswashing Machine on August 18.

We've already seen Ryan Nelsen shipped out to QPR. Ledley King's time has run out and the word on the street is William Gallas could be on his way this summer too.

Tottenham 1-5 Chelsea, April 15, 2012: Didier Drogba of Chelsea beats William Gallas of Tottenham Hotspur to score their first goal

The imminent recruitment of Jan Vertonghen from Ajax and Gylfi Sigurdsson from Hoffenheim is a method of operating that would have drawn criticism had Chelsea done it.

The feeling would be that Roman Abramovich is bringing in the stars he fancies and that the man is charge is simply tasked with making it sing.

Well that appears to be the case with Tottenham these days.

Levy is understood to favour moving away from older players and you do sometimes wonder why he doesn't just go the whole hog, get a tracksuit and take training.

After all, Giggs, Scholes, Ferdinand and Neville have all helped bed in young players at Manchester United.

The senior citizens at Chelsea all spearheaded the club's assault on silverware last season.

Arsenal's creaking back four were the bedrock of the club's early success under Arsene Wenger.

But Levy wants to go the other way. Presumably to make a few bob in the process.

All of which means the real fear remains that while Spurs fans enjoyed (during the first half of the season anyway) mixing it with Arsenal in the race for Champions League football, the Gunners are set to move on while Tottenham go backwards.

For that not to be the case, Levy - and Villas-Boas - need to pull some real rabbits out of the hat during what remains of this summer.

This c unt has had an agenda from day one.

Lost any integrity he had ( :) )
 
SSN now basically saying it straight-out that AVB is the man. Script went something like "We'll be going to WHL where AVB is to be unveiled as new Spurs manager today" or something like that.
 
Agreed. Read the first line or two and then gave up with it. At the end of the day, if AVB is the man we now have a manager who:

- will install a level of tactical discipline into the team rather than just tell them to 'run about a bit'
- will have a transfer policy which isnt centred around 33+ year olds
- wont air things which should be kept internal in the press
- wont tap up players from other clubs via the media with comments like 'player x is a great player and one any manager would like but he currently plays for y and so is unavailable. Of course if they wanted to sell him...'
- is under the age of 65 so will view Spurs as a platform where he can build a legacy
- will employ back room staff which are based around the best people for the jobs and their specialist skills rather than being appointed simply because they're retired English players

...and many other advantages...

Since we've been 3/4 best team in the country in the last few years it seemed those policies had worked especially the 'run around a bit' one.......

Have some respect please on where we were a few years back and what AVB will come into,a club on a downward spiral no,a club on an upward curve he will come into,with no major surgery needed at all.
 
"Treading water" in the few weeks he was at the club, prior to Redknapp joining?

Utter gonad*s. Just another Redknapp-camp journalist rewriting history.

Of course it's a gamble. Any time you appoint a new manager it's a gamble. That doesn't make you wrong for doing it.

To be fair he wasn't treading water, he was drowning :-"
 
"Treading water" in the few weeks he was at the club, prior to Redknapp joining?

Utter gonad*s. Just another Redknapp-camp journalist rewriting history.

Of course it's a gamble. Any time you appoint a new manager it's a gamble. That doesn't make you wrong for doing it.


Lewis is a mug and like all the other Redknapps pals in the press will be doing a hatchet job on AVB, Levy and the club.
 
Agreed. Read the first line or two and then gave up with it. At the end of the day, if AVB is the man we now have a manager who:

- will install a level of tactical discipline into the team rather than just tell them to 'run about a bit'
- will have a transfer policy which isnt centred around 33+ year olds
- wont air things which should be kept internal in the press
- wont tap up players from other clubs via the media with comments like 'player x is a great player and one any manager would like but he currently plays for y and so is unavailable. Of course if they wanted to sell him...'
- is under the age of 65 so will view Spurs as a platform where he can build a legacy
- will employ back room staff which are based around the best people for the jobs and their specialist skills rather than being appointed simply because they're retired English players

...and many other advantages...

What are your season expectations with him in charge?
 
Since we've been 3/4 best team in the country in the last few years it seemed those policies had worked especially the 'run around a bit' one.......

Have some respect please on where we were a few years back and what AVB will come into,a club on a downward spiral no,a club on an upward curve he will come into,with no major surgery needed at all.

If Harry treated the club, fans and Levy with some respect then I would give him some. You have to earn respect however the way he acts he doesnt deserve that much. Also, we were the 5th best last year

I also think there is a reasonable amount of work for AVB to do given that we need 2 CFs, need to get a long term keeper in, sign a CB and a winger
 
If Harry treated the club, fans and Levy with some respect then I would give him some. You have to earn respect however the way he acts he doesnt deserve that much. Also, we were the 5th best last year

I also think there is a reasonable amount of work for AVB to do given that we need 2 CFs, need to get a long term keeper in, sign a CB and a winger


But is that a good or bad thing? As long as he is backed by Levy financially, he can bring in players that he perceives will play his system well. Which would surely increase the chances of his system working with the players we already have.
 
so many marriages end in divorces ... and maybe its someone's fault, but perhaps its just a poor match.

we've been dithering around 4th/5th for so long now, I think its time to take a gamble and see if we can make that step forward. If breaking into top 4 is hard enough, going from 4th to 3rd and winning it is even harder. With limited resources (finance) we have to take risks ... and this is a calculated risk I am willing to support.

its the Spurs way... TO DARE IS TO DO!
 
What are your season expectations with him in charge?

Better to answer that on 31 Aug when we know what the squad looks like and what others have done (eg is Arse lose RvP then my expectations for us would be higher). However from what I see today I would hope that he installs a way of playing into the team (and club) in order that we start to build a system (similar to how Wenger has done at Arse) and that if we dont finish 4th then we're bloody close to 4th. I think, most likely, Cheatski will be 3rd and its us or Arse or maybe Saudi Sportswashing Machine for 4th. I would onyl expect us to be 5-10 points from 3rd though, unless cheatski have a blinding season.

All can change a lot between now and 31 august though given that we have some fundamental changes to our team to make (eg CF, losing Modric potentially, getting in a CB) and how those things go will determine what we can achieve
 
hopefully, he's the right man, and given enough time and support will build something similar to what wenger has built at arsenal
 
so many marriages end in divorces ... and maybe its someone's fault, but perhaps its just a poor match.

we've been dithering around 4th/5th for so long now, I think its time to take a gamble and see if we can make that step forward. If breaking into top 4 is hard enough, going from 4th to 3rd and winning it is even harder. With limited resources (finance) we have to take risks ... and this is a calculated risk I am willing to support.

its the Spurs way... TO DARE IS TO DO!

Funnily enough i have come around to that way of thinking. I have no idea if AVB will be a godsend or a nightmare but i suppose it comes down to whether we are willing to take a chance on achieving glory or happy to settle for being on the 'fringes'.

brick or bust perhaps :lol:
 
hopefully, he's the right man, and given enough time and support will build something similar to what wenger has built at arsenal

This is what i am hopeing he will do, under Redknapp is was all about now and i would like to see a longer term plan.
 
Back