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Next Manager?

Guess it depends if Conte comes in saying what an amazing squad they all are, in the first place, manages to add nothing of value to them as a coach, and then turns and starts throwing them under the bus when his antediluvian tactics start to fall apart at the seams.

You just won't give up the Jose love-in will you?

 
Conte would be highly surprising, unless its Levy desperate to keep Kane and things that getting Conte and giving him £100m (+ cash raised) to spend would do that, whereas a longer-term project led by Potter would not

edit: risk is that we hire another cheque book manager but without a chque book available
 
Wow. Maybe this will happen...


Edit: for those who don't subscribe...

Tottenham Hotspur are in talks with Mauricio Pochettino about a shock return to the club this summer.

Pochettino, who was sacked by Spurs only 18 months ago and appointed as Paris Saint-Germain head coach in January, is attracted by the idea of a quick return to the London club and to English football after failing to settle in the French capital. But while re-appointing Pochettino would also be attractive to chairman Daniel Levy, as he tries to repair relations with fans and relaunch the team towards the Premier League’s top four, it will be very difficult to pull off.

There is still one year left on Pochettino’s PSG contract and the Ligue 1 club do not want the upheaval of a third head coaching change in as many years. They would face another summer of disruption only a few months after sacking Thomas Tuchel in December. If Pochettino does ultimately decide that he wants to return to Tottenham, he would most likely have to resign in order to force his way out.

Pochettino’s spell in Paris has been mixed so far: PSG won the French Super Cup and the Coupe de France, and got to the semi-finals of the Champions League with thrilling victories over Bayern Munich and Barcelona along the way. But they were knocked out of Europe at that point by Emirates Marketing Project and have lost their Ligue 1 title to Lille after suffering three defeats in six matches between February 21 and April 3. This is only the second time in nine seasons that PSG have failed to win their domestic championship.
But although Pochettino has enjoyed the chance to work at an elite club, he has found his role in Paris to be less powerful than the one that he held at Spurs in five and a half years working with Levy. The Argentine has found himself facing the same internal issues at PSG as predecessor Tuchel did. According to reports in Italy, PSG are concerned enough about the situation to be sounding out replacements.

Again, the prospect of a return to a club where he was so popular is said to be attractive to Pochettino.

He managed Tottenham from the summer of 2014 until his dismissal in November 2019, leading the team on two close-run campaigns for the Premier League title in 2015-16 and 2016-17, and to the final of the 2018-19 Champions League. He is very aware of how loved he still is by the Spurs fans, and also retains a strong affection for Premier League football. Now he has to weigh up whether he wants to return to his old life, as difficult as that would be to arrange, or to press on with this new project across the Channel.

The Tottenham players are aware of the possibility of Pochettino returning, and are excited by the prospect.

In the last two seasons, Spurs have fallen away from the standards he set, finishing sixth and now seventh in the Premier League. Next year, they will be competing in the inaugural season of the Europa Conference League, having missed out on both the Champions League and Europa League. Their fitness levels have fallen considerably, too.

For Levy, the chance to reunite with Pochettino is naturally very appealing and despite sacking him, the two men have remained friends.

In his programme notes for the last home game of this season against Aston Villa, Levy admitted Spurs have “lost sight of some key priorities and what’s truly in our DNA”. There is a strong desire there to get back to the values of the Pochettino era — namely attractive, attacking football, the promotion of young players to the first team, and a sense of unity between all aspects of the club. Through the search for a new head coach to succeed Jose Mourinho, Pochettino has been seen as the benchmark of the type of coach that Tottenham would want to appoint. And now there is a chance that the man himself could be a candidate for his old role.

Ever since Mourinho was sacked five weeks ago, the north London club have been working hard to find the replacement who can get them back on track. That process led to the drawing up of a shortlist, including Erik ten Hag at Ajax, Belgium’s former Everton manager Roberto Martinez, unattached German coach Ralf Rangnick and Brighton’s Graham Potter. They were also interested in Hansi Flick, but the former Bayern head coach will take over the Germany national team after this summer’s European Championship.

None of those four shortlisted candidates has been ruled out yet. Indeed, given the difficulties inherent in getting Pochettino out of PSG, they very much remain in the frame. Ten Hag is still popular, having impressed in his three and a half seasons at Ajax, winning two Eredivisie titles there. Even though he signed a new contract with the Dutch giants on April 30, it does not mean he would be out of Spurs’ reach.

But there is no doubt that Pochettino would be the choice of most Tottenham fans if there is any way for him to return. His popularity has only grown since his departure.

When Pochettino was sacked early last season, that Tottenham side were at the end of their cycle. The club’s failure to invest in players in 2018 meant that the team went stale the following year and some of the players lost their hunger or grew tired of the demanding environment. Just before the Champions League final loss to Liverpool, Pochettino warned of the “painful rebuild” that was required to build a “new project”.

Tottenham have effectively been in transition ever since, with the 17-month Mourinho era delivering neither results on the pitch (no trophy, no return to the Champions League) nor any closure on the Pochettino era.

The club needs a clear-out and a rebuild even more now than they did two years ago.

Pochettino might now have the opportunity to deliver exactly that.

The ball is in his court.
 
I'd welcome Poch again with open arms, obviously - but what made it not work last time out, and how are we better suited to deal with that situation now? Will getting Poch back let us keep Kane? Sure, it's a moral boost for our supporters, and Levy will regain some of what he has lost - but ultimately, how are we going to not do the same mistakes again?

I don't know. Managers gets sacked eventually either way. I think I want Poch back eventually, but we haven't changed that many players since he was sacked last time out - so I'm a bit skeptic, I have to admit. If he comes, I hope Levy is prepared to back him heavily in the market - but just how we're going to afford that - I don't know. If it's the same trope of selling before buying, then he'll probably get the sack again before the end of the season. :p
 
I'd welcome Poch again with open arms, obviously - but what made it not work last time out, and how are we better suited to deal with that situation now? Will getting Poch back let us keep Kane? Sure, it's a moral boost for our supporters, and Levy will regain some of what he has lost - but ultimately, how are we going to not do the same mistakes again?

I don't know. Managers gets sacked eventually either way. I think I want Poch back eventually, but we haven't changed that many players since he was sacked last time out - so I'm a bit skeptic, I have to admit. If he comes, I hope Levy is prepared to back him heavily in the market - but just how we're going to afford that - I don't know. If it's the same trope of selling before buying, then he'll probably get the sack again before the end of the season. :p

If it does happen, I would hope it's an admission from Levy that he got it wrong, and is willing to work with Poch to make it work this time, on Poch's terms.

To me, even Poch with the same issues as before is more appealing than the risks that come with any of the other candidates (none of whom are particularly outstanding.)
 
I'd welcome Poch again with open arms, obviously - but what made it not work last time out, and how are we better suited to deal with that situation now? Will getting Poch back let us keep Kane? Sure, it's a moral boost for our supporters, and Levy will regain some of what he has lost - but ultimately, how are we going to not do the same mistakes again?

I don't know. Managers gets sacked eventually either way. I think I want Poch back eventually, but we haven't changed that many players since he was sacked last time out - so I'm a bit skeptic, I have to admit. If he comes, I hope Levy is prepared to back him heavily in the market - but just how we're going to afford that - I don't know. If it's the same trope of selling before buying, then he'll probably get the sack again before the end of the season. :p


Hopefully all parties have learnt something.
Levy, trust your manager, give him what he wants, not what you think he needs.
Don’t hang on to players that don't want to be here.
Don’t always expect top dollar for sales.

Poch, be patient.
A "lesser" trophy will buy you time.
Dont run the players into the ground.

Players, be careful what you wish for.

They all made errors last time round.
If, and I still think it's a big if, it comes they should all be that bit wiser.
 
Funny thing is, a lot of people assume that if Pochettino comes back, Levy will be on his knees and give him shedloads of money to rebuild the squad. However, if we sign Conte, a guy with a much bigger reputation, he'll have to work on a shoestring budget. I'm not entirely sure it works this way...
 
This feels wild, Poch coming back, getting to do the rebuild he should have been given in the first place, unfinished business etc.

Or, a total fudging disaster in the making.

YIDS!
 
Funny thing is, a lot of people assume that if Pochettino comes back, Levy will be on his knees and give him shedloads of money to rebuild the squad. However, if we sign Conte, a guy with a much bigger reputation, he'll have to work on a shoestring budget. I'm not entirely sure it works this way...
Levy for his faults isn’t stupid, and will recognise investment is needed in order to get back into the top 4 and that it will be more costly if we don’t invest and consistently miss out on the CL. Whatever manager we recruit will be given decent funds I’m sure....
 
Levy for his faults isn’t stupid, and will recognise investment is needed in order to get back into the top 4 and that it will be more costly if we don’t invest and consistently miss out on the CL. Whatever manager we recruit will be given decent funds I’m sure....

Paradoxically, you need to spend money to get richer. Then again, there's spending money and there's doing a Leeds. It's tempting to throw more money in a quest for success but only people at the top of the club's hierarchy know when to pull to plug (or at least, have a chance to realise when it's time to). If we were to spend very littel, appointing Potter would probably be a better choice. At least, he's used to it.
 
We're Begging You, go Straight To The Man. Good Times and Tears - our Star Will Shine.

How Do we Sleep... Daybreak... Love Spreads... Breaking Into Heaven
 
Christ, if we actually get Poch back...something about us will just feel whole again.

This club hasn't been the same since he left. And I'd like to think the interval taught all of us, Levy downwards, the truly transformative difference between having a manager who cares, and who unites everyone, from the players to the fans to the staff...and having a c*nt like Mourinho, who left behind a poorer, angrier, disunited mess of a club. Since the distant days of BMJ - no one got us quite like Poch did, and these two years have shown how priceless that is in a sport increasingly avaricious, cynical and disconnected from the people that live and breathe it every day.

Not that Poch didn't have anything to learn - likewise, I hope the interval taught him some valuable lessons as well.

But, if we can actually pull off bringing him back...

...we can live again, and we can dream again. As one club - Tottenham Hotspur Football Club, united and happy in the light of a new beginning. As we were in 2014, when that adventure began.

And damn the world. :)

Ah, it's too much hope for a Thursday morning.
 
Our players, budget and philosophy as a club (levy etc) would never work with a conte or a pep etc.

These world class managers need an elite winning environment filled with world class players.

Come on, why is so easy to just say stuff like this?

- Inter haven't won anything in a decade pre Conte
- They were in a one horse league
- Squad has Eriksen, Young, Lukaku, Vidal, Perisic, Sanchez & Skrinar (mostly washed up players on wrong end of their career, Skrinar being the only up and coming)

Where is the elite winning environment and world class players?

Take Skrinar from them and give to us and I'd expect on paper we beat them most days ..
 
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