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Igor Tudor has agreed a deal to become Tottenham interim head coach until the end of the season [Update@post#13]

Who should Tottenham Hotspur appoint as their next manager?

  • Julian Nagelsmann

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Luis Enrique

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Roberto de Zerbi

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Other

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    2

Firebat

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The unhappy marriage between Spurs and Antonio Conte has finally come to an end after an explosive press conference.

So the question now is who to replace Conte. They've said assistant coach Cristian Stellini will take charge for the rest of the season, implying there will be no imminent appointment.

The main candidates touted by the media are:

Mauricio Pochettino - recently sacked by PSG
Julian Nagelsmann - recently sacked by Bayern
Luis Enrique - resigned from Spain after 2022 WC
Roberto de Zerbi - Brighton
Ryan Mason - Spurs assistant

Who gets your vote in the poll above?
 
I think they will struggle to appoint Nagelsmann as Real Madrid are interested in him.

Ryan Mason will prob get the job.
 
Tottenham managing director of football Fabio Paratici says the club is "focused" on moving forward following Antonio Conte's departure.
 
Conte gone, same old Spurs.

They need a project manager, like Pochettino, to rebuild this team from the ground up over many seasons.
 
Spurs open talks with Brentford over head coach Frank

Tottenham have opened talks with Brentford over their head coach Thomas Frank following the sacking of Ange Postecoglou.

The Dane, 51, has emerged as a leading contender to replace Postecoglou.

Brentford would be entitled to compensation for Frank, with sources indicating it would cost Tottenham more than £10m to extricate him from his contract which runs until 2027.

That figure could rise depending on how many members of staff Frank decides to bring with him if he is named Spurs boss.

Postecoglou was sacked on Friday, 16 days after leading Tottenham to victory in the Europa League final, their first major trophy for 17 years.

However, it came towards the end of their worst Premier League season, as they finished 17th after losing 22 of their 38 matches.

Frank took over at Brentford in 2018 and guided them into the Premier League, winning the Championship play-off final at Wembley in 2021 and establishing them as a top-flight club on a small budget.

Brentford finished 10th in the 2024-25 Premier League season, seven places and 18 points above Spurs.


 
Tottenham have appointed Brentford boss Thomas Frank as their head coach on a deal until 2028

The 51-year-old Dane replaces Ange Postecoglou, who was sacked earlier this month despite leading Spurs to victory in the Europa League final in May.

Frank spent seven years in charge of Brentford, guiding the club from the Championship to the Premier League in 2021.

He is Tottenham's fourth permanent manager since June 2021.

Spurs finished 17th in the top flight last season, losing 22 of their 38 matches and finishing seven places and 18 points below Brentford.

However, they have qualified for next season's Champions League after beating Manchester United in the Europa League final in Bilbao - their first major trophy for 17 years.

Justin Cochrane will join Frank at Tottenham as the Dane's assistant, despite efforts from the Bees to keep hold of the England coach.

Frank has also brought head of performance Chris Haslam and first-team analyst Joe Newton with him from Brentford, while another assistant coach, Andreas Georgson, arrives from Manchester United.

Frank first joined Brentford as an assistant in 2016, before taking over from Dean Smith as head coach in October 2018.

In 2019-20 his side reached the Championship play-off final but suffered a 2-1 defeat by Fulham.

They reached the Championship play-off again the following season and beat Swansea City to reach the Premier League, with Frank becoming the first Brentford manager in 86 years to win promotion to the top flight.

Since then, Frank has established the Bees as a competitive Premier League club, recording 13th, ninth, 16th and 10th-place finishes.

Last season Brentford's tally of 66 goals in the Premier League was the joint fifth best in the division.

Of the 152 top-flight games Frank has overseen, he has won 54 and lost 60 - claiming 200 points from a possible 456.

Source: BBC
 
Thomas Frank sacked: Tottenham head coach departs after less than eight months in charge

Tottenham have sacked head coach Thomas Frank after less than eight months in charge.

Spurs fans booed Frank and chanted for his sacking during Tuesday's 2-1 defeat to Newcastle.

The club's hierarchy are understood to have concluded Frank's position had become untenable.

Spurs are 16th in the Premier League table, five points above the drop zone, and have won just twice in their last 17 league games.

"The club has taken the decision to make a change in the men's head coach position and Thomas Frank will leave today," a statement said.

"Thomas was appointed in June 2025, and we have been determined to give him the time and support needed to build for the future together.

"However, results and performances have led the board to conclude that a change at this point in the season is necessary.

"Throughout his time at the club, Thomas has conducted himself with unwavering commitment, giving everything in his efforts to move the club forward. We would like to thank him for his contribution and wish him every success in the future."

Frank left Brentford in June to replace Ange Postecoglou after the Australian was sacked despite winning the Europa League.

But the ex-Bees boss failed to win over the Tottenham faithful, with his short tenure littered with setbacks, including drinking from a coffee cup which carried the badge of rivals Arsenal.

Frank exits having won just 13 of his 38 games in charge, with the loss to Newcastle giving him the worst Premier League win percentage of any Spurs manager in the Premier League era with just 26.9 per cent.

The 52-year-old's departure means Spurs are searching for their sixth permanent manager in seven years since Mauricio Pochettino left in 2019.

Frank's successor will take over a side that is out of both domestic cup competitions, but remains in the Champions League knockout stages after the Dane guided them to a fourth-place finish in the table.

Spurs are next in action on Sunday February 22 with a home game against rivals Arsenal in the Premier League, followed by a trip to Fulham. Both games will be shown live on Sky Sports.

 
Goes to show how well Brentford are run, any manager does well there. Frank is overated, poor man management and clueless with his tactics.

Hopefully Spurs will go down but with a new manager bounce will likely stay up and possibly take points off Arsenal too.
 

Tottenham are 'not a big club' - Postecoglou​

Ange Postecoglou has criticised Tottenham's transfer strategy while claiming his former side are "not a big club" in the wake of Thomas Frank's sacking.

Frank, who replaced Postecoglou as head coach last summer, was sacked on Wednesday with Spurs five points above the Premier League relegation zone.

Speaking on The Overlap's Stick to Football, external podcast, the Australian praised the club's "unbelievable" facilities but said financial limitations meant they could not sign his main targets, such as Pedro Neto, Bryan Mbeumo, Antoine Semenyo and Marc Guehi, in 2024.

"When you look at their expenditure and particularly their wages structure, they're not a big club," he said.

"I saw that because, when we were trying to sign players, we weren't in the market for those players."

Portuguese forward Neto joined Chelsea in a £54m deal in 2024, Mbeumo moved to Manchester United for £65m last summer, while Semenyo and Guehi moved to Manchester City for a combined £85m last month.

'You've got to take risks'

Postecoglou guided Spurs to fifth in the Premier League during his first season in charge, but he was sacked after a 17th-placed finish the following season.

He did, however, end the club's 17-year wait for silverware by winning the Europa League in 2025.

"I think they didn't realise that, to actually win, you've got to take some risks," he said.

"I felt like Tottenham as a club were saying, 'we're one of the big boys', and the reality is I don't think they are."

'It's a curious club'

Since Mauricio Pochettino's departure in 2019, Spurs have had five different managers.

Jose Mourinho took charge between 2019 and 2021, but was sacked just days before the Carabao Cup final against Manchester City.

Nuno Espirito Santo's tenure lasted only four months, while Antonio Conte criticised the club's board and called his players 'selfish' before he was sacked after 16 months in charge.

His successor Postecoglou was dismissed last summer, while Frank lasted less than a year of his three-year contract.

Postecoglou, who was sacked by Nottingham Forest after just 39 days in charge earlier this season, questioned whether Frank was aware how things would operate when he accepted the job.

"You know that he can't be the only issue at the club," said the 59-year-old.

"It's a curious club, Tottenham.

"It made a major pivot at the end of last year, not just with me but with [executive chairman] Daniel [Levy] leaving as well, and created this environment of uncertainty.

"There's no guarantee whichever manager you bring in. They've had world-class managers there and they haven't had success. And for what reason?

"Thomas is walking in and what's his objective? What's the club's objective?

"If you're going to do such a major pivot, you've got to understand there's going to be some instability there.

"Did Thomas know he was walking into that? I don't know."

Source: BBC
 
Igor Tudor has agreed a deal to become Tottenham interim head coach until the end of the season

Thomas Frank was sacked earlier this week, with Spurs five points above the relegation places.

Sources told BBC Sport that Spurs wanted an interim manager in place for the players' return to training on Monday.

Tudor has been out of work since being sacked by Juventus in October 2025 following an eight-match winless run, leaving the club eighth in Serie A.

The 47-year-old has had a varied managerial career, having had stints at Lazio, Marseille, Galatasaray and Udinese among others.

He led hometown club Hajduk Split to the Croatian Cup in 2013 to win his only trophy as a manager.

During a nine-year stint as a player with Juventus he won Serie A twice and finished runner-up in the 2003 Champions League final.

Tudor was part of the Croatia squad that was knocked out of the 1998 World Cup at the semi-final stage, eventually finishing third.
Tottenham had several potential short-term options on their radar with former Borussia Dortmund manager Edin Terzic and ex-Red Bull Leipzig boss Marco Rose among them.

Tudor could be considered for the job on a permanent basis if he impresses in the role.

But former Spurs manager Mauricio Pochettino is a candidate to permanently replace Frank, and his contract with the United States men's national team expires after this summer's World Cup.

Roberto De Zerbi is another potential candidate, having left French club Marseille by mutual consent earlier this week.

Source: BBC
 

Tudor could stay at Tottenham for 'long time'​


New Tottenham interim manager Igor Tudor could stay at the club for a "long time", according to the club's sporting director Johan Lange.

The Croatian signed a six-month deal earlier this month to replace Thomas Frank as the club's new head coach for the remainder of the season.

Tudor's main objective is to keep the club in the Premier League, with Spurs sitting five points above the relegation zone with 12 matches remaining.

Sources told BBC Sport before Tudor's appointment that the club were seeking a short-term appointment so they could re-assess their options in the summer, when the availability of potential managers is likely to be greater.

But Lange says the club are open to appointing Tudor on a permanent basis, provided he impresses in the role.

"Of course if things go well, he could be here for a long time," said Lange.

"We interviewed a few [interim] candidates and Igor impressed us very, very much in the interview.

"If you come in here on the Monday and you are playing at the weekend, you need to build relationships with the players immediately.

"You need to come in to build relationships but of course assess the style of the club immediately. He has shown that with great success, not only once but a few times, to come into that.

"That is one of the reasons why we believe he is the best candidate here now, but of course also with his reputation and what he's done in his career."

'There were very few players available'

Lange, who joined Spurs from Aston Villa in 2023, has come in for criticism for the club's lack of transfer activity in the winter window.

Spurs signed England midfielder Conor Gallagher and Brazilian defender Souza for a combined £38m last month but the arrivals were offset by Brennan Johnson's £35m move to Crystal Palace.

Lange, though, has defended the club's business and says the culmination of the Champions League group phase in late January impacted the availability of potential signings.

"It meant that in January, very few players who could make a difference for us now or in the future were available and then it's back to the point even though the squad is too short we still have players we are unable to register for the last 16," said Lange.

"So to bring in players that cannot help us now or we don't believe have potential for the future, that unfortunately for me doesn't make sense. And if you analyse all the transfers in January, I think everyone can see there were very few players available."

Tudor '100% convinced' Spurs will stay up

Sunday's north London derby against Arsenal will mark Tudor's first game in charge.

The former Juventus manager took first team training for the first time on Monday, and his squad have had 12 days to prepare for Sunday's match given they were knocked out of the FA Cup in the third-round.

Tudor has a history of making immediate impacts at clubs and the former Croatia international is adamant he can keep Spurs in the Premier League.

Asked how confident he was Tottenham would still be in the Premier League next season, Tudor replied "100%".

"I'm not here to enjoy it, I'm here to work," said the 47-year-old.

"Enjoy is the first moment, and then there's work to do. It's a fantastic club. I am very focused to do the right things.

"It is not about systems. It is important to become a team, a group, who will look after each other. For me this is basic.

"After that the quality can come out and, for me, this is a team with quality, with legs that can run. There is potential."

Despite coming fourth in the league phase of the Champions League to jump straight into the last 16, Tottenham have struggled in the Premier League.

Since November they have only won two of 17 league matches, with six draws and nine defeats. Their last league victory was a 1-0 success at Crystal Palace on 28 December and they have collected only four out of a possible 24 points in 2026.

Spurs, who finished 17th last season, have been in the top flight of English football in every campaign since one year in the old Second Division in 1977-78.

But they head into Sunday's match against arch rivals Arsenal with an injury crisis.

"It's a very rare situation," added Tudor. "We have 10 injuries, we trained with 13 players.

"It is an even bigger challenge to succeed from this situation. My first goal is that we become a team in the right meaning of the word, that suffers when it needs to suffer, to fight, to run, to have the right mentality. The start is always about mentality."

 
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