Global Times

Crisis, what crisis? Mourinho scrambles for answers to Spurs’ slump

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Jose Mourinho has played down talk of a crisis at struggling Tottenham but is scratching his head as he seeks a way to pull the club out of their spiral of decline.

Sunday’s 2- 1 defeat at West Ham was Spurs’ fifth in their past six Premier League games and they now trail the fourthplac­ed Hammers by nine points.

Tottenham appear a shadow of the side that topped the table in December and Mourinho is in one of the worst spells of his long managerial career.

The Portuguese has earned 81 points after 50 league matches in charge of the London club, the lowest total at this stage in any managerial stint. In sharp contrast, he had 126 points at the same point of his first spell in charge of Chelsea.

“I wouldn’t say crisis,” said Mourinho when asked about the form of his team, now languishin­g in ninth spot in the Premier League table.

“If crisis is frustratio­n and sadness in the dressing room, I’d say so because nobody is happy and we all showed that in this game.”

Things might have been different at the London Stadium had Gareth Bale’s fierce strike gone in instead of hitting the crossbar or Son Heung- min’s deflected effort not looped onto the post.

Mourinho, 58, admitted his team needed a change of fortunes.

He will be only too aware that his predecesso­r, Mauricio Pochettino, was fired just months after guiding Spurs to the Champions League final in 2019.

Despite Tottenham’s struggles, Mourinho can win the club’s first silverware for 13 years when they take on league leaders Manchester City in the League Cup final in April.

And they are well- placed to reach the last 16 of the Europa League – another potential route back into the Champions League.

Ultimately, his future could hinge on whether Spurs can find a way back into Europe’s top club competitio­n, which he has won twice before, with Porto and Inter Milan.

“Very hard, yes, very hard, but mathematic­ally possible,” Mourinho said when asked about his team’s chances of finishing in the top four.

“Of course our team has problems, and the problems they have reflect on results and on points, but I also believe that a little bit of that light, a little bit of that luck that you also need in football to win matches, has to be back.”

The consequenc­es of missing out on the Champions League would be enormous, not just financiall­y but also the possibilit­y that stars such as Harry Kane could lose patience and look elsewhere.

Mourinho himself is confident that he remains the right man to turn around Spurs’ fortunes.

“Mine and my coaching staff’s methods are second to nobody in the world,” he said. “Sometimes the results are the consequenc­e of multiple situations in football.”

The problem for Mourinho is that time is not on his side and he will know that whatever the frustratio­ns, the buck ultimately stops with him.

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