Daily Mirror

Poch just didn’t see the sack coming... the chairman told him to pack up and go that night

KANE TELLS TEAM-MATES OF EX-BOSS’ BRUTAL AXING

- BY MATTHEW DUNN

A CONVERSATI­ON among senior Spurs players in the club’s plush canteen highlights the brutality of the sacking of manager Mauricio Pochettino.

Jan Vertonghen is telling Harry Kane and Heung-Min Son that the Argentine must have known the end was coming.

“He didn’t know already, I spoke to him last night,” says Kane, before reporting Pochettino’s account of his conversati­on with Daniel Levy to his astonished team-mates.

“Mauricio told me, ‘The chairman called me and said, ‘Can I talk? It will be a shame but you will need to pack your things and you leave tonight’.”

Inviting Amazon Prime to bring their cameras behind the closed doors told a very different story to the one that Levy anticipate­d when the deal was struck last summer.

Instead of documentin­g more Champions League glory under Pochettino, the film-makers captured a club in turmoil.

Despite five-and-a-half years of remarkable improvemen­t that took them all the way to the Champions League final, the team seemed to hit a wall at the start of the season and Pochettino was sacked after just three wins in the first 12 games left Spurs 14th in the Premier League.

“The perception of me is that I am hard-nosed, stubborn, don’t care and not ambitious,” says Levy. “A lot of that is unfair.

“They just don’t understand how hard it is to get to that place where you improve the team.

“The engine of the club is the team and I hate it when we lose. It is not something I can directly control – obviously I can have an influence by hopefully making the right decisions.

“But reaching this decision took a lot of heartache.

My heart was telling me don’t do it and my brain was telling me I needed to do it.

“It was the most emotional decision I have had to make.”

The omnipresen­t cameras capture details that Jose Mourinho may have preferred had remained hidden.

Did he really want the world to know it takes a 45-page contract to secure his services?

Or for us to see his ears prick up when he hears Sky Sports News on the television in the corner of his office start to analyse his appointmen­t?

Mourinho’s interest quickly turns to disgust. When a social media post is read out suggesting he is past it, he swears at the set and turns it off.

More important now is how the players react to their training ground secrets being laid bare.

Certainly Dele Alli’s soon-to-be very public dressing down is uncomforta­bly close to the knuckle.

The only plus side is that the Tottenham manager will finally discover who soaked his trainers thanks to a clumsy piece of ball control that knocks over a full mug of coffee – Serge Aurier. Throughout, though, Mourinho makes sure he is the

star. “The guy never smiles; the guy is ruthless – this is the perception,” he says of himself.

“The truth is that there is some truth in that!

“Since I was a kid playing two against two with my friends in the street in front of my house, I was not there playing just for fun. I wanted to win against my best mates. Football is for me about trying to win.

“I have to show the players the person I am, the manager I am and to make the players believe in me and work with me well as soon as possible.”

Results in the new season will dictate whether ‘All or Nothing’ is the motivation­al masterclas­s of a maverick or the psychologi­cal parlour tricks of a music hall magician no longer playing to his era. At present, though, there are no plans for a sequel.

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