The Daily Telegraph - Sport

Coach’s move to rival is damning sight for Levy

Chairman’s stubborn refusal to even talk to Pochettino on coming back is a final twist of the knife for Tottenham fans

- By Jason Burt CHIEF FOOTBALL CORRESPOND­ENT

In a season of collapsed ambition and crushing disappoint­ment for Tottenham Hotspur, Mauricio Pochettino taking the Chelsea job is a final dagger to the heart for their fans.

It is also another serious addition to the charge sheet at Tottenham, who appear a club riven with not just uncertaint­y but unjustifie­d vanity.

The bare fact that Spurs did not even apparently pick up the phone and talk to Pochettino about returning, in the knowledge that he was open to the prospect, is stunning. As stunning and – yes – vain as letting it be known they would not be pursuing interest in Julian Nagelsmann.

The former Bayern Munich head coach may well, as was feared, be too expensive for Spurs, which is fair enough. But he also had misgivings about the club and who would be their next sporting director – not that chairman Daniel Levy will probably use that title for whoever succeeds Fabio Paratici.

The Italian, banned from sport for 30 months for false accounting while he was with Juventus, had the role of “managing director of football”. Whatever that means. But then so much of what Spurs do is mired not just in confusion but in a lack of identity.

The brutal truth is no one knows what Spurs stand for. There have been so many apparently kneejerk, confused decisions that their identity has been lost. There are no cultural signposts as to what Spurs are anymore so it can be no surprise that it is hard to work out what their planned direction is.

There are a few very good players and some extremely competent staff at Spurs – from the boardroom in Rebecca Caplehorn, the director of football administra­tion and governance, to the football department in performanc­e director Gretar Steinsson and not least acting head coach Ryan Mason – but where is the route map?

Harry Kane – with one year left on his contract and his own future uncertain – hit the nail on the head in recent interviews when he accused Spurs of having lost values and lacking a culture in recent years. Mason agreed and everyone knew what they meant.

The fact is that since Pochettino was sacked in 2019, Spurs have lost their way. They were heading in the wrong direction in his final months, but that appeared largely due to a lack of investment in the squad that was catching up on them.

After Pochettino’s sacking, Levy has been guilty of poor judgment and bad appointmen­ts as he has hired a succession of short-term managers in the forlorn pursuit of immediate success: Jose Mourinho, Nuno Espirito Santo and Antonio

Harry Kane hit the nail on the head when he accused Spurs of having lost values and lacking a culture

Conte. Player recruitmen­t has been just as disappoint­ing and Spurs, with their superb stadium and excellent training ground, look like they are rattling around in accommodat­ion way above their station.

And now their best manager for many years, the one who helped them almost shed that “Spursy” reputation, has joined their bitter rivals. How will it look to Kane, who almost single-handedly guided Spurs to eighth in the Premier League, if Pochettino lifts a trophy in this country before he does?

Spurs could have had him back. Instead it appears Levy could not swallow his pride. Instead it looked like he could not stomach bringing back a manager he has unsuccessf­ully replaced, having had to shell out tens of millions of pounds for those who followed him into the dugout and were also sacked.

That, too, smacks of vanity from Levy, who has made serious mistakes, not least after being so unnerved by Spurs’ involvemen­t in the European Super League.

Arsenal also stupidly signed up to that but – and this may hurt Spurs even more than Pochettino going to Chelsea – they have now left their north London neighbours behind because they have organised themselves properly.

Just look at Arsenal compared to Spurs. The clubs have similar-sized stadiums, budgets and are similar in scale. But that is where the comparison ends.

Arsenal have bought into Mikel Arteta the way Spurs used to buy into Pochettino and have created an environmen­t and support structure around him to succeed. The pathway is there. No one is talking about the owner, “silent” Stan Kroenke anymore. Everyone is talking about Arteta, the players and using this season’s unexpected title bid as a bridgehead rather than the endgame.

In 2015-16 Spurs came close but did not kick on. They finished second the following year but were already overreachi­ng. The 2019 Champions League final felt like the completion of something rather than, as with the team who beat them, Liverpool, the continuati­on of it. That is the difference.

What Spurs have done with the training ground, stadium and the general running of the club is impressive. The organic growth is highly commended.

Levy has moved them up, made them competitiv­e in an environmen­t when they were up against clubs with superior resources. But they plateaued and are now in danger of falling on to a downward slope because of the short-termism that has infected the club and which the chairman has to take responsibi­lity for.

Pochettino could have helped with the cultural reset that Spurs need and maybe Levy will delegate his new, de facto No2, Scott Munn, the incoming chief football officer, to execute that. It would make sense for Levy.

For Spurs, it is about much more than making the right managerial appointmen­t. Whoever comes in has to have the right conditions; to work under the right identity. Otherwise he, as with all of Pochettino’s successors, is doomed to fail.

Meanwhile, Pochettino is back at Chelsea. It will be a twist of the knife for Spurs fans.

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