Tudor's Tottenham Tenure Teetering: Where Do Spurs Go From Here?
A Club in Freefall
There is crisis, there is chaos, and then there is whatever is currently unfolding at Tottenham Hotspur. A 3-0 home drubbing by Nottingham Forest on 22 March 2026 has left Spurs 17th in the Premier League with 30 points from 31 games, perched just one point above the relegation zone. If you had told any Spurs supporter a year ago that relegation would be a genuine conversation in March, they would have laughed you out of the room. Nobody is laughing now.
Igor Tudor, appointed as interim manager in mid-February after Thomas Frank's sacking, has overseen a run that would make even the most hardened optimist wince. His record reads: played seven across all competitions, won one (a Champions League dead rubber), drawn one, lost five. It is, by any reasonable measure, dire.
The Numbers Tell a Grim Story
Let us not sugarcoat the statistics, because they are genuinely startling:
- Spurs have gone 13 Premier League matches without a win, equalling the club's second-longest winless run in their entire history, a record previously set in November 1912.
- They have managed just 2 home wins from 16 home games this season, the worst home record in the division.
- Only 2 wins from their last 22 league matches. Two. From twenty-two.
- Their points tally after 31 games is joint-lowest in club history, matching the 1914/15 season.
- Six consecutive defeats under the Frank-Tudor era marked the first time in Tottenham's 143-year existence that the club had lost six on the bounce.
The last Premier League victory came on 28 December 2025. That is nearly three months without tasting league success. For a club with Champions League ambitions not so long ago, the decline has been breathtaking in its speed.
Tudor's Impossible Brief
In fairness to Tudor, he walked into a situation that was already ablaze. Thomas Frank, appointed on a three-year deal in June 2025 to replace Ange Postecoglou, managed just 7 wins from 26 league games before getting the boot. Key players have been missing for months: James Maddison has been sidelined with a knee injury since pre-season, while Mo Kudus and Rodrigo Bentancur have only recently returned to ball work after being out since January.
Then there is the boardroom upheaval. Daniel Levy's departure as chairman after 25 years has created a vacuum at the top of the club. Fabio Paratici, the former sporting director who had originally recommended Tudor as an option back in autumn 2025, also left in February. The infrastructure around the team is crumbling just as quickly as results on the pitch.
Tudor himself was absent from post-match media duties after the Forest defeat due to an immediate family bereavement, with assistant Bruno Saltor stepping in. It was a reminder that behind the tactical diagrams and touchline fury, there are human beings dealing with real life.
So What Happens Next?
The consensus across football journalism is clear: Tudor's departure is a matter of when, not if. Reliable transfer journalist Fabrizio Romano has confirmed Tudor will leave in the summer regardless of what happens in the remaining seven fixtures. Jamie Carragher has gone further, calling it the "worst appointment in Tottenham's history".
The leading candidates to take over on a permanent basis are Roberto De Zerbi, currently unemployed after leaving Marseille, who is reportedly the club's dream appointment, and Mauricio Pochettino, the man who took Spurs to a Champions League final and remains deeply loved by supporters despite now managing the United States national team. Other names in the frame include Robbie Keane, currently at Ferencvaros, and Sean Dyche.
Seven Games to Save a Season
Spurs face Sunderland away on 12 April after a three-week break, followed by Brighton at home, Wolves and Aston Villa away, Leeds at home, Chelsea away, and Everton at home. It is a mixed bag, but at this point, every fixture feels like a cup final.
The three-week gap before the Sunderland match could prove either a blessing or a curse. Time to regroup and get bodies back, certainly. But also time for the negativity to fester and the speculation over Tudor's future to intensify.
What Tottenham desperately need is a plan, not just for the next seven games, but for next season and beyond. Three managers in a single campaign, a departing chairman, missing key players, and a fanbase stretched to breaking point. The problems at the club run far deeper than any one manager can fix. Tudor may well be gone soon, but whoever replaces him will inherit a rebuilding job of enormous proportions.
Read the original article at source.
No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts.