Sacking Mourinho would be pointless.
Sacking Mourinho
would be pointless.
By Don Scully
Sacking Mourinho wouldn’t solve Tottenham’s problems. The club's
problems lie with Daniel Levy (& Joe Lewis), nobody else.
Ever since Levy (& Lewis) took over the club 20 years ago (from
Alan Sugar), their focus has been on profits for themselves, their board and
the shareholders. After that, the emphasis would be on building a state of the
art stadium (a cash cow), and then, and only then, any meagre leftover crumbs
would be handed down to their manager.
Granted, I accept the building of a state of the art stadium for the 21st
century (and sacrifices have to be made). But now they’ve built it, Levy (&
Lewis) need to build a team to go with that stadium. At the moment, we've got a
top of the range Rolls Royce, but with a Vauxhall engine in it (sputtering and
spurting away).
Daniel Levy is looking for naming rights and wants something in the
region of £20 million per year to advertise a companies name. At the same time,
anybody who wants to invest in Tottenham also wants to invest in a team and
stadium with potential (which will help promote their name). At the moment, it
would be a lopsided deal (in favour of Levy and not the company).
A couple of reasons
why Daniel Levy hasn't invested as other top clubs have:
·
He believes such huge transfers isn’t sustainable.
·
He also believes that he should put any profits, before any
team building, into the boards and shareholders' pockets first.
Both would be false
economies.
Levy has stated that it isn't sustainable for top clubs to keep
splashing out vast amounts of money for players'. That is ok if other clubs
shared that philosophy, but they don't. They continue giving their football
managers a large war chest to compete in the transfer window (hoping to win as
many trophies as possible, including the Premier League). So, while Levy is
standing by that tight-fisted-belief, we slowly drift further away from the top
teams. As we are witnessing at the moment. To be a top-four or even the top one
club, we have to compete on an equal footing (invest more in players). In other
words, we must make similar financial purchases as Chelsea, City, United, and
Liverpool do. Levy goes into deals for top players, but quickly ends up with an
inferior product because the price was too high for their original choice.
As for "false economy"; if Levy invests as other clubs do and
achieves the gold standard (trophies and high league position), it will create
more wealth for the club. Being stingy will result in falling standards, as we
are witnessing at the moment. Sacking Mourinho wouldn't solve Levy’s
stinginess; it is a mental blockage on Levy’s part.
Levy should start considering that there are defects in his business
way of thinking. He has been at the club now for 20 years, and in all that
time, he has only managed one trophy under his watch (League Cup in 2008). He
should ask the question, why? And why has he gone through 13 managers without
any trophies?
His managers:
When he came to the club in 2001, he inherited an Arsenal man as the
club’s manager, George Graham. Understandably, he replaced him with David Pleat
(temporarily) until he could figure out who he wanted to manage the team for a
pittance. A stroke of genius, he hired a Spurs legend, Glenn Hoddle.
Hoddle and the team began the 2002–03 season in excellent form, and
Hoddle was named Premiership Manager of the Month for August 2002 after we
ended the month top of the League. Sadly, we finished in a disappointing 10th
place at the end of the season. The pressure began to build up on Hoddle, and Levy
started to wield his axe and sacked him in September 2003 after a slow start to
the season, in which the team picked up just four points from their opening six
league games. He was at the club for approximately two years.
Back came Pleat as caretaker manager. This time around, Levy looked to
the continent for his manager. Finally, he picked Jacques Santini (who?). Santini
took the managerial position at Tottenham after Euro 2004. He then surprisingly
announced his resignation after just 13 games. Officially, Santini left England
due to personal problems, but it was widely reported that a series of
disagreements with the then Sporting Director Frank Arnesen, which led to his
departure. Whether we can blame Levy on this is a moot point.
Martin Jol was next up. He was a popular figure at the club. He was our
manager for approximately three years. Because of the large amount of money
that had been spent (a significant amount by who’s standards?), the team were
expected by Levy to challenge for a top-four place in the 2007–08 season. After
we lost our opening two games, Club Secretary John Alexander and Director Paul
Kemsley were photographed in a Spanish hotel with Sevilla FC manager Juande
Ramos, who then claimed that Tottenham had made him a "dizzying
offer" to become their manager, though this was denied by Levy (he would,
wouldn’t he?). This undermined Jol's position, and he was eventually sacked by
Levy on 25 October 2007 during our 2–1 defeat to Getafe CF in the UEFA Cup.
News of the sacking was known around the ground before the final whistle was
blown before even Jol had become aware of his fate. Jol confessed that he first
became aware of the decision when his nephew told him of a text message he
received saying Jol was to leave the job. This was an early sign in how Levy
wished to be known in how he operated. Ruthless, vicious and quick.
Clive Allen & Alex Inglethorpe were asked to take charge while Levy
looked for another replacement. That replacement was, and up until now, the
only man to win us a trophy under Levy's watch, Juande Ramos. After a promising
pre-season, the 2008–09 season saw Ramos lead us to our worst ever start to a
league campaign, with the team placed bottom of the table after acquiring just
two points from our opening eight matches. Levy jumped into action and did what
he did best, kicked Ramos in the proverbials. In other words, Ramos was sacked
on 25 October, along with assistant manager Gus Poyet. He was at the club for less
than a year.
After two European managerial failures Levy looked for a replacement
closer to home and an Englishman. Harry Redknapp was announced as Ramos's
immediate replacement. Upon becoming manager, Harry’s revigorated team defeated
Bolton 2–0 and register our first league win of the season.
Harry was at the club roughly for four years. Despite leading us to our
second fourth-place finish in three years and missing out on UEFA Champions
League qualification only due to Chelsea winning the competition, Redknapp was
sacked by Levy on 13 June 2012, after failing to agree terms on a new contract.
Levy, again, wanted to flex his muscles and show everybody how God should
behave. Harry left the club with Tottenham in a healthy position (5th).
André Villas-Boas & Tim Sherwood, in quick succession, came and then
were quickly fired. This led the way for Pochettino to be another one of our
managers to go and fail because of a lack of funds. After taking us to the
European Champions Final, but had problems in the League, he ended up as
another casualty of Levy’s iron-fisted management style. He was at the club for
5 years but gone in a blink of an eye. Pochettino also started asking for
proper funds, and that quickly put him in Levy’s bad books. Funds were ok, but
not at the expense of his and the club's wages/ profits and shareholders
bonuses. He had to go. Levy then looked around for somebody who was gullible
and was desperate for work (somebody who had been out of work for a while but
had a winning reputation). Somebody who would be so glad of a job that he
wouldn’t expect too much in the way of funds to build his team.
Pochettino was replaced with probably the highest-profile manager we’ve
ever purchased at Tottenham. However, like all the other managers who had dared
to tread before Levy, Mourinho was/ is also starved of funds and was expected
to do miracles with the team and win something with meagre handouts. At the
same time, get the club into the top four to make even more profits for Levy,
Lewis, the board and shareholders.
Daniel Levy is one of the highest-paid Directors in the Premier League,
if not the highest-paid. If he put himself, the board and shareholders after
the team's interests, by his thinking, they/ he would probably see a reduction
in their/ his free-flowing-lolly. Priorities, priorities, old boy (that is the
way of thinking)!
Anybody who comes to the club is expected to achieve a higher standard
than Chelsea, City, United, Liverpool and Arsenal in the Premier league with
fewer funds. Sacking Mourinho won’t change this philosophy. We have a world-class
stadium with a pint-sized mentality board (where the team is concerned). We may
be lucky and win a trophy here or there while Levy runs the Titanic. We might
even do an Ipswich Town, Derby City or even a Leicester City (win the league on
rare occasions), but until Levy & Lewis loosen the purse strings, we will
never be in the same class as Trophy hoarders Chelsea, Liverpool, Arsenal, the
two Manchester clubs and anybody else who has a Chairman/ owner who wants
consistency and glory for his club (i.e.trophies and Premier league titles).
All said, without cracking a smile or a hint of irony (well, not
much!).
Anyway, I’ve digressed a bit, the point of this article was that
sacking Mourinho and replacing him with another Pochettino-look-alike (in other
words, wet behind the years; no trophies to his name) would be pointless, and
we would still be where all the other managers had been before Mourinho, up the
creek with no-fucking Trophies or funds (but expected to compete with the best).
What are your thoughts? Do you think sacking Mourinho (if we don’t make
the top four) would be the answer? Or is Levy the problem?
Don Scully
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