I can’t wait until a book comes out about Levy
I can’t wait until a book comes out
about Levy
By Don Scully
Most of the
managers that have dealt with Levy are keeping schtum, however, there will be a
time when they will open their mouths and tell everybody the truth about him and
his ways (which have been detrimental to the Tottenham team).
I bet Pochettino
and Mourinho have a few stories they could also tell about Levy and how
Tottenham is run, but while they are still in the football market, it would be
very foolish to say anything, but the time will come.
This leads
me nicely onto Andre Villa-Boas or AVB to you and me. In a recent discussion
with the Atlantic Magazine, he has revealed the ‘animosity’ he has for Levy
after he was forced to leave the club.
Yes, our former
Tottenham Hotspur manager, Andre Villas-Boas, revealed his time at Tottenham
and his dealings with the club’s Chairman. Villas-Boas joined Spurs in 2012 after
being let go by the Russian owned football club, Chelsea, replacing Harry Redknapp
as manager at Spurs. In his time at the club, he only managed 80 games in
charge but was quickly sacked by Levy at the end of 2013. Nevertheless, he managed
to win just over half of these games.
Eight years after
leaving us, he is still niggled by the way he was treated, and he told The
Athletic magazine of his strained working relationship with Levy. He claimed
that Levy wanted him to leave and take the PSG job because it would have
resulted in a £15m pay-out for Tottenham, but he wouldn’t play ball with Levy
and didn’t want to leave. He said: “I understood Tottenham wanted me to go to
Paris. I had an offer from Paris Saint-Germain at the end of the (2012-13)
season. But I said, ‘No’. My clause for leaving Tottenham, which (Chairman
Daniel) Levy was negotiating with Paris, was £15 million. Chelsea had paid €15
million for me, and in Tottenham, it was £15 million. And Levy was, of course,
negotiating this.”
He then went
on and added: “So I didn’t have the best of relationships with Daniel. We were
correct throughout, but we were not in love with each other, and I think they
wanted me to accept the offer. But I wanted to stay. I had a great time in
London. The team was good. I didn’t feel at that time that Paris was what I
wanted for my career, so I decided to risk on that one more year, and for me, I
take things a lot personally. I have a different vision of football and, for
me, whenever somebody declines something that’s normally better — be it
contract wise or the possibility of you winning — for me, you are entitled to a
contract renewal. That’s how I see things. It wasn’t the case. And that led to
a bad, bad animosity between us. To the point where it was December, and there
were no conditions for us to continue working, and we reached an agreement to
leave.”
When he was
asked about getting the sack, he said, “Although we lost heavily to Liverpool (5-0),
we were on more points than the season we beat the points record. But the
environment wasn’t there, and it was best for both parties.”
And he won’t
be the only bitter person who had dealings with Levy. There will be a whole
host of ex-managers and those that had dealings with him lining up to give
their two pennies worth. And I am sure their stories will make interesting
reading. But, where the fans are concerned, Levy has been walking on fragile
ice and would love to read such a book, if only to say, “I told you so”.
By Don Scully
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