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Igor the Interim

First: I dont think it has anything to say who is running the team from now to the summer…
Igor aint there to hold hands with the players, and if if he aint blind he will se that we need more movment without the ball.
BUT: only way we can get back is getting players out of the treatmentroom.. we need to find out why we have twice the number of players out. Not one team can have 10-15 players out and think the have a chance in the league

Didn’t someone put together an analysis which showed 80% of our injuries occour at home?
 
I think the best we ever played under Pochettino was the 3-4-3.

Lloris
Alderwireld Dier Vertonghen
Walker Wanyama Dembele Davies
Eriksen Dele
Kane

Dier could slip in to the midfield so the formation was quite fluid form what I remember. Gray I think would be great in that role.
I think you are slightly remembering chronology wrong. We played that systen long before Wanyama and Alder arrived, or before Dembele switched to CM from LAM.

It was back in the season where Bentaleb and Mason were the CMs and Fazio was the other CB
 
I think you are slightly remembering chronology wrong. We played that systen long before Wanyama and Alder arrived, or before Dembele switched to CM from LAM.

It was back in the season where Bentaleb and Mason were the CMs and Fazio was the other CB

No we didn’t play it until Poch 3rd season. The first time was against Watford away before we played Chelsea at home who had been playing it successfully for most of the season.
 
Looks like we're keeping Andreas Georgson as set piece coach
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They (football.london) said at lunchtime that goalkeeping coach Fabian Otte will stay at Spurs, so are we having two?
 
That video from Sheringham really stank of xenophobia, it was ugly to watch; sneering at some Johnny Foreigner.

He's a bit of a clam though, isn't he? Whenever his name comes up, people who have met him or know someone who has met him seems to not think too fondly of him.

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I also don't like it when former players, supposedly fans, talk about the club as "they" instead of "we", although there's nothing wrong with it, of course.

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Haha. What Mitchell of course forgets is that there wouldn't be a bloody club without its supporters, so it bloody well is a WE.
 
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Based on the video Raziel shared the big difference should be that the 6 doesn't press. It's the LCB and RCB that push forwards with the 2 wingbacks. So it should be reasonably stable. Tudor has a fighting chance as we do have time between games to drive a new system forward.

My only concern is that the casual guys like Muani and Spence that let their effort and standards drop recently will get a free pass. If they do it to Tudor then we're in clear trouble. We need everyone in the trenches whatever system we play.
Hopefully he doesn't invert the FBs something that I felt was a big issue with Ange's system. Neither FB was actually particularly good when inside having fewer passing options neither being particularly suited in that space. Keeping the FBs wide and pressing should suit better.
 
https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/70...hared_gift_article_copylink&smid=url-share-ta

Clubs turn to Igor Tudor when they’re on a cliff edge – Spurs will not daunt him​

Igor Tudor knows better than to think he is your first choice. It is the story of his coaching career. In 12 jobs, he has only been hired at the start of the season three times. His reputation is like that of The Wolf in Pulp Fiction. If you’re hiring Tudor, it’s because someone’s in a panic and there’s a bloody mess to clean up.

Udinese were on a 10-game losing streak in April 2018. They were sliding towards relegation for the first time in almost a quarter of a century. Luigi Delneri got the sack. Massimo Oddo couldn’t revive them. Udinese were flat-lining. Tudor found a pulse. They had four games left. The first one was dramatic. Udinese were seconds away from beating Benevento, only for Bacary Sagna to score an equaliser for Roberto De Zerbi’s team in a dramatic 3-3 draw. But then Udinese beat Verona and Bologna, both 1-0, and Tudor was their saviour.

The Croat left, only to return a year later. Udinese had not learnt their lesson. They needed him again. A point was all that kept them out of the relegation zone. Not even Davide Nicola, the coach best known for rescuing Serie A teams in times of trouble, managed to shock Udinese back to life. Only Tudor could do that. Udinese took points off both Milan clubs, beat the teams around them and ended in 12th place, their joint-highest finish in the past 13 years.

In the interim, Tudor has tried to shrug off the stereotypes and step out of the pigeonholes. Italy has a tendency to place coaches in categories. He was, for a long time, portrayed as an escape artist, like Nicola and Davide Ballardini. A Harry Houdini figure from Split. To leave it behind, he did something unexpected. When Juventus fired Maurizio Sarri in 2020 and promoted Andrea Pirlo, Tudor was invited to become his assistant.

Not many head coaches accept becoming a No 2. But this was Juventus, the club Tudor served as a sharp-elbowed centre-back for the best part of a decade. Pirlo had never coached before. He’d been hired, initially, to take charge of the under-23s. Il Maestro lacked experience. Tudor, by contrast, didn’t, and Juventus’ executive team, which included Fabio Paratici, later of Tottenham Hotspur, thought he might be able to lend a hand.

While Juventus’ nine-year title-winning streak ended that season, they played a modern hybrid style of football with Rodrigo Bentancur and Dejan Kulusevski (the pair made more than 40 appearances each and their now Tottenham team-mate Radu Dragusin played four times), beating Barcelona at the Camp Nou and winning the Coppa Italia. Since that 2020-21 campaign, Juventus have not bettered the 78 points they racked up in the league. Some thought Pirlo deserved more time. He was fired after only one year.

But Pirlo’s career since at Fatih Karagumruk in Turkey, then Sampdoria in Italy’s second division, and now Dubai United has raised questions: how much of that season at Juventus was down to him and the presence of players such as Cristiano Ronaldo? And how much of it was down to his assistants, Tudor and Antonio Gagliardi?

A partial answer came when Tudor stepped in for Eusebio Di Francesco at Hellas Verona in September 2021. They had lost every game and, as happens every year since they were last promoted, pundits had taken one look at their squad and predicted relegation. Tudor instead made them a revelation. It was their best season in years, a ninth-place finish, 53 points.

Verona’s attack was the joint-fourth best in the league in Tudor’s time. Atletico Madrid manager Diego Simeone’s son, Giovanni, scored 17 times, his best goalscoring season, and got a move to Napoli soon afterwards. Other players’ careers were launched by Tudor, as was his own.

The same executives who picked De Zerbi to coach Marseille in 2024 picked him two years earlier. Only once in the past eight seasons have Marseille collected more points than under Tudor in 2022-23. Yet he was not made to feel welcome.

.. more in link
 
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