Would someone be kind enough to copy and paste please?
When Antonio Conte took over at
Tottenham Hotspur in November, the club’s morale was on the floor.
Spurs’ previous game, a 3-0 home defeat to
Manchester United, had seen
the fanbase erupt into outright mutiny. The doomed “glorified caretaker” Nuno Espirito Santo was one target, but so was chairman Daniel Levy, the board in general, and some of the players. There was anger at how far the team had fallen and at years of perceived mismanagement — Mauricio Pochettino’s sacking, the miserable Jose Mourinho era, the attempts to join the European Super League. It felt as though the soul had been ripped out of the club.
This was the environment Conte was walking into, and there have been periods when it looked like he wouldn’t even last the season. But after weathering some pretty heavy storms,
many partly of his own making, he has led Spurs back into the
Champions League six months after taking the job. Conte has frequently said how absurd the idea of Spurs, ninth at the time of his appointment, finishing in the top four seemed back then. Last month he said it would be a “miracle” if they did it. As he explained on Friday, had Levy said he expected Champions League qualification when he appointed Conte, his response would have been: “Are you joking?”
But thanks to his ferocious commitment to extracting every last drop out of his players, Conte and Spurs have pulled off that miracle — confirming fourth spot on the final day with a thumping 5-0 win at
Norwich.
It’s been a rocky road and, on the night of that infamous meltdown at
Burnley in February, Conte said to the players in the dressing room that maybe it would be better for everyone if he left.
But Spurs have eventually got over the line, and this is how. From the shock therapy of the first two months, via that turbulent period when every week it felt like Conte was raging at himself or the club or both, to the sprint finish that reeled
Arsenal in. The players have evolved and improved, while Conte has also modified his approach. After the 0-0 draw at
Brentford for instance, he did not berate the players but instead said nothing in the dressing room and waited until the next training session to impress upon them how they needed to react. Spurs then took 13 points from their final five games to secure fourth spot.
Phase one: Appointment and shock therapy
Going all the way back to Conte’s appointment, it was another occasion — like the sacking of Pochettino and hiring of Mourinho — when Levy acted quickly and decisively.
It was Levy who led the secret negotiations with Conte, not managing director of football Fabio Paratici, and he was absolutely determined to hire the man he had been unable to land a few months earlier. Spurs were actually only five points off the top four at this point, but performances had been even worse than the results and Levy knew that, after just 10
Premier League games, Nuno had to go.
The relatively small points gap to fourth also convinced Levy that Champions League qualification was still possible — especially with Manchester United so inconsistent and refusing to sack their own lame-duck manager in Ole Gunnar Solskjaer.
Conte himself was being told by some close to him that he should hold out for a better job than Tottenham, a Europa Conference League club in a state of disarray. But as Conte has put it recently, coaching and winning is “like a drug” to him and even after only a few months out of the game he was desperate to return. Spurs offered him the opportunity to show he was still an elite manager, and prove that he didn’t need a big budget to outwit the Premier League’s big beasts.
He had watched a lot of videos of Tottenham before starting the job, as well as some of their matches live on television — including the humiliating 3-1 defeat to Arsenal in September. He knew the big problem was the team’s defence, but he was confident that with his coaching he could solve it.
One view at the club was that appointing Conte removed the excuses from players who had fallen back on them for too long. By getting one of the best managers in the world, the players would have to start looking at themselves. They would have no one to blame if things didn’t work out.
In general, there was a feeling that the energy had left the club under Mourinho and Nuno and that standards had dropped. Conte came in and gave everyone a fresh start, keeping everyone on their toes, from staff to players. Both felt more challenged in Conte’s first week than they had done in months under Nuno.
As
The Athletic reported at the time, in Conte’s first week
he told staff there was a problem with food and nutrition. On his first day, he saw one first-team player eating nachos. He was very clear that there would be no more heavy foods like nachos and sandwiches. Ketchup, mayonnaise, oil and butter were all banned, with Conte feeling that a number of the squad were not in good enough shape.
He told the players this after his first match in charge, a 3-2 Europa Conference League win against Vitesse Arnhem, and explained that although he was proud of their efforts he would not tolerate having players who were in anything other than peak physical condition. He told the team they had to be stronger, suffer together and make sacrifices.
Being willing to “suffer” is one of Conte’s mantras, and there was lots of suffering in his first week. On his very first training session, one player’s physical output was so high that it was measured as being around 75 per cent of what he would normally have done in a match.
The day after beating Vitesse, Conte sat the squad down for a 75-minute video session to analyse the match in forensic detail. There was also lots of 11-vs-zero “shadow play” to ram home some of his messages about how the team needed to be set up. Conte always possesses a manic energy, and never more so than in these early weeks. The characterisation from those at Hotspur Way was of a man consumed by the sense that without a pre-season he had so much to do and so little time to do it.
The players were exhausted after his sessions, describing themselves as “dead”. One observer said they looked like they’d just run a marathon.
For Conte to get the kind of buy-in that Nuno, and to an extent Mourinho, never did it was essential the players saw the benefits from their considerable exertions. Thankfully the results were instantly obvious — in Conte’s second league match in charge, Spurs outran Marcelo Bielsa’s notoriously fit
Leeds United team. After a few games, the team had gone from covering the least distance per game in the Premier League under Nuno to the most. It was a remarkable turnaround that also led to a big uptick in results — six wins, three draws and one defeat from Conte’s first 10 matches in charge in all competitions.