http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/fo...rs-left-frustrated-in-search-for-manager.html
Southampton v Tottenham Hotspur: Spurs left frustrated in search for manager
Spurs chairman Daniel Levy is told that Frank De Boer and Michael Laudrup will not leave Ajax and Swansea mid-season while Franco Baldini's signings are criticised.
Tottenham are becoming increasingly desperate in their efforts to find a new head coach.
It is understood Spurs are yet to settle on a final shortlist of realistic targets or make a firm decision on whether to pursue a short-term or long-term appointment.
Interim head coach Tim Sherwood takes charge of the team again for Sunday’s game against Southampton, but chairman Daniel Levy is struggling to find a permanent replacement for Andre Villas-Boas.
Frank De Boer insists he is happy at Ajax and has no plans to leave the Dutch club mid-season, but that has not stopped Tottenham Hotspur trying to establish whether he could still be a long-term target for the summer.
Spurs are understood to have looked in several different directions already and Levy has asked key allies, both inside and outside the club, for their thoughts and information.
FC Basel’s Murat Yakin and Zenit Saint Petersburg’s Luciano Spalletti are believed to be of interest to Spurs, but Southampton’s Mauricio Pochettino claims he has not spoken to Tottenham and Michael Laudrup insists he would not leave Swansea mid-season.
Sherwood confirmed he would like the job on a permanent basis. But asked if Levy had given him any firm indications of his plans, the former midfielder said: “He can’t can he because the pressure’s on him if it goes wrong. I don’t like to think negatively, but if we weren’t to get a good result ... he’s taking every game as it comes.”
Sherwood is “open-minded” about the prospect of working with director of football Franco Baldini, but he admitted the jury is still out on a number of the club’s summer signings and questioned whether they were better than the English players who were let go.
Baldini helped Tottenham spend £110 million on seven new players, while Steven Caulker, Tom Huddlestone and Scott Parker were sold, and Jake Livermore and Tom Carroll were sent out on loan.
Questioned over whether he would be happy to work with Baldini, Sherwood replied: “I’ve never known anything different, as I’ve never managed without a director of football.
I’m open-minded to it. My style of management would just have to evolve.” A number of Tottenham’s new signings have struggled to make an impact and Sherwood said the club must be careful to only spend money on players who improve the first team.
“Every club that has been successful at bringing players through always buy players as well, that’s the nature of it,” said Sherwood.
“My point of view is I like to buy players who are going to make a difference to your 11. They need time, a lot of these boys that joined in the summer. When you come across and play in a different country, I never did it, but I recognise it does take time.”
Pushed on whether players who were signed in the summer were better than Caulker and Huddlestone, Sherwood said: “The proof’s in the pudding. Let’s give them time to see if they can adapt because in the end they might be better than the ones you mentioned. But, at the moment, you’d have to say there is not much between them.
“You want to keep young players at your club. You’ve worked hard at bringing them through.
“But they can’t all stay and sometimes the manager and the board need to make a decision that they want to bring in what they perceive to be extra quality and then you have to see how it goes. You make that decision and live or die by it.
“The loans have worked for us. Danny Rose is a good example. Nobody really trusted Danny, did they? Not until he had to go and prove himself on loan. I trusted him. Andros Townsend as well. Livermore now is playing every game at Hull, so we have got good players who are good assets for other clubs at the moment.”
Sherwood does not believe Tottenham need to re-enter the transfer market next month, despite the fact the club have been considering a loan move for Juventus forward Mirko Vucinic.
“I don’t know how we fit all the players out there, there are so many players,” he said. “It’s 15-a-side out there. What are we going to do with them all? Unless they’re going to make a difference to your starting 11, I suggest that there’s no spending needed there.”