As ambitious as he might be, he would be unwise to go to Man U at this point. It’s never been more obvious which teams are teams (Spurs, Leicester, Arsenal, Watford) and which are collections of players (Man U, Liverpool). It takes a couple of years to go from the latter to the former, and it takes belief in the manager and a willingness to transform the club according to his vision. Would Pochettino get that at Man U? It’s very doubtful, I think. Meanwhile, someone else would reap the benefits of his work here. A move away from Spurs before another couple of years elapse would mark Pochettino as a particularly fickle coach, which would hurt his long term career prospects, given he left Saints relatively soon. The justification there was that they sacked Cortese, who apparently was a good friend and ally. So I would be surprised (if not shocked) to see Pochettino leave in the next year or two, at least. I think he needs to win something here first.I think that in a profession as precarious as football management you do not walk away from success. MP is still a young man with plenty of time to take the big stage and there is no better way than taking an underachieving giant like Spurs back to the top.
These football writers are extremely boring, they cannot see past their top 4 noses. We've heard all this crap a hundred times no wonder newspapers are becoming a thing of the past.
The story atm is Leicester City, go and write something interesting.
The new stadium opening may be a bigger factor than most think for players (and coach) evaluating their future. It’s not just fans who are hoping for an ideal world, where Spurs are in the CL and suddenly a significantly bigger and better club. Who knows what the chances are of that happening? But everything has been planned to make the chances of it happening as good as possible, and things are certainly heading in the right direction at this point.
Last edited: