Conte’s words may have been accurate, but Levy will not wilt – what happens on the pitch will speak far louder
By Jack Pitt-Brooke and James Horncastle 5h ago 75
Tottenham head coach Antonio Conte’s interview with Sky Italia this week has attracted plenty of attention.
If you read what he said, there is really very little to disagree with. Yet whether you think it was wise or constructive for Conte to speak in these terms about the club’s transfer policy is another matter.
There are plenty of reasons why a manager will say something in public — getting a message out to the players, the club or the fans — and ultimately comments should be assessed for their political function as much as for their truth value. Just because something is true, it does not mean it is always helpful to say it.
This time last year, remember, then-manager Jose Mourinho was hammering his Spurs players in public, despite requests from club staff not to do so. Mourinho’s analysis might have been accurate, but it was not wise to keep airing it publicly, and he was eventually sacked.
This is the situation Tottenham find themselves in, in their long post-Mauricio Pochettino identity crisis.
Daniel Levy has built the club up to the point that he can attract the most famous managers in the game to lead the team (in a separate interview with BeIN Sports, Conte praised Levy for building a “cathedral” for football in the form of the new stadium). But there is a lingering feeling with Conte (as there was with Mourinho) that Tottenham are just a bit too dependent on the man in the dug-out. That there is not enough ballast elsewhere at the club — quality in the squad, unity with the fans, strategic direction — to give him the support that he needs.
That is why, less than four months in, the Conte era already feels so brittle. There is no question he is a brilliant coach, and he has made Tottenham significantly better, with and without the ball, even if it does not feel like that after three league defeats on the spin. Spurs are still in the mix for a fourth-place finish, in the last 16 of the FA Cup, and in far better shape than they were likely to have been with the Italian’s short-lived predecessor Nuno Espirito Santo.
At the same time, Conte is already playing his own political games, managing expectations, refusing to commit his long-term future to the club — anything to strengthen his own position and reputation at Tottenham. His comments in recent months have not gone down very well with some at the club and, it appears this week, with some fans. That is only natural. People do not like to feel that they are lucky to have Conte managing their club. And they do not want to feel under constant threat of him walking out.
But in the context of everything Conte has said at Tottenham, this interview is not as explosive as it first seemed.
He started off by saying that he is “definitely happy” with the way that Spurs are working. He reiterated that it was going to “take time and patience” to get them to where they want to be. He said — not for the first time — that Tottenham are “one of the many teams that are in the middle and that has to work a lot”. No one who has watched Spurs recently would disagree with that.
There are two comments in the interview, which could suggest a difference between Conte and the club, that are worth a bit more examination.
The first is that what happened in the January transfer window was “not easy”, with Spurs losing four players and replacing them with just two. But even on this, Conte was not being as critical as some first thought.
“Four players left in January, four important players for Tottenham,” he said. “Two have now come in. Numerically, on paper, you may have ‘weakened’ instead of strengthening. Specific choices have been made for lots of reasons, but I definitely never expected four players who I considered to be important players would change teams in January for a number of reasons.”
Now, there are several ways that this is a slightly strange answer, but as an analysis it is not wildly off the mark.
The first thing to say is that if Conte really thought Tanguy Ndombele, Giovani Lo Celso, Dele Alli and Bryan Gil were “important players for Tottenham”, he had a curious way of showing it. Those four players started just three Premier League games combined under Conte (two for Dele, one for Ndombele). Ndombele was sent to train on his own after the FA Cup game against Morecambe and never made a bench again. Lo Celso and Dele were not even among the substitutes for Chelsea away on January 23 (Harvey White and Dane Scarlett were), giving a pretty good indication of what Conte made of them, too.
And there is certainly an argument that Spurs are better off this way.
Clearly, Conte did not fancy Ndombele, Lo Celso, Dele or Gil. Simply put: Tottenham are better off with two players the manager counts on rather than four he does not. Conte himself said in his first press conference after the window shut that the squad was “more complete” with the additions of Rodrigo Bentancur and Dejan Kulusevski. It would be unusual for him to go back on that opinion now.
All that being said, at the start of the window Conte probably did not expect he would lose four players and only get in two. Whether you think Spurs will be better off or not, they certainly do look short of a body or two. Some key players have played so much they do not look themselves right now. There is no genuinely creative midfielder in the squad. And there is still no attacking right wing-back, which back at the start of January was Conte’s top priority. So he may well have a point that the outgoings did not lead to the signings he was hoping for. Moves for Luis Diaz, Adama Traore and Franck Kessie all came to nothing.
This leads us to the second part that stands out, the part concerning Spurs’ stance on not signing experienced players. Conte said — quite accurately — that the signings of Kulusevski and Bentancur reveal the club’s intentions in the transfer market. “Tottenham are looking for young players, players to develop, not players who are ready now,” he said. “That is what it comes down to.”
When asked about the contrast between previous club Inter Milan’s policy of signing experience and Spurs’ policy of signing youth, Conte recognised the difference. “It is inevitable that if you want to grow faster and if you want to be competitive more quickly, you also need players with a lot of experience,” he said, “because they can also lead to an increase in experience across your team.” But Conte then said he has “come to realise that (the) vision of the club is this”.
This is not the first time recently that Conte has talked up the value of signing experienced players. In his press conference on January 14, Conte was asked whether he would like Spurs to do what Inter did when he was in charge, and buy him experienced players to help him win. (They signed Arturo Vidal, Romelu Lukaku, Diego Godin, Aleksandar Kolarov, Ashley Young, Alexis Sanchez, Christian Eriksen and the rest, and won Serie A last season.) Conte did sound like a man who wished his new club would do just that.
“When you go to sign experienced players, it can help you, it can help the players in the squad,” he said. “Especially if there are young players without great experience. It is not simple to sign experienced players, but at the same time, I think there are players who can build something important.” He pointed to the example of Zlatan Ibrahimovic rejoining AC Milan at the age of 38 “to help them improve, and to teach them how to manage the pressure”.
Of course, Tottenham have not done that. It has been a strategic goal of Fabio Paratici since he arrived last summer to renew the squad by signing younger players. And they have done that, signing six outfield players, the oldest of whom is 24-year-old Bentancur.
Given the players who have left the club, Spurs have a much younger squad now than they did last season. This might make it harder for them to win in the immediate term but it is also a long-overdue process of renewal. As has been discussed many times before, they had been playing with more or less the same squad since the start of the Pochettino era. The idea of going into this season with the same old players would only have delayed the pain, and made it worse when it did come.
Perhaps the most surprising thing about the interview is that Conte is out in public discussing the football strategy of the club, allowing distance to be perceived between him and the club. Conte, remember, is Tottenham head coach rather than manager, and has been in that position for less than four months. His current contract expires at the end of next season. He is not going to be here forever.
Really, the job of explaining and defending the club strategy in public should belong to Levy and Paratici. They are in charge of the long-term plan of the club and should answer for it.
But Levy rarely speaks in public, and has said very little since his “Tottenham DNA” message at the end of last season, which has effectively hung over the club ever since. When Nuno was sacked after only four months and Conte then appointed, it was Paratici’s name on the quotes on the Tottenham website.
When Paratici arrived last summer, there were hopes he could take some of that pressure away from Levy and the head coach, in the way that he did at previous employers Juventus by conducting pre-game interviews. He gave one brief pre-match press conference in November when Conte was waiting for his clearance to take over and has given a few cheery interviews to the club’s official media channels.
This is certainly not a problem unique to Tottenham. Very few senior executives at their fellow Big Six sides speak publicly and in detail about their plans. But the fans of Spurs — and their rivals — deserve to hear from the people who set the strategy and direction rather than just having the head coach trying to defend the policy he is paid to implement.
But for as long as Conte is the only one who speaks, he can continue to play politics as much as he wants.
Whether this gets him the desired results is another matter.
Levy might not be enjoying the public pressure Conte puts on him, but this behaviour will surely have been “priced in” when he gave him the job in the first place. And while Levy and Joe Lewis are unlikely to suddenly find him an extra £200 million to spend this summer, Conte is also unlikely to walk away this early in his tenure.
The biggest factors in deciding whether or not Spurs have a more productive summer window, and whether the Conte era works out or not, will not be anything said to Sky Italia, or indeed in Friday’s pre-game press conference.
Finishing fourth or lifting the club’s first trophy since 2008 in the FA Cup will still be what make this season, and this appointment, a triumph.
For now, the only thing that can make this relationship work are wins, the only true answers to be found on the pitch.