Pochettino Hands Spurs Shopping List to Levy and Counts on Him to Deliver

 Mauricio Pochettino is keen to raise Tottenham’s minimum level so they can get better results on the inevitable bad days. Photograph: Simon Stacpoole/Offside/Getty Images
Mauricio Pochettino is keen to raise Tottenham’s minimum level so they can get better results on the inevitable bad days. Photograph: Simon Stacpoole/Offside/Getty Images
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Pochettino Hands Spurs Shopping List to Levy and Counts on Him to Deliver

 Mauricio Pochettino is keen to raise Tottenham’s minimum level so they can get better results on the inevitable bad days. Photograph: Simon Stacpoole/Offside/Getty Images
Mauricio Pochettino is keen to raise Tottenham’s minimum level so they can get better results on the inevitable bad days. Photograph: Simon Stacpoole/Offside/Getty Images

Mauricio Pochettino is back in Barcelona – the city he calls home – and he is waiting. The Tottenham manager is waiting to see whether the chairman, Daniel Levy, and the club’s recruitment staff can deliver on any of his transfer targets, who include Tanguy Ndombélé, Donny van de Beek, Nicolò Zaniolo and Ryan Sessesgnon.

Pochettino has made it plain he wants to refresh at Spurs and a part of that means introducing new players for the first time since January 2018. There has even been the subtext that he would consider his position if Levy were to disappoint him.

The Argentinian does not intend to return to England until the beginning of pre-season training – the players will report in the week of 8 July – and the wait could be a testing one. Yet, as things stand, Pochettino appears to have accepted a fundamental point, which is that the club’s outlook will not change radically.

Levy will continue to balance incoming and departing player business as he meets the bank repayment deadlines on the stadium project, and that means Pochettino being denied the chance to attack the market with the gusto he might like.

It is not easy for Pochettino. He has maintained the impression of progress at the club despite a clutch of problems, some of which were linked to the lack of signings last season. The squad came to look stretched and it was unusual to note that each of the 25 players who began the campaign last August started at least two games in the Premier League, including the back-up goalkeepers Paulo Gazzaniga and Michel Vorm.

In the end, though, Pochettino is a company employee and the good news for Spurs fans is he and his staff are continuing to act like diligent staff. They are planning for next season with optimism, despite knowing they cannot compete in financial terms with their domestic top-six rivals – particularly the Manchester clubs and Liverpool. In short, Pochettino is digging in at Spurs for the next phase. He has the resources he has and it is about making the best of them.

Pochettino and his inner circle have reflected on every detail of the past season, which ended with the 2-0 defeat by Liverpool in the Champions League final on 1 June. To them, a particular low came in the 2-1 win over Watford on 30 January, when only 29,000 came to watch them at Wembley. Pochettino would sometimes think when the club’s temporary home was full it was only because neutrals and tourists were able to buy tickets. The feel of Wembley was all wrong and Spurs’ exile from Tottenham could not end soon enough.

Pochettino has never hidden his view that the league represents the true measure of a team’s level and it worries him that Spurs’ trends are negative. Yes, they finished in the top four again to make it four Champions League qualifications in a row but their points tally of 71 compared unfavourably with the 77 in 2017-18 and the 86 in 2016-17.

The low return could be explained in part by the run to the Champions League final but that merely heightens the sense the squad is not deep enough or equipped to fight on multiple fronts. And that, once again, shines an unforgiving light on Levy’s recruitment policy.

One of the main conversations to have taken place involves the team’s minimum level and how it may be raised. Pochettino and his staff believe the key to success over a long season is being able to get results on the bad days. To their minds Liverpool were very poor in the Champions League final whereas Spurs were about average and yet Jürgen Klopp’s team won with a measure of comfort.

The thinking is that if a team’s minimum level is relatively high, it does not take much for them to jump to their very best. But if it is low, there is always the danger of non-performances and unacceptable defeats – such as the ones that Spurs suffered at Watford, Burnley and Southampton last season. Pochettino’s team can hammer Chelsea at home, for example, and they feel on their day they can beat anyone. But while there is a huge disparity between their top and bottom levels, there will be problems.

Pochettino’s mission to find out why his players can sometimes plumb the depths is ongoing. To him, mentality is everything and he relished the work he oversaw on the psychological side with his squad in the three-week countdown to the Champions League final. He felt they were perfectly focused for the game, even though it would get away from them after the blow of an early penalty concession. The challenge for them is to maintain that focus over a 10-month period.

Pochettino knows he cannot highlight, say, three weaknesses in his squad and simply go out to get three new players to solve them, and he is mindful his signings have tended to need six months to settle. He must adapt to what he has and that can mean tweaking his tactics. For example, he has come to realise Lucas Moura performs to his best as a second striker rather than a pure winger. Hence the move to incorporate a 4-4-2 diamond system.

Pochettino is obsessed with driving improvement in every player, even if it is only small details, and that will remain his focus this summer. The approach extends to his support staff, who number 25 and include the medics and analysts. What worked in the various areas last season and what did not? How can they be more productive? Every year, Pochettino changes the organisation, the dynamics.

It will be transfers that dominate the news agenda in the coming weeks and it is noticeable how Spurs have targeted young talent with the potential to grow. It is the trend across the board in the Premier League and, moreover, Pochettino might like to admit that his squad is not such a young one any more.

There is an acceptance at the club that unwanted players may be difficult to shift. They have contracts, after all, and where could they go that would be an upgrade? What is more difficult to digest is how expensive the incoming targets may prove. Lyon, for example, want €75m (£67m) for Ndombélé, a hugely gifted midfielder.

Christian Eriksen could hold the key to Spurs’ summer business. There was no surprise at the club when he announced he wanted to leave and the money his sale would generate could power the recruitment drive.

And so back to the waiting. It can feel a little edgy, at times, with Pochettino, and everybody knows how quickly things can change in football. One thing is clear. Pochettino is counting on Levy to deliver something.

The Guardian Sport



Sinner, Djokovic in Opposite Halves at Australian Open, Sabalenka vs Stephens in 1st Round

09 January 2025, Australia, Melbourne: Belarusian tennis player Aryna Sabalenka (L) and Italian tennis player Jannik Sinner pose with Daphne Akhurst Memorial Cup and the Norman Brookes Challenge Cup during the draw for the 2025 Australian Open tennis tournament, at Melbourne Park, Melbourne. Photo: Joel Carrett/AAP/dpa
09 January 2025, Australia, Melbourne: Belarusian tennis player Aryna Sabalenka (L) and Italian tennis player Jannik Sinner pose with Daphne Akhurst Memorial Cup and the Norman Brookes Challenge Cup during the draw for the 2025 Australian Open tennis tournament, at Melbourne Park, Melbourne. Photo: Joel Carrett/AAP/dpa
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Sinner, Djokovic in Opposite Halves at Australian Open, Sabalenka vs Stephens in 1st Round

09 January 2025, Australia, Melbourne: Belarusian tennis player Aryna Sabalenka (L) and Italian tennis player Jannik Sinner pose with Daphne Akhurst Memorial Cup and the Norman Brookes Challenge Cup during the draw for the 2025 Australian Open tennis tournament, at Melbourne Park, Melbourne. Photo: Joel Carrett/AAP/dpa
09 January 2025, Australia, Melbourne: Belarusian tennis player Aryna Sabalenka (L) and Italian tennis player Jannik Sinner pose with Daphne Akhurst Memorial Cup and the Norman Brookes Challenge Cup during the draw for the 2025 Australian Open tennis tournament, at Melbourne Park, Melbourne. Photo: Joel Carrett/AAP/dpa

Defending champion Jannik Sinner and 10-time Australian Open winner Novak Djokovic have landed in opposite sides of the draw for the season’s first major, ruling out a replay of last year’s semifinal match.
Sinner upset Djokovic in the semifinals at the Australian Open last year before coming back to beat Daniil Medvedev in the final 3-6, 3-6, 6-4, 6-4, 6-3 for his first Grand Slam singles title.
Top-ranked Sinner has a first-round match against Nicolas Jarry and also has Taylor Fritz, Ben Shelton and Medvedev in his quarter of the draw. Fritz will open against fellow American Jenson Brooksby.
Djokovic and No. 3 Carlos Alcaraz could meet in the quarterfinals, with a possible semifinal against No. 2 Alexander Zverev.
At the draw Thursday to set the brackets for the singles fields, defending champions Sinner and Aryna Sabalenka walked into the official ceremony holding thei trophies.
Sabalenka won her second consecutive title at Melbourne Park in 2024 by defeating Zheng Qinwen 6-3, 6-2 in the final. Sabalenka will be attempting to win a third consecutive women’s singles title at Melbourne Park, something last accomplished by Martina Hingis from 1997 to 1999.
Sabalenka drew a tough opening match against 2017 US Open champion Sloane Stephens and has 17-year-old Mirra Andreeva and Zheng in her section.
“I have a lot of great memories and to be back here ... as a two-time Australian Open champion, it’s definitely something special,” Sabalenka, who won the Brisbane International title last week, said at the draw ceremony. “I hope that I can keep doing what I’m doing here in Australia.”
Third-seeded Coco Gauff is a potential semifinal rival for Sabalenka. Gauff has a challenging first-round match against former Australian Open champion Sofia Kenin and is in the same section of the draw as seventh-seeded Jessica Pegula.
The Australian Open starts Sunday morning in Melbourne (Saturday night EST) and will run for 15 days.
Djokovic will be playing in his first event alongside new coach Andy Murray, his former on-court rival and a three-time major champion. Nobody has won the men's title at Melbourne Park more often than Djokovic, although he said he still feels trauma from the one year he wasn’t allowed to play.
Nick Kyrgios, the 2022 Wimbledon runner-up who withdrew from an exhibition against Djokovic this week because of an abdominal strain, will face Jacob Fearnley in the first round if the mercurial Australian is fit enough to contest his first major since the 2022 US Open. Kyrgios is in the same section as Zverev.