Top candidates as Tottenham look for a saviour following Igor Tudor's exit

Sean Dyche is one of the bookies' favourites to take the Spurs job
Sean Dyche is one of the bookies' favourites to take the Spurs jobLee Keuneke, PA Images / Alamy / Profimedia

Tottenham Hotspur's brief and bruising experiment with Igor Tudor has ended with a whimper rather than a reset. Forty-four days, seven matches and a solitary Premier League point have left Spurs staring nervously over their shoulder, the club now 17th and just one point above the relegation zone.

What was intended as a stabilising interim appointment has instead accelerated the crisis, with Opta now placing their relegation probability at 27 per cent, a staggering rise from four per cent prior to Tudor's arrival.

The raw numbers tell a grim story. A woeful 20 goals conceded in seven matches at a rate of 2.8 per game, a return of 0.57 points per match, and a sequence of one win, one draw and five defeats have left Tudor with a joint-lowest win percentage in the club's history - not unsurprising given the total lack of Premier League wins.

The chaotic timeline, punctuated by a catastrophic 3-0 home defeat to fellow strugglers Nottingham Forest and a 4-1 humbling by arch-rivals Arsenal, culminated in his exit on March 29th.

Spurs now require not just a manager, but a firefighter - something the Croatian was supposed to have been.

Attention inevitably turns to the shortlist, so who will likely take on the tall task at Tottenham Hotspur next?

Sean Dyche

Sean Dyche emerges as the pragmatic favourite. His reputation is built on survival rather than style, and in a relegation battle, that may be precisely the appeal.

Dyche's sides historically outperform defensive expectations relative to squad value, and his ability to organise quickly makes him a credible interim solution.

The question is whether Spurs would accept the aesthetic compromise, even temporarily, given the club's long-standing identity crisis between results and philosophy, and whether Dyche himself would be interested in a short-term role.

Roberto De Zerbi

Roberto De Zerbi represents the ideological opposite. His Brighton tenure showcased elite build-up play and progressive attacking metrics, often ranking among the Premier League's best for possession sequences and expected-goals creation.

Yet parachuting such a system into a fractured Spurs side fighting relegation with games running out feels ambitious to the point of risk. 

De Zerbi may be more plausible as a summer appointment than a short-term stabiliser.

Marco Silva

Marco Silva sits somewhere between those two poles. His Fulham side has demonstrated tactical flexibility and resilience, with a balanced approach that could translate to a squad low on confidence.

Silva has prior experience navigating relegation-threatened environments, although his track record suggests gradual improvement rather than instant rescue. As an interim, he offers competence rather than a dramatic uplift.

Adi Hutter

Adi Hutter is perhaps the most left-field of the bookmakers' names. His work across the Bundesliga and Ligue 1 has shown a capacity for structured pressing and vertical attacking transitions.

However, the Premier League's intensity and the immediacy of Spurs' predicament may limit his suitability as a short-term appointment, and he has no experience of the Premier League, something that has contributed to Tudor's own poor spell. He appears more of a project coach than a crisis manager, but even still, fans will likely be unimpressed.

'A Tottenham man'

Among supporters, sentiment has drifted towards familiarity... Harry Redknapp, Tim Sherwood and Glenn Hoddle each carry the intangible appeal of being 'Tottenham men'.

Redknapp's attacking instincts and past success at the club would bring optimism, though his absence from top-level management raises questions about immediate impact. Sherwood offers passion and internal knowledge, albeit with limited tactical nuance. Hoddle, cerebral and steeped in Spurs heritage, would command respect, though it remains uncertain whether that translates into short-term points.

Then there is Jurgen Klinsmann, a name that straddles nostalgia and intrigue. His previous spell at Spurs as a player still resonates, and his managerial career has been defined by tournament football and motivational leadership rather than week-to-week league grind. In a relegation scrap, charisma alone rarely suffices.

Hovering above all of this is Mauricio Pochettino, widely expected to be the preferred long-term appointment in the summer.

Spurs in the Premier League standings
Spurs in the Premier League standingsFlashscore

That context complicates the interim search. Spurs are not merely hiring a manager, but a custodian tasked with preserving Premier League status until a more permanent vision can be reinstated.

For a club that began Tudor's tenure five points clear of danger and now clings to a one-point cushion, the decision is arguably the most important in Tottenham Hotspur's modern history.

Romance, ideology or pragmatism. The next appointment, however temporary, will determine whether Tottenham's season ends in relief or in one of the most jarring relegations in Premier League history.

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