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Tottenham transfer rumours: Baleba, van Hecke, Verbruggen, Stones, Wan-Bissaka

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Tottenham transfer rumours: Baleba, van Hecke, Verbruggen, Stones, Wan-Bissaka - BBC
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Vinai Venkatesham interview: Tottenham need ‘complete reset’, says chief executive

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Vinai Venkatesham interview: Tottenham need ‘complete reset’, says chief executive - BBC
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Vinai Venkatesham was upbeat when he began his new job as Tottenham Hotspur chief executive last summer.

His outlook quickly changed. To say his first season in charge did not go to plan would be an understatement.

And in a wide-ranging exclusive 50-minute interview with BBC Sport, Venkatesham has spoken about:

Why the club needed a "reset"

Why they kept Thomas Frank for as long as they did

The wrong call in appointing Igor Tudor

The personal abuse he has faced from supporters

Roberto de Zerbi's "extraordinary" impact

The club's recruitment plans

Speaking after a final-day victory over Everton clinched Tottenham's Premier League survival, Venkatesham discussed the emotional strains of a relegation battle that went to the season's closing minutes.

"I think it was just a huge outpouring of relief," said Venkatesham, who said that the club would not have made anyone redundant in the event of relegation.

"But obviously feeling relief at the end of the season is nowhere near the standard of the football club."

Venkatesham's first words were praise for the supporters who he says got the team "over the line" in their relegation battle.

But he knows he will need more than words to appease supporters who have turned on him this season.

When Venkatesham started work on 1 June last year, he had high hopes.

"On my very first day, what I thought would be a realistic target for the men's first team would be competing for European places," he said.

Even though Tottenham had just finished 17th under Ange Postecoglou, they had won the Europa League, their first trophy since 2008, while the squad was packed with seasoned internationals.

But reality quickly struck.

"If you'd have asked me a few months after I joined, when I was no longer an outsider, I would have told you the club was in a significantly worse state in some places than I thought," said Venkatesham.

"That is absolutely not meant to be a criticism of anyone or anything. It was just what I found. It was very clear that this wasn't some form of turnaround that was required of the club in quite a few areas. It was really a complete reset."

Asked to expand on that, Venkatesham said: "If I had to generalise, I would say on the non-football side of the club, in particular around stadium operations and commercial, that the club was and is really strong.

"I think if you look at the football side of the club, over a timeframe of five years or so, there has just been an explosion in progress across the Premier League.

"I'm not saying that Tottenham didn't improve in that period. But what I can tell you is that when you look at where Tottenham were in many of those areas, compared to where I believe other Premier League clubs are, there was a significant gap. In some areas really quite worryingly so.

"I don't think that there was what I would call a relentless obsession with football success.

"Our training centre is amazing, one of the best, if not the best in the world. But when you look around, it looks more like a five-star hotel than it does a performance environment. That will change over the summer.

"I think there are many areas where the club hasn't got the right level of expertise."

It means nothing now, but Frank's ill-fated reign started quite well following his appointment last June. Tottenham lost just one of their opening 10 matches of the season in all competitions.

But when Tottenham finally sacked Frank in February, the only surprise was that it didn't happen sooner.

Indeed, Venkatesham and sporting director Johan Lange faced heavy criticism from fans for prolonging Frank's tenure for as long as they did.

"There's been plenty of coverage that the club was passive during this period. And that's absolutely not true," insisted Venkatesham.

In weighing up Frank's future, Venkatesham says the club considered results, the probability of the Dane turning their failing season around, concerns changing managers may create in the January transfer window, the fixture calendar and concerns over entering the interim head coach market.

Venkatesham confirmed to BBC Sport that Tottenham tried to entice De Zerbi, who was leaving Marseille, to become the club's full-time head coach after Frank was dismissed.

The Italian, however, was originally unwilling to take the job mid-season, which led Spurs towards making the left-field appointment of Tudor – who left Spurs by mutual consent after just seven games.

"Obviously, we were very disappointed when it became clear that we wouldn't be appointing Roberto on a permanent basis [in February]," said Venkatesham.

"We were then, in the interim market, which is generally not the broadest. There were a number of reasons why Igor was selected: he had managed in very high-profile and high-pressure environments - we didn't want somebody that was going to wilt under that pressure.

"He has a history of making an immediate impact. He has managed in big clubs. He has quite a different personality to Thomas and we felt like something different was needed.

"But of course we were really aware he had no Premier League experience. Was it a risk in appointing him? Absolutely."

Asked if he would accept the Tudor appointment was a mistake, Venkatesham responded: "It didn't work out. I think it's very clear it didn't work out. And I don't think that is in question. I don't think anybody would argue anything else."

Former executive chairman Daniel Levy, who left Tottenham in September after 25 years, was generally the target of supporters ire during his long reign.

But since Levy's exit, Venkatesham has attracted increasing anger from irate sections of the fanbase.

Asked if the abuse from supporters has forced him to consider his own role at the club, Venkatesham said: "I understand the frustration around supporters. I think Tottenham supporters have been frustrated for some time. This is two 17th-place finishes in a row.

"It's clearly not good enough. I think that is rational, normal, sensible, and, is what we would expect from supporters.

"The club had some serious challenges that it needs to address on the football side. We know what those are. We are addressing them. We are fixing them. Those challenges have not disappeared overnight.

"They built up over many years. I wish I could wave my magic wand and fix them overnight, but that is not possible. It takes some time to fix those issues.

"So I have complete confidence in what we're doing, how we're doing it. But supporters are rightly impatient. So I have to weather that storm."

On dealing with intense criticism from fans, Venkatesham - who previously worked for Arsenal - added: "It's not easy. You have to develop a thick skin.

"I'm helped by the fact that I've been in football for a while, for the last 15 years, so it's not new to me.

"It's a game of opinions, and I have absolutely no problem with being criticised. I've got no problem what anyone in the game being criticised, it's just part of the job.

"The challenge in football is that that criticism frequently goes way past the line for players, referees, executives."

Speak to those behind the scenes at Tottenham, they will tell you that De Zerbi's impact has been profound.

Not only in picking up 11 points from seven games to preserve the club's top-flight status, but his growing influence is instilling belief in the squad.

"I think he has made an extraordinary impact so far," Venkatesham said.

"We have to recognize that it's early days, and we also need to recognize that he's come into a very specific situation.

"It is hard to underestimate the scale of the challenge he walked into. And it's hard to describe what a significant impact he has had in the dressing room with all the players.

"I think he's an excellent coach, and we think that he plays the style of football that our supporters and the broader football public want to see."

De Zerbi is expected to have full involvement in the club's recruitment this summer.

Tottenham have held talks with Borussia Dortmund's departed sporting director Sebastian Kehl, while Venkatesham confirmed the club have raised their wage ceiling in the hope of attracting top-quality players.

"The squad needs work and the squad hasn't got the right balance," he said.

"We need experience and leadership and also that kind of physical robustness to play in the most demanding league that exists.

"We need to strengthen the club over multiple transfer windows but this transfer window, in particular, is going to be critical."

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Tottenham: Premier League club launches season review after injury woe

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Tottenham: Premier League club launches season review after injury woe - BBC
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Tottenham have launched an extensive review into why their season was heavily affected by fitness issues, with a key focus on the "unusual" spate of anterior cruciate ligament injuries.

Spurs avoided relegation on the final day of the season thanks to a 1-0 win over Everton but their difficult campaign was beset by a constant flow of injuries to key players.

The club are now carrying out an internal audit - led by performance director Dan Lewindon, who joined the club from the City Football Group earlier this year - to work out why their season was so badly disrupted.

It is understood the average availability of Spurs players last season was about 77%, and squad members were absent for a combined period of more than 2,000 days.

Tottenham would prefer to take those numbers closer to 90% availability and fewer than 1,000 days, though there is an acknowledgement that may be difficult to achieve in the months leading up to next season.

James Maddison, Wilson Odobert and Xavi Simons all sustained long-term ACL injuries, while Dejan Kulusevski missed the entire campaign after requiring surgery on a serious knee injury from the end of the 2024-25 season.

There has been an acknowledgement among medical staff at Tottenham that the club have sustained more ACL injuries than they should.

As part of the audit, they are considering numerous factors to work out why it has become such a problem.

For example, Spurs are analysing the "bounce" on the club's home pitch in comparison to that at rival grounds and their Enfield training centre.

At present, the club have found there is no major difference between the conditions of other pitches in comparison to their home ground, but testing is ongoing.

There is a view that certain knee injuries are unavoidable - Odobert for instance damaged his ACL following an awkward landing.

It is also understood Spurs are confident the on-field treatment of Simons' injury did not result in additional damage to the Dutchman's knee.

There has been criticism from supporters after footage showed medics allowing the attacker to put weight on his knee despite having suffered a serious injury.

One of the key improvements Lewindon has recommended is to make medical support more individually tailored - based on factors including strength, fatigue and robustness.

Medical staff will compile bespoke profiles for each player that will include personal insights as well as physical and psychological information to ensure they can deliver expert individual support to treat - but also prevent - injury.

There is also set to be greater leeway for injured players to conduct part of their rehabilitation away from the club's training facility.

Players across the Premier League are increasingly relying on external medical practitioners to aid their fitness and recovery, while many overseas footballers even return to their homeland for treatment.

That dynamic often causes friction but moving forward Tottenham are open to letting players leave their direct care provided all parties involved agree to one shared recovery plan - though Spurs would ultimately take responsibility for any problems that arise during the process.

The medical team will work closely alongside head coach Roberto de Zerbi and his staff over the summer amid concerns changing managers three times in under 12 months has contributed to their injury problems.

Tottenham will look to introduce an integrated structure that will ensure De Zerbi, or a member of his staff, the medical department and the player are involved in deciding when a player can accelerate their rehabilitation plans.

Psychology is also a key component of the ongoing review with the club set to employ a full-time head of psychology to work with the players and staff.

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Connor Roberts and Ben Davies return for Wales after injuries

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Roberts and Davies return from injury for Wales - BBC
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Captain Ben Davies has returned from a serious ankle injury to be included in Wales' squad for friendly matches against Ghana and Romania, while Connor Roberts could make his first competitive appearance for a year.

Tottenham Hotspur defender Davies, who turned 33 last month, has not played since sustaining the injury, which required surgery, while playing for his club in January.

Burnley right-back Roberts has been absent since injuring himself during Wales' World Cup qualifying defeat by Belgium in June 2025.

The 30-year-old was forced off with a groin injury in Brussels, before damaging his Achilles after returning to Burnley, ruling him out of the entire 2025-26 season.

Having featured for the Clarets' Under-21s earlier this month, Roberts returned to the first-team matchday squad for the first time this campaign on Sunday as he was an unused substitute for the Premier League draw with fellow relegated side Wolves.

There is also a return from injury for centre-back Chris Mepham, but midfielders Jordan James and Rubin Colwill as well as forwards Liam Cullen and Mark Harris miss out with minor injuries.

Wales host Ghana, one of England's World Cup group opponents, at Cardiff City Stadium on Tuesday, 2 June, before facing Romania in Bucharest the following Saturday.

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Tottenham news: 'I couldn't imagine Romero leading me' - Hart

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'I couldn't imagine Romero leading me' - Hart - BBC
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Watch former Tottenham goalkeeper Joe Hart analyse Cristian Romero's future, with the Spurs captain heavily linked with a move away this summer despite their final day survival.

"I think he'll move himself on," Hart told BBC Radio 5 Live's Monday Night Club.

"I think it's been really difficult and the hardest thing for me to watch is in big moments he's not been able to control his emotions.

"I was at Old Trafford and I remember Tottenham starting well and then he lost the ball in a moment where he feels he shouldn't and because of that a switch went in his head and he nailed someone over the ball. Red card in such an important game.

"I couldn't imagine that guy leading me. There's no doubt he's a brilliant player and you can't take that emotion out of him. But to put that at the forefront of it and let him do his thing, I think is a really difficult one for Spurs."

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Tottenham news: Mohammed Kudus to miss World Cup with quad injury

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Tottenham forward Mohamed Kudus will miss next month's World Cup because of injury after being left out of Ghana's preliminary 28-man squad named by Carlos Queiroz.

Kudus was expected to return in March from a quad injury suffered in January but suffered a setback and has not featured since.

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Tottenham news: 'As big a shambles as it is possible' - Phil McNulty's review

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'As big a shambles as it is possible to imagine' - BBC
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Now the curtain has come down on the 2025-26 Premier League campaign, here is my end-of-season review - with a look back to what I predicted in August.

Prediction: 8th

As big a shambles as it is possible to imagine - on and off the field. Reduced to celebrating Premier League survival on the season's final day with victory over Everton.

The job proved too much for Thomas Frank, who found the expectations and dysfunction of Tottenham a sharp contrast to the stability of Brentford.

Just when you thought it could not get worse, matters hit a new low with the bizarre appointment of Igor Tudor, an arrival that posed serious questions of CEO Vinai Venkatesham and sporting director Johan Lange.

Tudor lost five of his seven games before he left after 44 days, to be replaced by Roberto de Zerbi.

Spurs escaped at the 11th hour, but it was a reprieve borne of luck more than judgement.

What I said in August: "It could not get worse than last season - or Spurs would find themselves in the Championship."

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Tottenham admit 'football success was not driving decisions'

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Spurs admit 'football success was not driving decisions' - BBC
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Tottenham say "football success had not been driving our decisions" as non-executive chairman Peter Charrington admitted failings and vowed to rebuild in an open letter to the club's supporters.

Spurs narrowly avoided relegation with a 1-0 win against Everton on the final day of the Premier League season, finishing 17th for the second season in a row after a difficult campaign that Charrington said fell "well short" of expectations.

"Last September, we recognised that something seismic had to change at Spurs," wrote Charrington, who was appointed to the Spurs board in March 2025.

"The Lewis family stepped in and authorised a full reset. That decision was not taken lightly, and it came later than it should have."

That reset coincided with Daniel Levy stepping down after nearly 25 years as executive chairman, with sources indicating the decision was taken to improve sporting performance.

"As part of that process, we discovered some uncomfortable truths," Charrington added.

"The qualities that make Spurs distinct, our football, our ambition, the connection between the team and its supporters, had been allowed to fade. Football success had not been driving our decisions.

"We did not have the right expertise in key roles. We did not build squads good enough to compete in the most demanding league in the world."

Charrington was in attendance at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium for Sunday's season finale along with Vivienne Lewis, representing the family who own Spurs, her son-in-law Nick Beucher and the club's finance officer Matthew Collecott.

Now under manager Roberto de Zerbi, Spurs needed a point on the final day to avoid their first relegation from the top flight since 1977 - and only a third home league win of the season ensured they sent West Ham down instead.

Charrington added that Spurs have since restructured their football operations, with refreshed executive and football teams, as well further appointments expected in the coming weeks.

The chairman also backed De Zerbi, who signed a five-year contract when joining in March, "to build back to where we need to be", saying the Italian "represents the kind of football and ambition that Tottenham should stand for."

It comes after Spurs midfielders James Maddison and Conor Gallagher credited De Zerbi, who became the club's third manager this season after Thomas Frank and Igor Tudor, with saving the club from relegation.

"Without that appointment, disaster could have maybe struck, but it didn't and he takes a lot of credit for that because of the work he's done behind the scenes and on the training pitch," Maddison said.

Gallagher added: "From the first day or two he had everyone under his wing. Everyone trusted him instantly and everything he was doing - it was like 'thank God he's come in' straight away."

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Tottenham news: Without 'genuinely passionate' De Zerbi 'disaster could have struck' - Maddison

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Tottenham news: Without 'genuinely passionate' De Zerbi 'disaster could have struck' - Maddison - BBC
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Tottenham midfielder James Maddison says he is "really happy" for "passionate" head coach Roberto de Zerbi, without whom the season could have ended in "doom and gloom".

De Zerbi took charge at the end of March with Tottenham winless in the Premier League in 2026 and in the relegation zone before his first match.

However, despite injuries to key players, including Cristian Romero and Xavi Simons, he bought a renewed positivity to win three out of Spurs' final five games and stay up on the final day.

"He's so passionate," said Maddison, who has only recently returned from a long-term knee injury.

"He's been living at the training ground with the guys, with his team.

"He's there at 9pm with all his staff. They've got the tactics board up, there's six of them, they're just talking. It's 9pm and we've already had four or five meetings on each game. He's just obsessed with football.

"You feel the authenticity of someone who's passionate for Tottenham - because I am, I love this club and I want this club to be successful so badly.

"Without that appointment, disaster could have maybe struck, but it didn't and he takes a lot of credit for that because of the work he's done behind the scenes and on the training pitch.

"I'm excited under this manager."

Another player invigorated by De Zerbi's arrival was Conor Gallagher, who looked lost in his first few games after his January move from Atletico Madrid but has been a key performer in getting Spurs over the line in the final stretch.

"He completely turned around the start of my Spurs career," Gallagher reflected.

"From the first day or two, he had everyone under his wing. Everyone trusted him instantly.

"I can't speak highly enough of him."

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Tottenham 1-0 Everton: Post-match Premier League analysis

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Tottenham 1-0 Everton: Post-match Premier League analysis - BBC
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Travelling across a sweltering London to Tottenham Hotspur Stadium by Tube on the final day of the season, the emotional divide among football fans in the city was striking. Sitting opposite me in the carriage, a man in his 50s wearing a 90s original "Holsten" home shirt was wedged between two Arsenal supporters.

"I think you'll be all right today, mate," they offered.

Now I know you don't speak to strangers on the Tube if you're a Londoner, but this Spurs fan just stared straight ahead, entirely consumed by the dread and anxiety that they could be relegated on the same day that Arsenal were crowned champions. He didn't even acknowledge them.

There was a hush around the ground on arrival - very few smiles, very little noise. That was until the team bus turned up and the players were greeted as if it was them that had won the Premier League title and not their north London rivals.

Inside the ground, the wall of noise before kick-off was deafening. The relief at Joao Palhinha's goal palpable. The West Ham goals against Leeds filtered through to add some jeopardy, but Everton never really offered enough until late on to make it truly nerve-wracking inside the stadium.

Spurs' players collapsed with a mixture of exhaustion and relief at the final whistle, and the South Stand became a wall of noise once again.

The concourses, now doubling as bustling bars, were now buzzing - smiles, laughter, singing, drinking and general merriment.

The journey home saw the Victoria Line trains mixed with red and white shirts as triumphant Arsenal fans returned from south London to launch an impromptu street party around Emirates Stadium. Fans chanted at each other as they passed on the escalators, but what I saw was good humoured.

It was one city and three entirely different sets of emotions for the supporters of the teams involved on an afternoon in the capital not to be forgotten.

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