Thomas Frank looks set to replace Ange Postecoglou as new head coach at Tottenham Hotspur.
And, in many ways, he may well be the perfect man for the job.
Tottenham chairman Daniel Levy had a difficult decision to make in relieving Postecoglou of his duties in north London. Speaking after he dismissed Mauricio Pochettino in 2019, Levy said that it was "never easy" asking someone to leave after working with them for five-and-a-half years.
Levy only had two with Postecoglou, but given the Australian managed what most before him had failed to do - win a trophy - Levy may well have been having the same vibes.
Back in 2019, Levy said on Amazon Prime's All or Nothing documentary: "My heart was telling me 'don't do it' and my brain was telling me I needed to do it. It was the most emotional decision I've ever had to make."
There would have been a lot of emotion riding on this decision too. Postecoglou may well have failed in the Premier League, but he ended Spurs' 17-year silverware drought with that incredible night in Bilbao when Son Heung-min lifted the UEFA Europa League trophy.
It could very well have been a case of his heart telling him one thing and his head telling him another.
The outpouring of support for Postecoglou in the wake of his sacking from the players he had left behind was extraordinary. The messages from Spurs players reached never-before-seen levels.
There were reports of a dressing room revolt against the news to sack the most successful Tottenham manager in years. Postecoglou always retained the backing of the players, even when times were tough. He supported them, had their backs and they loved him for it.
The best way to pour cold water on any talk - true or not - of a dressing room revolt is to bring in a new head coach with similar man management attributes and Frank is certainly that.
He is and has always said he is a coach, rather than a manager, which will be music to Levy's ears. Frank will work with what he is given and get the best out of his players. You can see that from what he has done with Brentford.
He has taken a group of players from being a mid-table Championship side to being an established Premier League outfit on the fringes of the European places.
He is a good communicator - that you can see from his behind the scenes dressing room speeches that are rife on social media right now. He is an attacking coach, playing possession-based football, which will delight the Tottenham fans who may have feared the side reverting to the Jose Mourinho or Antonio Conte days once Postecoglou had been sacked.
Frank, like Postecoglou before him, will be well-liked in the dressing room and when he talks, the players will listen. It will not take much, if anything, to get them onside and that is why Levy may just have made his best decision yet, straight after a call that many supporters will have deemed his worst decision yet.