Thomas Frank and his Tottenham team have got themselves into a position of maximum danger.
They have somehow managed to save their worst two performances of the season for their recent games against Arsenal and Chelsea.
This, in the eyes of many fans, is simply unforgivable. They've been asked to be patient for a while now.
However you cannot play like that in those games and not expect an avalanche of criticism.
Talk of injuries, transitional periods and adapting to a new style of play simply falls on deaf ears when Spurs fans have to go to work on Monday morning knowing their Arsenal and Chelsea-supporting colleagues have enough ammunition for weeks of merciless ribbing.
It is not as though the defeats themselves have caused all this upset. Spurs fans have lost plenty of London derbies in the past.
But the abject nature of the losses, devoid of attacking intent, with no plan B and absolutely no powers of recovery, means this manager and this team have nowhere to hide in the face of overwhelming criticism.
So the situation for Thomas Frank and his side has changed very quickly over the past few weeks.
They have gone from diligently carving out a new identity for themselves to a full-blown crisis with unknown consequences.
Frank is now under huge pressure to improve results and performances immediately. His previous cover has gone. Meanwhile, this squad is under the microscope like never before.
Serious questions are being asked about whether some of these players are equipped to take the team back to a respectable Premier League position after last season's disintegration.
Everybody, all of a sudden, is on borrowed time.
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