When the final whistle descended at the Emirates last Wednesday, signaling the end of yet another dismal, ineffectual North London Derby performance, there was no rage, no anger, no bitterness. Just a collective shrug of indifference from a fanbase who knew exactly what was coming, and was finding it increasingly hard to care. The sense of disillusionment was palpable.
In many ways, this is perhaps the most telling legacy of Daniel Levy and ENIC’s ownership of Tottenham Hotspur. Generational fans replaced by tourists, hardcore supporters supplanted by day-trippers, and tribalism succumbing to apathy.
Expectation has been curtailed. Hope has been extinguished. This is a fanbase, and a club, that no longer dares to dream, let alone do. It was the 6th defeat in the past 8 North London Derbies. The 3rd consecutive defeat — for the first time in Premier League history. The 5th time Arsenal have done the double over Spurs in a single season; the 2nd in Mikel Arteta’s tenure. Tottenham’s miserable run of 1 away win in the past 31 games, stretched to 32. And yet the man overseeing all of this failure just gets richer and richer, his pockets deeper and deeper.
The reality is that Arsenal are no longer our rivals. They operate in a different stratosphere in terms of ambition and on field competency. The great irony, of course, is that in terms of financial power, Spurs are not just their equals, but their superiors. And yet in terms of expectations and drive to succeed, we have more in common with the likes of Fulham and Brentford, than Arsenal and Chelsea.
What was once a fiercely contested local rivalry — amongst the biggest in football — has devolved into a one-sided farce. Arsenal barely got out of second gear, and yet looked light years ahead of us. One look at the respective wage bill for each club, at their record signings — indeed at their recruitment in general over the past few years, confirms the underlying reasons. Arsenal shop at the top table of European football, Spurs shop at Poundland.
When the team fell to Everton on Sunday, their 12th defeat of the season, their 6th in the past 8 games, continuing a dismal run of 1 pt from the past 18, even then there was no real shock. There certainly was no reaction from the club.
The truth is that Daniel Levy doesn’t see success as on field victories. Success to him arrives in pound, and more recently, dollar signs. His eyes are trained westward, casting envious glances at the NFL, and the way in which American sports is commercialized and milked. He sees more room for financial growth in his shiny new cash cow, and he is singular in his focus.

This highlights the single biggest problem at Tottenham Hotspur. Daniel Levy, its supposed chief executive, isn’t judged on results on the pitch. He never has been. The goals of Tottenham and ENIC (the investment fund of which he is part owner) are diametrically opposed. Success on the pitch requires spending on top transfer fees and high wages — pesky expenses that eat away at the margins the investment firm wants to see. He is rinsing this club, using it to siphon profit into a myriad of shell companies, many of which he and his cronies are also shareholders of. Daniel Levy and his disgraced, federally charged mentor, Joe Lewis, have created a self-sustaining financial racket that will line their pockets for decades to come.
Despite all this, however, there have always been appearances to maintain. The superficial notion that Tottenham remains at least interested in footballing matters. Today, even the pretense of competing is gone, the illusory jolts of ambition he once issued through his various mouthpieces now all but vanished. He has learned over time that fans, media, and the public at large don’t really care for genuine scrutiny, so why bother?
Levy was once the most trigger happy chairman in football. Acting like a mafia boss, firing his managers the minute things went awry. In recent years, some of the biggest names in world football have been relieved of their duty. Pochettino was fired after years of turning water into wine, years of overachieving. Even reaching a first ever Champions League final counted for nothing in the end. Mourinho was inexplicably fired with the team in 7th, and with a League Cup final less than a week away. Nuno, whose Forest side currently sit 11 places and 17 pts above Tottenham, was fired in 8th. Antonio Conte was actually 4th at his time of sacking.
Ange Postecoglou sits 15th in the table. He has the lowest PPG this season of any manager in Spurs history — yes, lower even than Christian Gross. His side have lost as many games (12), at this stage in a season than any other Spurs side in history. The only three sides in the Premier League to have lost more this season, Wolves, Leicester, and Southampton, all sit in the relegation zone. He’s lost 12 games out of the last 22; taken 30pts from the last 84 available; 1 win in 9 — against bottom club Southampton. The stats, whichever way you slice them, make for horrible reading.

His side are not just displaying relegation like form — they are statistically one of the worst sides in the league, and actively drifting into a relegation fight. And yet…the Australian is not only still here, but appears to retain the full backing of the ownership. The club are apparently perfectly fine with what should be an entirely untenable situation.
So what changed? Largely the stadium, and the head-spinning revenues it now brings in to line ENIC coffers. Despite the team’s woeful form, the tills are still ringing and the money still streaming in. Football has become so much of an afterthought, that even languishing near the relegation zone doesn’t hasten the powers that be into action. Scott Munn, who apparently does exist, Johan Lange, the technical staff — all just a facade to distract while the executives pilfer as much profit as possible.
But also, aside from football’s decreasing importance at Tottenham Hotspur football club; there is the issue of personality. While Ange appears a broken man now, the latest to fall foul of football’s equivalent of Voldemort, a malevolent being who sucks all sporting life force from victims until all that’s left is a cold, grey husk…he is still singing from the Levy hymnbook. He’s not speaking in riddles about how badly he’s been backed, like Poch, or outright lampooning him in front of the world, like Conte. Externally at least, he’s still taking the blame and insisting he can get it right with whatever he’s given. This is music to Voldem—Levy’s ears, and as long as that remains the case, anything bar actual relegation will likely suffice. In Levy’s Tottenham, it isn’t excellence or competency that’s required from managers; it’s obedience.
In many ways the current situation is a microcosm of what Tottenham has become. Fail to back some of the most decorated managers in the game, but show unwavering support to a man whose greatest achievement was winning the Scottish SPL; a league ranked globally lower than the MLS. The truth is that Postecoglou being hired in the first place was a damning indictment of how low the standards have fallen at this club. A near 60 year old journeyman from Australia, whose managerial CV includes stints in the A-League, J-League and Scottish SPL, was never top of the list. The Aussie admitted as much himself. But when Arne Slot demanded assurances on backing, Levy baulked. Slot is now sitting pretty with Liverpool at the top of the table, Postecoglou is staring worryingly downwards in 15th. It’s yet another sliding doors moment for Tottenham Hotspur, where their chairman has again gone the cheaper, easier route, and killed any genuine chance of success the club might have had. Ange was the cheapest, easiest, most pliable manager on the list, which explains not just why he was hired, but more worryingly, why he’s still here.
And while penny-pinching on players has been a hallmark of the ENIC era, the one thing they used to at least attempt was in hiring proficient managers. Levy’s mantra was always to bring in top managers and have them overachieve with underfunded squads. Even that act of self-preservation is now gone. Where once at least the semblance of on-field competency, and top-level pedigree, was required; now only fealty to the ownership — the continued refraining from ever daring to point the fingers at the lack of backing, is needed.
The unavoidable reality is that the seeds of this latest defeat — and indeed the larger pattern of relegation form — were sown long ago. This is years of mismanagement, years of neglect, coming home to roost. This is an ownership who’s checked out, a fanbase who no longer cares.
While everyone could see at the end of last season that major improvements were required to a squad that limped home — especially with the increased load of European football — Levy saw the summer’s recruitment as a cost-cutting exercise. He got rid of a raft of experienced players on high wages, and replaced them with kids on peanuts. In total, as Tottenham’s revenues swelled to record levels, their financial position firmly established among Europe’s best, Levy slashed over £40m from the wage bill. What was already the lowest wage-to-turnover ratio in the Premier League got even lower. Even Postecoglou’s appointment itself is looking like an attempt to reign in costs after the expensive appointments of Conte and Mourinho.
Whether priming for a sale, or simply fattening his own margins, the move to lower the wage bill at a time when bold, ambitious recruitment was desperately required was audacious even by his standards. Tantamount to the waving of a white flag for even attempting to compete at the top of the table.
And the trend of chronic neglect continues. With more than half of the January window already gone, the squad decimated by one of the worst injury crises in recent history — itself a product of both managerial incompetency and boardroom neglect — and Tottenham sitting significantly closer to the relegation zone than the Top 4…Levy has deigned to sign a grand total of zero outfield players. Forget about the LB, RB, LCB, striker, and attacking players that the club should have signed in the summer — no one, nada, zilch. The sheer levels of neglect and indifference are astonishing.
Fans Role
Daniel levy has killed everything that was once great about this club. The bravado, the style, the panache, the trophies, and the glory. All consigned to the past, lost among the scrapheap of history, a mere footnote in the commercial juggernaut that has consumed this famous football club. He may have succeeded in his goal, but he is only allowed to continue because of the indifference of a numb, beaten down, and fractured fanbase. He has broken the club so systematically that few dare to even ask for more now.
Being charged the highest ticket prices in the land to watch relegation level football? Sure. Seeing concessions for the elderly and disabled slashed? No problem. Watching the level of the squad deteriorate to a standard never before seen in the modern era? Who cares?! The standards have fallen so low that one has to wonder: where is the floor now — not just for this ownership, but perhaps more pertinently, for this fanbase? Where is the point at which fans actually take a stand and rise up against what is inarguably the greatest threat this football club has ever faced? We all know what Levy’s end game is. We all know that until he’s milked and exploited the club for every conceivable penny, and drained it dry, he will likely not leave. He is sitting drunk on profit, giddy with success, perfectly fine in his gilded castle of property and event management. Increasing revenues while lowering the wage bill should have been seen as an act of war. Instead it was greeted with the same muted apathy and indifference as always.

We should have listened when Harry Kane left. A kid born just miles from White Hart Lane, who grew up in the academy, and became one of our own. Who wound up so disillusioned with the levels of ambition of the owners, so profoundly frustrated, that he left his home country entirely, and fled to the Bundesliga. He sounded the warning for years, imploring the club to match his ambition and at least try to become competitive. Did they care? Even boyhood academy products are eventually forced to leave in search of success; in search of a club actually interested in delivering trophies. Kane likely saw what Levy had planned — wage cutting, loan signings, free transfers, etc, and said enough is enough. He’d suffered through enough false dawns, being forced to play through injury, and having to work with a new manager every 18 months to know better. In truth it’s nothing new; Carrick, Berbatov, Modric, Bale, Walker, Eriksen, etc — top players have always had to leave this graveyard of ambition and competency. The only surprise is that the one man at the top of the tree, the one common denominator, still gets away with it. One has to wonder how many other ownerships in football would watch the world’s best striker spawn unexpectedly from their academy, and use him not to spearhead their club to success, but as a crutch on which to stand still.
The harsh truth is that Harry Kane was the only thing standing between Spurs remaining marginally competitive, and falling into mid-table mediocrity. With him gone, it’s difficult to imagine Tottenham as anything other than also-rans. Short of making up for the chronic lack of ambition that forced him to leave, Levy has used his departure as an opportunity to tighten the ship, slash costs, and generally bring the entire level of the club back down to more manageable (profitable) levels. It’s a shameful, disgraceful dereliction of duty from a man whose sole purpose should be to ensure the on pitch success of Tottenham Hotspur.
Levy once said that the stadium would enable Tottenham to compete with the elite. Did he mean in the Forbes list? The Deloitte money league? Because those are the only lists the club have actually moved up on. On the pitch, where it actually matters, the team is moving inexorably backwards. Remember the 90s? No, this isn’t like the 90s. This is worse. We won trophies in the 90s. We had hope. We signed world class players. We have none of that now. All we have is a gleaming corporate theme park, and a relentless, multi-headed money printing machine.
It’s simple. We’ve got our Tottenham back.
Daniel Levy
Perhaps Levy was right when he crowed at a sham supporters forum that “we’ve got our Tottenham back.” Spurs have come full circle. In the intervening quarter century since ENIC’s takeover, Levy has become a billionaire, and the team is right back where they started — 15th place, firmly ensconced in mid-table, and more likely to join the relegation fight than any charge for the title. It is a shocking, horrific example of corporate greed over social and sporting custodianship. He would have fired himself a thousand times over by now, had football ever been even a tangential parameter by which he was judged. But he isn’t. Profit, revenues, margins are the only thing that matter to Tottenham’s board of “footballing” directors. Levy, Cullen, Collecott et al., none have any expertise or even interest in football beyond financial gain. Tottenham Hotspur in its modern incarnation is little more than a real estate investment company masquerading as a multi-sport entertainment venue, feeding off the fading legacy of hundred and forty year old football club.
It is now abundantly clear where football sits on the list of priorities at ENIC investment corp — if it makes it on there at all. A cursory glance at Tavistock group’s list of corporate entities — and Tottenham’s respective position —illustrates this clearly. The warning signs we’ve all seen over the past few years, of drifting back into mid-table mediocrity — or worse — have become a reality. And the saddest, most damning part of all, is that none of this is by accident. The club is exactly where it’s meant to be; exactly where its owners have put it.
It might seem like hyperbole, but for many of us who grew up supporting this great club, the club we once loved is now long gone. Until the rot is removed at its source, it will continue to fester, eating away at its foundations, eroding its DNA, and tarnishing its name until there is nothing left to consume.
Never have Keith Burkinshaw’s words been more apt.
There used to be a football club over there
Keith Burkinshaw
Extraordinary piece which should be compulsory reading for all Spurs fans. I watched my first game at The Lane in 1961 ( Charity Shield )and I have never felt so disillusioned as I do now. The ONLY solution is a change of ownership but you summed up the chances of that perfectly, unfortunately.
Graham I’ve been a Spurs fan since 1967 , most of my family were born and lived in Islington, my Nans house sits inside that graveyard called the Emirates when it was knocked down to make way for a Stadiums which sucked the revenue out of Arsenal until the owners realised that trophies are what fans want .
It’s not the Managers , it’s not really the players although they don’t help , but we know the real cause of our demise .
A magnificent stadium was we think lift off for us to beat the top table .When Pococino got us to the promised land we dreamed of golden days , but Levy failed to back him and the successive managers .
The outcome is before our eyes , a manager with little pedigree , and a regime flogging players to death with backroom staff who are woefully inefficient.
My enthusiasm for my beloved Spurs has hit rock bottom , and the cash cow Levy has milked at our expense has created the current malaise .
When the game musical starts ends the only one with a chair is Levy .
Agree with every word of that article but hoped it would end with a possible solution. Whilst for most of us fans it’s an expensive passion that we would find almost impossible to let go of the only thing that we will ever win under Levy will be the first top flight team to be totally destroyed by greedy owners that have no care for the game or the team and of course the fans. And if Levy can get away with it then other owners will follow. Not sure we’ll pick up silver wear for that win though.
We once looked at other teams taken over by overseas fat cats and thought that was bad but this just takes the biscuit.
Meanwhile I live in desperately disillusioned hope and will see any other likeminded out of pocket fans in Liverpool🙄
Some good points made, but as is always the case when Levy/ENIC are being discussed, it’s not balanced by what has been done well.
It’s easy to be so critical with hindsight. Let’s not forget the damage done by previous Chairman, Irving Scholar nearly bankrupted us and Alan Sugar presided over a period of total mediocrity. Levy has his faults but THFC have come a long way under ENIC. Now we are in a sound financial footing and able to compete at the highest level, it’s time to invest in players and salaries
The time to invest was when we reached a champions league final and had a team capable of winning titles and cups, not now. The only people gaining from our financial position is Levy, ENIC etc, not the fans.
Did you read the article 🤷♂️
But that’s the point tou idiot…. we all know LeVYwint!!
What on earth are you talking about? Irvine Scholar was nearly 40 years ago and that was a relatively short period of our history. Levy is now a significant chunk of our history – he has no interest in trophies, he cares only for balance sheets. Wake up!
His soundbites of getting “our Tottenham back” and the new stadium being how we will compete are hot air. He has had countless opportunities to succeed and in taking a chance would not have jeopardised anything or “do a Leeds” as so many other blinded people enjoy harking on about.
He failed Jol, Redknapp, even Villa Boas. Pochettino flirted with the likes of Utd and Madrid, but I believe all he was trying to do, was get Levy to back his aspirations – he didn’t and the rest is history – he sucked the life from Pochettino and he made it look like he was justified sacking him, because sacking him was the cheaper option.
In the words of the Kulu chant, “he don’t care about me…”
Fuck Levy.
It has been time to invest for a while now and that’s the frustration. We could all accept some pain (though stupid from Levy not to invest whilst Poch was on top) to get the stadium but now no more excuses. Levy has ridden the football riches of the PL well…..but let’s not kid ourselves he is a genius….he has built a multi propose stadium building off the models of the US NFL and has done that well…..but after 24years still does not understand football and doesn’t have the gumption to invest to win – time to invest and deliver proper trophies in the next 3 years or to pass the batton on to new owners who can get the job done
You are one of the clueless fans we have, we sit 15th and it’ll be 30 years… 1 league cup to show for it but we have to be grateful. Not how it works.
Press Room bot
You’re obviously not seeing it through the eyes of the fans that travel up and down the country watching our great football club. We’ve had bad times on the pitch before, but never in my 60 odd years of following Spurs, can I remember such a disillusioned fan base. Levy is using Tottenham Hotspur Football Club as a vehicle to earn his shareholders money.
Just because the bar was on the floor beforehand doesn’t mean ENIC should be lorded as our saviours because they lifted it a foot or two. That should be expected by any incoming owner. They’ve missed every single naturally occurring opportunity to make the right choice to improve the footballing side of things. (I am not interested in the stadium the NFL or Formual 1 as I am a fan of Tottenham Hotspur FOOTBALL CLUB.) They are milking this club dry and I don’t want to point fingers but it is fans like yourself that they want. Poch was an incredibly lucky appointment. He still didn’t back him.
Its been time for a long while but nothing has happened.
Tbh I don’t think anything will happen significantly re transfers. Buying players, good enough quality costs and his (Levys) business model is all about buying cheap/young and hopefully selling on for a profit.
I hope I’m wrong and he actually buys in the quality Ange needs but not holding my breath.
This is one of the dumbest comments in this chain. It’s as if the entire point has flown over your head. Levy has failed to invest at every key moment, he’s just milked the club’s best prospects for profits while idiots like you hold on the hope that he’ll finally get it right some day. Dreadful
Look at the history of Levy. He may be good at some things but promoting the team with high level players is not one of them. Spurs are not at the bottom of the table because of it and facing relegation prospects.
Great article. Well done!
Can you explain to me these shell companies that the profits are being siphoned off into. I can’t see that from the financial statements of the club.
If this is occurring I’d suggest raising it with the Financial Markets Authroity as the financial statements say that no dividends are being paid.
Can you explain to me how having the 3rd highest net spend in the transfer market fits with the narrative around under investment.
Can you explain to me how these tourist fans get tickets in the away end for the North London derby, or any away match. You need to regularly attend matches and earn points to be allocated away tickets which are as rare as hens teeth.
How do I contact the author?
Well Levy has managed to siphon every piece of credibility Spurs ever had .It must be said that it is Enic that owns the whole kit and kaboodle , the loans for the stadium being serviced by the money the stadium makes , but the football team needs drastic attention . What happens if/when relegation strikes ? For Enic , they’re more than covered by the other revenues .
Why no suitors for this Club ?? A company that is history – making in its revenue production – but its all been done on the coat-tails of the football club , it acquired the kudos and status from Spurs name and thinks it owes them nothing in return .
The apathy of we the supporters has not helped but we are just “prawns in the game Rodney”. Like the rest of the business world , if nobody is minding the till , the villains will move in . Daniel , Joe , Enic , they’re just financial gangsters . Heaven help us , naive gullibility maybe , but we really dont deserve being raped in full view , its scandalous ……..
Greed often shows up on a ledger for a marketable portfolio in a careful combination of asset and expense. Investment in growth and development will not show up as dividends, but it will certainly benefit the shareholders regardless of whether it positively improves the product.
Some nice points on the away tickets and on the net spend. The article is definitely pointed as a narrative, and does not pretend otherwise.
My only fair reply is that the type of net spend points to a purpose of growing yet another sellable asset in young players rather than in honest manager support. As for the away tickets, they account for what – around 8% of a ticketed home fanbase?
Respect your points, and only ask what your expected standards are to an owner for a winning football product. With the massively grown revenues, the product just does not represent the financial position. At all.
I am not the author. No intention to represent an author’s pov.
Looking up Daniel Levy on companies house gives a long list of related companies where certain club related activities have been segregated from the actual company the club is registered as (separate company for stadium, residential, leisure and hotels).
So any buyer would need to purchase all these too? He has very much carved the club up into different companies and structured this in a way to benefit him.
https://find-and-update.company-information.service.gov.uk/officers/GmEJorViWZCgqpF5O40rge5g1ZA/appointments
The sooner spurs fans and wake up and fight for our beloved club THFC..it has been taken away from us and is being run buy a PLC money making company not as a football club…just look at all the events going on CONCERT’S NFL BOXING RUGBY GO KARTING HOTEL CINEMA o ye fogot tourist fans which get 4000 tickets every home game without being members or season ticket holders….Ask yourselves 1 question when you was a child did you start supporting for the above or because it was your local football club with some great legends playing for our spurs..TTID…
Tas,as a spurs fan for 60 plus years I say boycot the home games for 2 matches .see what happens.???
You’ve had a £250m net spend on players over the past two years even taking into account the Kane transfer. James Maddison is on £170k/week (£9m/year). Check your privilege, you spend loads of money and have a top 6 squad. More complicated to look for other answers, I guess.
Rest in peace Spurs, the club that I came to love.
A great piece of writing , don’t get me started on the disgraceful way tickets are allocated for away games , people with over 430 loyalty points are now being frozen out by corporate and players tickets and none has ever actually told us ( truthfully) how many away tickets don’t end up in real supporters hands
People I have been going with for years and years are now not getting tickets , look at Bournemouth , Brentford and Tamworth , yet you look around the away end , half and half fucking scarves, tourists , young kids and people who wouldn’t have a clue how to even apply for an away ticket!!
My first game was with my dad as a five year old on a Wednesday night in 1950.
I fell in love with Spurs and football.
I saw every home game the season we won the double.
At the start of every season I say that this is our year.
I have said it 62 times !!!!
And we are further away from that dream than we have ever been.
I never thought that I would die before my dream came true.
Levy buys kids for the future, for the future that never arrives.
He has not only let me down, but let down every one of the millions of fans who have dreamt my dream.
But we also know, he doesn’t care.
He has never cared and he will never care.
Not like us.
COYS
I’ve been a spurs fan from the age of 5 when we won the double, through the highs and horrible lows, but enough is enough, I vowed to never spend another penny on thfc after the conte rant and I have stuck to my word, it hurts not to go to games and enjoy the team I grew up with , but ENIC and levy don’t get a penny from me, he won’t give a toss about little old me there are thousands to take my place at games and spend in the shop, but one day there will be empty seats and silent tills…then we might get our tottenham back
I
I fell in love with club when I attended every home game in the season when club was relegated in 1977.as a young 9 year old it was glorious days getting bigger crowds than most clubs in the division above.the potential of this club is still enormous other London clubs say we are not a big club most of them wouldn’t get anywhere near our support.but whilst these owners are there my love has diminished
Until this fanbase gets off its arse and actually organise a proper protest against Levy nothing will change. Stop going to games stop spending money in the club shop and stop spending money in the ground. That is the only language Levy understands (money). Too many fans are just happy with failure.
Oh, the irony of such a beautifully written article on such a mess of a situation.
Nothing you so eloquently penned we didn’t already know but you put it all together in a damning indictment of everything that’s toxic about the club I love but that I currently detest. I guess it’s like a close friend who you’ve known your whole life, who you used to laugh and love to spend time with, turning into someone you dread seeing and have nothing left in common with.
I still go and sit in the South Stand, but now turn up with zero expectation or hope. I sing and try and show some passion but the Aussie Fraud, that has been shoe-horned in to save money and keep quiet (rather than the honest roastings from Mourinho and Conte which clearly embarrassed Levy), should have been canned months ago, and is so far out of his depth, he’d drown in a puddle.
But as you neatly pointed out, he’s just a stooge; a sad one-man-distraction that keeps the gullible audience looking at one hand whilst the one pulling the strings is doing all the work unseen. Levy’s tenure has ushered in one trophy and his lack of ambition, his sole focus on profit over entertainment has killed the heart of the club that I have supported for 50 years.
Whether we manage to stay up or not, I’ll still go, but the passion, the love and excitement I used to feel will have been damaged to a point where I’m struggling to see if it will ever return.
Couldn’t agree more
After 60 odd years I’ve had enough and will never again step foot instead Levy’s cash machine. So glad my son chose to support Arsenal and I never thought I’d say such a thing. There is no team there any more.
“siphon profit into a myriad of shell companies, many of which he and his cronies are also shareholders of”
Got any actual proof of that?
Looking up Daniel Levy on companies house gives a long list of related companies where certain club related activities have been segregated from the actual company the club is registered as (separate company for stadium, residential, leisure and hotels).
So any buyer would need to purchase all these too? He has very much carved the club up into different companies and structured this in a way to benefit him.
https://find-and-update.company-information.service.gov.uk/officers/GmEJorViWZCgqpF5O40rge5g1ZA/appointments
They are not shell companies. They are part of the overall group: https://thstofficial.com/understanding-the-ownership-and-corporate-structure-of-tottenham-hotspur/
I’ve been a spurs fan for over forty years and have never felt so disillusioned by what is going on at the club , yes we’ve seen bad times over the years but what I remember looking back is that the fans at least always had a hero to admire a Hoddle , Gazza , Lineker , Klinsmann ,Ginola , now there is not even one talisman to hang your hopes on there is no one
PHENOMENAL PIECE. Insanely accurate and meticulously laid out. This is an amazing read.
Very well said, but are we getting an American point of view commercialised not commercialized.
Yeah, really great article. When Ned Lasso is sacked, why don’t we employ Sean Dyche. He’ll keep us up plus he can easily fit in with the Levy dream of an old school grafter who’ll keep us ticking along nicely in the lower echelons of the league for eternity with no silly distractions of being a club aspiring to win anything