'In Jose we have one of the most successful managers in football': Why Tottenham fired Mauricio Pochettino and gave Jose Mourinho his job

Mauricio Pochettino sacked six months after leading Spurs to the Champions League final

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Jose Mourinho sealed a return to coaching after almost a year out when Tottenham hired one of the world’s most successful managers in a bid to end the club’s decade-long wait for a trophy.

Tottenham moved swiftly to replace Mauricio Pochettino, who was fired on Tuesday after a five and a half year spell in which he transformed the team’s fortunes - including reaching a Champions League final - but was unable to win a title.

Silverware and titles are something Mourinho, who has won 25 major trophies as a manager, specialises in. But there remain question marks over whether the Portuguese coach is still the force he once was after a turbulent 30-month spell at Manchester United that ended last December.

“In Jose we have one of the most successful managers in football,” Tottenham chairman Daniel Levy said of an appointment that has divided the opinion of fans “He has a wealth of experience, can inspire teams and is a great tactician.”

Levy, who acknowledged Tuesday that he fired Pochettino “extremely reluctantly,” said he believed Mourinho “will bring energy and belief to the dressing room”.

Tottenham’s players will certainly respect Mourinho’s CV, which includes three Premier League titles across two spells at Chelsea and also league winner’s medals with Porto in Portugal, Inter Milan in Italy and Real Madrid in Spain. He has won the Champions League with two clubs, Porto in 2004 and Inter Milan in 2010.

It is Mourinho’s man-management that has mostly been questioned in the latter years of his coaching career, given his penchant for publicly criticizing his own players. He has never spent more than three and a half years in a single stint at one club.

“I am excited to be joining a club with such a great heritage and such passionate supporters,” said Mourinho, who signed a contract to the end of the 2022-23 season. “The quality in both the squad and the academy excites me. Working with these players is what has attracted me.”

Tottenham’s improbable run to the Champions League final in June, where they lost to Liverpool, masked a drop-off in form in the Premier League that has seen them win just six of their 24 games since February, straddling the end of last season and the start of this season.

Spurs currently are in 14th place in the standings after 12 games, 11 points off the Champions League qualification positions.

Mourinho’s first game in charge of Tottenham will be against West Ham on Saturday, and he will return to United at Old Trafford on December 4.

Since leaving Porto for Chelsea in 2004, Mourinho has always worked at clubs with big budgets so Tottenham is not necessarily a natural fit. Pochettino had to battle against the biggest teams in Europe while working with strict financial constraints under Levy, particularly as Tottenham prepared to move into their new stadium last season.

Tottenham’s squad needs a revamp, too, after growing stale because of the lack of recent recruitment. He will need to quickly fix Tottenham’s leaky defence and get more out of the team’s underperforming midfielders, Dele Alli and Christian Eriksen.

The main playmaker, Eriksen appeared to be on his way out of the club as he seeks a new challenge but working under Mourinho might offer that.

Mourinho, who still has a house in London, will be back coaching the Champions League next week, too, with Tottenham needing one win from their final two group-stage games to qualify for the knockout stage. They are out of the League Cup, having been eliminated by fourth-tier Colchester in one of a number of humiliating results under Pochettino this season.

Tottenham have not won a trophy since capturing the League Cup in 2008.