Tottenham Overhaul Continues as Sky Sports News Details 2024-25 Pressure — Sky Sports News

Tottenham Overhaul Continues as Sky Sports News Details 2024-25 Pressure — Sky Sports News

sky sports news says Tottenham Hotspur’s owners are pushing through an internal overhaul regardless of whether the club stays in the Premier League. The work is already under way while Spurs face a final-day battle to stay up, with changes set to continue next season whatever league they are in.

Vinai Venkatesham Review

Vinai Venkatesham was tasked with a considerable internal review into how Tottenham reached this position. He later told a Supporters Trust meeting that the club had made "strong progress in areas such as the stadium, training facilities, commercial growth and stadium operations", but said other areas were "falling short of what is required to compete at the highest level".

That split explains the way Tottenham are being rebuilt. The off-field work has moved forward, but the football side has not kept pace with the resources and infrastructure around it, and the hierarchy are treating that gap as something to fix now rather than after the season ends.

ENIC Since 2022

Since 2022, Joe Lewis put his stake in ENIC into a family trust, and Vivienne Lewis, Charles Lewis and Nick Beucher have been overseeing Tottenham Hotspur. Daniel Levy left Tottenham in September last year, a few games into the season and days after a troubled transfer window that saw the club miss out on Morgan Gibbs-White and Eberechi Eze.

That leadership shift came after fan protests intensified against the ownership and the former chairman. The club’s problems have built over time beneath the stadium and training-ground gloss, with the current review pointing to a severe disconnect with supporters and a poor reputation in the game.

£450m Losses At Tottenham

The financial picture is just as stark. The 2024-25 accounts later revealed a swing from profit in 2018 to £450m-worth of losses from 2020 to the end of last season, driven by unsustainable spending and a lack of revenue from player sales.

Tottenham’s first team have increasingly underperformed in relation to increased revenue in recent seasons, leaving the club trying to reset both its football operation and its balance sheet at the same time. For supporters, the immediate reality is that the overhaul does not depend on staying up; it is happening while the club still has to solve its final-day survival battle.

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