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Your thoughts on ... Comolli exit imminent as Spurs change direction

ackie

Well-Known Member
Dec 29, 2005
8,780
6,660
What are your thoughts on The Independent's report.
Will this move us in the right direction?
Is DC the man to blame for our poor start?

The Tottenham Hotspur hierarchy is debating whether to abandon its director of football system altogether as the sacking of Damien Comolli becomes imminent. The Frenchman is on his way out of the club after their disastrous start to the season and there is pressure on chairman Daniel Levy not to replace Comolli when he does eventually leave.

The Tottenham chairman implemented the system in May 2004 when he appointed Frank Arnesen but four years on Levy is being told by those close to him that Comolli's role has become so marginalised it would not be necessary to replace him. Getting rid of the director of football role would be a major change of direction for Tottenham who became the only club in the Premier League to embrace the system of one man being responsible for recruiting the players and another to coach them.
Levy has been told by those close to him that it would be pointless to replace Comolli because it is the chairman who does most of the deals himself anyway. It was Levy who flew to Zagreb at the end of last season to tie up the £16.5m deal for Luka Modric personally. Often in negotiations Comolli now finds himself acting as little more than a go-between for his chairman who decides the limits of Spurs' buying and selling.
Dispensing with the director of football's role would be a major move because it would remove another buffer between the famously private Levy and the Spurs supporters who are increasingly desperate about the club's start to a season which has left them bottom of the Premier League. Already it has been decided that Comolli, rather than 'head coach' Juande Ramos, will carry the can for the five defeats out of seven.
Comolli, who joined from Arsenal in 2005, was largely an unknown figure working in the background until he emerged as a major player in the plot to get rid of Martin Jol this time last year. In a particularly fiery press conference to mark Ramos's arrival in October last year, Comolli admitted that he would stand or fall by the success of the Spanish coach, although even he could not have predicted that he would go before Ramos.
Comolli is expected to leave within the next few weeks, a decision that is likely to be smoothed over on the understanding that it was "by mutual agreement". His major failing was not so much this summer – blame for the disastrously late sale of Dimitar Berbatov and the failure to replace him adequately has been laid at Levy's door – but the dealings of the previous year. Buying Younes Kaboul, Darren Bent and Kevin-Prince Boateng for a combined total of around £27m did not strengthen his position, especially with Adel Taarabt and Benoit Assou-Ekotto failing to live up to the billing.
As the secondsticked down to midnight on the transfer deadline day of 1 September, and with Tottenham struggling to plug the gap left by Berbatov, Comolli was largely being bypassed by Levy in negotiations for players. When Tottenham brought him into the club as Arnesen's successor they thought they were getting Arsène Wenger's brightest young scout. In fact, as the Arsenal chief scout Steve Rowley noted in an interview somewhat later, the only Arsenal player Comolli had a hand in scouting was Gaël Clichy.
Levy is a powerful figure at Spurs, he has a 20 per cent stake himself through the property and investment company ENIC and he also manages the 60 per cent stake owned by tycoon Joe Lewis. The two other non-executive directors on the board are Sir Keith Mills and Mervyn Davies. However, there is now a very real possibility that the entire structure of the club that Levy implemented will change when Comolli leaves.
Despite the results, Ramos will emerge as a manager in the most traditional sense of the word with a direct line to Levy on who he wants to buy and sell. However, it seems that the one person who is not prepared to change the way he runs Spurs is Levy himself. On the day Ramos was appointed, the secretive Spurs chairman famously squirreled himself away and allowed Comolli to take the flack for Jol's departure. With the Frenchman gone and no one to replace him there will be no option in the future but for Levy to front up
 

SpurSince57

Well-Known Member
Jan 20, 2006
45,213
8,229
Further proof (if it were needed) that the 'quality' press can be as full of crap as the tabloids. How was the sale of Berbatov 'disastrously' late?
 

Stavi

Active Member
May 7, 2006
501
135
he can't change it because it'd be the biggest admission that things weren't working and levy would have to go too. it's the same with sacking wendy: he can't do it as it'd mean that sacking jol and getting wendy in was a mistake; a giant one. levy needs to stick to his policies as it's the bed that he has made for himself.
 

worcestersauce

"I'm no optimist I'm just a prisoner of hope
Jan 23, 2006
26,982
45,287
Paragraph 4 line 1 "Comolli, who joined from Arsenal in 2005".
If the pratt who wrote this can't even get that right then nothing else he says has any credence whatsoever.

Another Independent no nothing prick talking out of his arse again.
Why do people pay any attention to these arseholes.:evil:
 

talkshowhost86

Mod-Moose
Staff
Oct 2, 2004
48,304
47,462
I don't think anyone will go anywhere because that would mean Levy admitting that the system had failed.

It was Comolli's job to pick Ramos so if Comolli is removed then that is surely admitting that Ramos isn't good enough either.

I think we have to wait for new owners before any major changes are made...and I don't know if that's actually going to happen any time soon.
 

worcestersauce

"I'm no optimist I'm just a prisoner of hope
Jan 23, 2006
26,982
45,287
I don't think anyone will go anywhere because that would mean Levy admitting that the system had failed.

It was Comolli's job to pick Ramos so if Comolli is removed then that is surely admitting that Ramos isn't good enough either.

I think we have to wait for new owners before any major changes are made...and I don't know if that's actually going to happen any time soon.

Not sure if you are accepting that the system has failed TSH but I don't accept that at all, it's certainly been better than the previous one manager system that we had in the 90's, when nobody could even be bothered to laugh at us we were such a nonentity.
 

kingofspurs

Member
May 15, 2007
195
0
Further proof (if it were needed) that the 'quality' press can be as full of crap as the tabloids. How was the sale of Berbatov 'disastrously' late?

It was disastrously late because of the havoc it wreaked on the squad's preparations, undermining team morale and meaning we could not get a proper pre-season with the finalised squad.

If we had sold him earlier, the impact on the squad of our hugely depleted frontline - and the fact that the Berba "replacement" Pav could not actually play with our only other senior striker, Bent - would have been very clear, and Levy could have taken action to bring in more quality up front.

The fact is, Levy should have had the foresight to see both these situations becoming realities. He was undone by his desire to prove a point to Man Utd and squeeze every pound out of the deal.

He has done much good for the club but on this one, he must take the blame - and I reckon he knows it.
 

talkshowhost86

Mod-Moose
Staff
Oct 2, 2004
48,304
47,462
Not sure if you are accepting that the system has failed TSH but I don't accept that at all, it's certainly been better than the previous one manager system that we had in the 90's, when nobody could even be bothered to laugh at us we were such a nonentity.

I agree that under Levy we've been much better than before, but I'm not sure that's because of the system.

Arnesen bought in a hell of alot of dross and Comolli has done the same. How many of our non big money signings have actually become successful? And how many youth players have broken through?

Yes we've bought in some good players in that time but we hardly needed a DoF to tell us that someone like Berbatov would be a good buy.

I'm just not sure exactly what the role has bought to the club. One of the reasons we had it was to bring stability when we changed managers....well that hasn't happened has it?
 

DJS

A hoonter must hoont
Dec 9, 2006
31,278
21,782
I would prefer that we do away with the role and just go back to having a manager.
 

fazza

Well-Known Member
May 5, 2004
17,285
490
I've said it on here already, Nothing at Tottenham would suprise me anymore, yeah we hear that Comolli's job is safe, thats the line coming out of Tottenham anyway, but wasn't Martin Jol's job safe aswell a year ago.

One positive out of this should it happen is the likes of O'Neill and Redknapp would become more likely in the future should we need a manager change.

Now would Redknapp come to Spurs if he controlled who was bought in to the club and the club itself wasn't in the bottom 3, probably.
 

DC_Boy

New Member
May 20, 2005
17,608
5
well once again the timing of Berbatov's sale comes up
I have no problem that it was a late late sale - thatgot us the money we needed

however it was a massive problem that we didn't get another striker in pre-season

Pav apparently wasn't available - though we don't know that for sure of course

milito, my choice to replace Keane was apparently available, but we didn't take up the option, others must have been available - we chose to pursue Arshavin (who I never thought would be a good keane replacement, and I said that time and again on here during the Arshavin frenzy, a very good player but not a priority at the time when we needed a striker) and Pav till the bitter end

a massive massive mistake
 

yanno

Well-Known Member
Aug 1, 2003
5,857
2,877
Now would Redknapp come to Spurs if he controlled who was bought in to the club and the club itself wasn't in the bottom 3, probably.

That's the best reason ever for keeping the DoF role...

'Arry in charge of ENIC's chequebook? The man who was allegedly paid commission by West Ham's board for selling their "golden generation" such as Rio Ferdinand? :bang:
 

trevo

(ex?)EU Member
Oct 23, 2007
3,027
3,439
I'd say that Comolli has been responsible for a load of really duff expenditure and in this time of economic crisis lot's will lose their jobs. He should lose his for sheer incompetence. We should also ditch the role and let the manager manage. At the moment DOF=DIREctor of Farce. If he is given the spanish archer then
game_flintstones_taskset.gif
 

Dan Ashcroft

Manstack vs The Gay Chimney
Jan 6, 2008
6,404
1,147
Paragraph 4 line 1 "Comolli, who joined from Arsenal in 2005".
If the pratt who wrote this can't even get that right then nothing else he says has any credence whatsoever.

Another Independent no nothing prick talking out of his arse again.
Why do people pay any attention to these arseholes.:evil:

Yes, and Pleat not Arnesen was our first director of football (or even Venables back in the 1991-3 seasons).

It was disastrously late because of the havoc it wreaked on the squad's preparations, undermining team morale and meaning we could not get a proper pre-season with the finalised squad.

If we had sold him earlier, the impact on the squad of our hugely depleted frontline - and the fact that the Berba "replacement" Pav could not actually play with our only other senior striker, Bent - would have been very clear, and Levy could have taken action to bring in more quality up front.

The fact is, Levy should have had the foresight to see both these situations becoming realities. He was undone by his desire to prove a point to Man Utd and squeeze every pound out of the deal.

He has done much good for the club but on this one, he must take the blame - and I reckon he knows it.

It would have cost us £10m to sell Berbatov earlier. The only bids before deadline day were around the £20m mark. Only on deadline day did the £35m City and then £30m United bids come in.

I would prefer that we do away with the role and just go back to having a manager.

Ramos would have to go then. Most top European coaches also wouldn't want to come into an English system where they get burdened with an awful lot more administrative and other duties that distract them from coaching the first team.

Ramos has probably never scouted or bought a player in his life before.

I've said it on here already, Nothing at Tottenham would suprise me anymore, yeah we hear that Comolli's job is safe, thats the line coming out of Tottenham anyway, but wasn't Martin Jol's job safe aswell a year ago.

One positive out of this should it happen is the likes of O'Neill and Redknapp would become more likely in the future should we need a manager change.

Now would Redknapp come to Spurs if he controlled who was bought in to the club and the club itself wasn't in the bottom 3, probably.

I'd put good money on neither O'Neill or Redknapp ever being our manager. Levy met O'Neill before we appointed Santini and wasn't impressed at all. Levy also tries to be whiter than white in financial matters (hence not simply paying the Arshavin bungs) and wouldn't touch Bent 'Arry with a barge pole.
 

fazza

Well-Known Member
May 5, 2004
17,285
490
That's the best reason ever for keeping the DoF role...

'Arry in charge of ENIC's chequebook? The man who was allegedly paid commission by West Ham's board for selling their "golden generation" such as Rio Ferdinand? :bang:

Twitcher's one of the best English managers around, he should have got the England job last time.

He's ability to pluck players out of knowhere and gel them into a good team I admire, he's doing an excellent job at Portsmouth IMO and they beat us didn't they (though all premiership teams do these days), If Ramos was pushed out the door i'd welcome good old Arry to the club, though if he had any sense he'd stay at Portsmouth as they love him down here despite his loan spell at Southampton.
 

fazza

Well-Known Member
May 5, 2004
17,285
490
Dan do you have any new info to tell us regarding whats going on inside the club, Ramos position etc, rumours of players not being happy with him like Bentley and Gio.
 
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