Next Spurs manager odds: 5 candidates to replace Antonio Conte following his Tottenham exit

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Next Spurs manager odds: 5 candidates to replace Antonio Conte following his Tottenham exit

Was that a one-way ticket, Antonio Conte?

With Tottenham’s head coach pictured aboard a Ryanair flight to Italy last week, it appears he need not have bothered booking a return as it was announced on Sunday night that he had left the club by mutual consent.

Daniel Levy used the international break to speak with his closest confidants before ending the Italian’s 16-month reign.

It was expected that Conte would be leaving following his astonishing rant after the draw with Southampton, when he branded Spurs’ players “selfish”.

“I see players that don’t want to help each other and don’t put their heart [in],” Conte added.

“They don’t want to play under pressure, they don’t want to play under stress. It is easy in this way. Tottenham’s story is this. Twenty years there is the owner and they never won something but why? The fault is only for the club, or for every manager that stay here.”

The next chapter of Tottenham’s story is now about to begin without Conte, as his former assistant Cristian Stellini takes charge with Ryan Mason as his assistant.

Here are the managers being linked with the job on a permanent basis.

Julian Nagelsmann

The former Bayern Munich boss only parted ways with the Bundesliga outfit a matter of days ago, with Thomas Tuchel – himself often previously touted as a future Spurs manager – replacing him.

Nagelsmann is reportedly interested in the vacancy, though no permanent appointment is expected to be made until the summer which would leave plenty of time for talks to take place.

Mauricio Pochettino

“He’s magic, you know,” goes Spurs fans’ chant for Pochettino, and wouldn’t this be some reappearing act – four years on from his dismissal.

In and out have gone Jose Mourinho and Nuno Espirito Santo in that time, with Conte now following suit, while in his own endeavours Pochettino has collected a Ligue 1 title at Paris Saint-Germain before getting the customary boot for failing to deliver the Champions League.

As Carlo Ancelotti, Unai Emery and Tuchel have all gone on to prove, European silverware is more attainable away from the pressure cooker that is PSG, and after being the nearly-man for a few recent appointments – namely missing out on the Manchester United gig to Erik ten Hag – this one just feels right.

Hence why the bookmakers also fancy a return.

Next Tottenham manager odds

Tottenham manager for the first game of 2023-24 Premier League season

  • Julian Nagelsmann 1-2
  • Mauricio Pochettino: 2-1
  • Oliver Glasner: 9-2
  • Luis Enrique: 6-1
  • Roberto De Zerbi: 10-1

Oliver Glasner

Recent experience of winning silverware? Step right up, Oliver Glasner, who steered Eintracht Frankfurt to Europa League glory last season – beating Barcelona, West Ham and Rangers en route.

Their Champions League campaign this time around may have ended with a last-16 exit to Napoli, but losing to the runaway Serie A leaders is no blot on the CV.

Frankfurt faced Spurs twice in the group stage, too, losing 3-2 in London and drawing 0-0 at home, while they are currently sixth in the Bundesliga – stumbling of late with two draws and two defeats and slipping out of the Champions League places.

Regardless, 48-year-old Glasner is turning heads, and could be swayed too. “Eintracht Frankfurt is a great club, but there are even more attractive jobs,” ex-Frankfurt boss Friedhelm Funkel told Sky Sport Germany. “If a request comes from abroad, then I believe that Oliver will think about it.”

Luis Enrique

Another available head coach, Luis Enrique left Spain after their last-16 defeat to Morocco at the World Cup last year.

International football aside, Barcelona was where Luis Enrique first handled the egos, and also the expectation, when winning the treble in 2014-15.

He would go on to leave in 2017, while amid two spells with Spain he had the personal trauma of losing his daughter, Xana, who died of bone cancer in 2019.

Away from club football for some time, six years to be precise, a return in this guise feels like an outside bet.

Roberto De Zerbi

The stock of Roberto De Zerbi has risen vastly since he first graced these shores in September. The Italian has emphatically answered the question of how Brighton will cope after Graham Potter, with the Seagulls remaining in contention for European football next season and arguably playing a more attractive brand of football to boot.

That could be music to Spurs fans’ ears, given their displays under Conte. But with Pochettino’s return also promising an improvement stylistically – anything would be an improvement, some supporters would say – Brighton will hope to keep hold of their man for the long term, until the next Big Six manger is dismissed, anyway.