#Drennn. Posted April 30, 2021 Posted April 30, 2021 With Bayern Munich snapping up the most eligible manager on the market in Julian Nagelsmann, Tottenham have been left with an extensive list of potential candidates to consider as a replacement for Jose Mourinho. Ryan Mason has taken temporary charge until the end of the season, but who will chairman Daniel Levy trust to take the job going forward? A progressive, young 'project' coach, like Nagelsmann is and former Spurs boss Mauricio Pochettino was in 2014, or an experienced, high-profile name in the vein of Mourinho? Tottenham face the prospect of a second successive season without Champions League football and whoever takes the reins in north London will need to ensure a club that was part of the failed breakaway Super League does not spend a third outside Europe's elite competition. The contenders Levy has been at the helm since 2001 and finally got the man he sought for most of those two decades when Mourinho was appointed Spurs boss in November 2019. Now that project has come to an end, the Tottenham chairman must go back to the drawing board. Levy's previous appointments have ranged from club legend Glenn Hoddle to the likes of Jacques Santini, Martin Jol, Harry Redknapp and Andre Villas-Boas, while the only trophy Spurs have won during his tenure was the League Cup under Juande Ramos in 2008. Despite the lack of silverware, Pochettino's five-year term was the longest of any manager under Levy as he established Spurs as Champions League regulars and Premier League title challengers. The Argentine was 42 when he arrived from Southampton, and Levy may look to candidates of a similar age and profile who have already worked in the English top flight. At 40, Scott Parker has already overseen Fulham's return to the Premier League via the play-offs last season, but his side are in danger of going straight back down. The former England midfielder was a po[CENSORED]r figure at the club as a player as well as when he returned as an under-18s coach and has qualities that may appeal to Levy and Spurs fans - a desire to play attractive football and to trust in young players. In a similar mould is Brighton boss Graham Potter, 45, who got his break in the Swedish fourth tier, leading Ostersund through the divisions and into the Europa League before arriving at Brighton via Swansea. Brendan Rodgers is arguably the best-suited candidate from within the Premier League but has distanced himself from reports and said his focus is on Leicester, so does that mean Levy will have to look abroad? German football writer Constantin Eckner told BBC Sport that Nagelsmann was considered the leading contender but had a "desire for championships" - and has chosen Bayern instead. Ajax manager Erik ten Hag was the favourite at the time of publishing this article, having led the Dutch giants to the Champions League semi-finals in 2019, but he signed a contract extension with the Amsterdam club on Friday that runs until 2023. Former RB Leipzig coach and director of football Ralf Rangnick is another name being mooted and is currently out of work. Rangnick, 62, who also enjoyed success at Schalke and Hoffenheim, turned down the Chelsea job this season and his methods have influenced a host of coaches including Nagelsmann, Thomas Tuchel and Jurgen Klopp. The other option for Levy is to go for an international coach - as he did with the unsuccessful appointment of former France manager Santini - so could Spurs pair England captain Harry Kane with Three Lions boss Gareth Southgate? "Levy has a problem because he has to think about the direction of the club," former England international Karen Carney told BBC Radio 5 Live's Friday Football Social. "Does he go for a young manager and a project or an experienced manager? He has tried both now and neither has worked." Former Spurs midfielder Jermaine Jenas says Rodgers and Nagelsmann would have been "great options" adding that "I am not sure anyone else could get Tottenham better as quickly" as the Leicester boss. But he says it "makes no sense" for Rodgers to leave the Foxes as he "has great owners" and a "better team" at Leicester. Analysis - Levy needs to get this one right BBC Sport's Simon Stone Tottenham's next manager will be the 10th permanent appointment made during Daniel Levy's 20 years as chairman. After the events of the past week, he really needs to get this one right. In a way, the timing of Jose Mourinho's dismissal made no sense. Ditching the man whose major currency is silverware less than a week before a major final and replacing him with a rookie yet to reach his 30th birthday is at odds with the clarity Levy has brought to his role. Uncertainty surrounds the future of Harry Kane, although whether anyone has the funds to buy him is another matter given the England skipper's contract runs to 2024. The feelgood factor that existed around the club as it approached its first Champions League final has been lost. The absence of fans - and enormous financial hole created by the pandemic - gives Tottenham the impression of a club searching for its direction again. Ajax's Erik ten Hag would, stylistically, have seemed a good fit. The same is true of the Maurizio Sarri who did so well at Napoli, though the Sarri from Chelsea and Juventus less so. Wolves boss Nuno Espirito Santo gives the impression of someone reaching the end of the line in his current job but, at their most effective, his team at Molineux is based on counter-attacks. Parker knows Tottenham, but the leap from Fulham is a big one and after that we are into the likes of Rafael Benitez, Massimiliano Allegri and Marcelo Bielsa, who would all be imaginative choices without being long term. 4
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