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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Sport
Ed Aarons

Tottenham fans will only appreciate me when I am gone, says Daniel Levy

Daniel Levy
Daniel Levy believes the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium is his greatest achievement. Photograph: Steve Kyewong Cho/Shutterstock

The Tottenham chair, Daniel Levy, believes he will get credit for his time in charge only when he leaves and is confident that Thomas Frank can help the club to “compete at the ­highest level”.

In a rare interview, Levy described the construction of the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium as his greatest achievement and hit back at fans who have blamed him for the club’s failure to win more trophies. “It’s one of those situations when I’m not here I’m sure I’ll get the credit,” Levy told Gary Neville on his Overlap podcast.

“This stadium is a symbol of ­Tottenham Hotspur on the global map. It’s fantastic for the local ­community – the employment we’re creating because of this stadium. The fact that other clubs are now trying to copy what we’re doing, that should be a sign that maybe we did do something bold and something right.”

The Europa League triumph last season was Spurs’ first trophy since 2008 and came just before the end of a Premier League campaign when they finished 17th after a record 22 defeats. Levy sacked Ange ­Postecoglou 16 days after the win against Manchester United in the final in Bilbao and he is hopeful that Frank can help the club to challenge for trophies on a more consistent basis.

“Whenever you appoint a coach, you always believe it’s right,” Levy said. “You need a lot of ­ingredients for it to be right. Thomas is a highly intelligent individual, a ­fantastic way about him in terms of communication.

“He will be great at ­developing young players and older players and making them better. He gets the style of football we want to play. We haven’t said to him: ‘You’ve got to win the league this year.’ We just want to compete at the highest level.”

Levy was critical of the Premier League for the time it has taken to conclude the case involving alleged breaches of the league’s regulations by Manchester City. The club, who deny wrongdoing, were charged in ­February 2023 with more than 130 breaches .

“It would be really unfair of me to talk about another club in the Premier League,” he said. “All I would say is that it’s going through a process which has gone on for far too long. It needs to be brought, for the good of the game, to a conclusion one way or another.”

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