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History of Tottenham Hotspur F.C.

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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
History of an English football club
For a statistical breakdown by season, seeList of Tottenham Hotspur F.C. seasons.

The original bronze figure of the Spurs cockerel on a ball on display in the lobby at White Hart Lane
The original Spurs cockerel

Tottenham Hotspur Football Club is afootball club based inTottenham, northLondon, England. Formed in 1882 as "Hotspur Football Club" by a group of schoolboys, it was renamed to "Tottenham Hotspur Football Club" in 1884, and is commonly referred to as "Tottenham" or "Spurs". Initiallyamateur, the club turned professional in 1895. Spurs won theFA Cup in1901, becoming the first, and so far onlynon-League club to do so since the formation of theFootball League. The club has won the FA Cup a further seven times, the Football League twice, theLeague Cup four times, theUEFA Cup/Europa League three times and theUEFA Cup Winners' Cup in 1963, the firstUEFA competition won by an English team. In1960–61, Tottenham became the first team to completeThe Double in the 20th century.

Tottenham played in theSouthern League from 1896 until 1908, when they were elected to theFootball League Second Division. They won promotion to theFirst Division the following year, and stayed there until the late 1920s. The club played mostly in the Second Division until the 1950s, when it enjoyed a revival, reaching a peak in the 1960s. Fortunes dipped after the early 1970s, but resurged in the 1980s. Tottenham was a founding member of thePremier League in 1992; they finished in mid-table most seasons, but now rank as one of thetop six clubs.

Of the club's thirty-seven managers,John Cameron was the first to win a major trophy, the 1901 FA Cup.Peter McWilliam added a second FA Cup win for the club in 1921.Arthur Rowe developed the "push and run" style of play in the 1950s and led the club to its first league title.Bill Nicholson oversaw theDouble winning side as well as the most successful period of the club's history, in the 1960s and early 1970s. Later managers includeKeith Burkinshaw, the second most successful in terms of major trophies won, with two FA Cups and a UEFA Cup, andTerry Venables, under whom the club won the FA Cup in 1991. The most recent winner isAnge Postecoglou who led the team to victory in theEuropa League in 2025.

Spurs played their early games on public land atTottenham Marshes, but by 1888 they were playing on rented ground atNorthumberland Park. In 1899, the club moved toWhite Hart Lane, where a stadium was gradually developed. Spurs remained there until 2017. Its replacement,Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, was completed in 2019 on the same site; during its construction, home matches were played atWembley Stadium.

Formation

[edit]

On the 5th of September, 1882, the subscriptions to the club were commenced to be received, and the same, augmented by a small sum from the Cricket Club, were expended in purchasing wood for goal and flag posts, material for flags, tape (there were no cross-bars then), stationery and stamps, and later, a ball. The goal posts, one of which is still in existence, were of amateur make and made by Mr. Casey, the father of two of the members, and painted blue and white; the first ball was given by the big brother of the same two members, and he had some time back suggested the name of 'Hotspur' when the Cricket Club started.
The actual founders of the Football Club were: J. Anderson, T. Anderson, E. Beavan, R. Buckle, H.D. (Sam or Ham) Casey, L.R. Casey, F. Dexter, S. Leaman, J.H. Thompson, Jnr., P. Thompson, and E. Wall. R. Buckle was captain, H.D. Casey the vice-captain, J.H. Thompson, Jnr. the secretary, and L.R. Casey the treasurer.

A Romance of Football: The History of the Tottenham Hotspur F.C. (1921)[1]

The Hotspur Football Club was formed in 1882 by a group of schoolboys from Saint John's Middle Class School andTottenham Grammar School. Mostly aged 13 to 14, the boys were members of the HotspurCricket Club formed two years earlier.[1]Robert Buckle with his two friends Sam Casey and John Anderson conceived the idea of a football club so they could continue to play sport during the winter months. Club lore states that the boys gathered one night under a lamppost alongTottenham High Road about 100 yards/metres from the now-demolishedWhite Hart Lane ground, and agreed to form a football club.[2] The date of their meeting is unknown, so the Hotspur Football Club is taken to have been formed on 5 September 1882, when the eleven boys had to start paying their first annual subscriptions ofsixpence.[3] By the end of the year the club had eighteen members.[1] Although the nameNorthumberland Rovers was mooted, the boys settled on the nameHotspur. As with the cricket club, it was chosen in honour of SirHenry Percy (better known as Harry Hotspur, the rebel ofShakespeare'sHenry IV, part 1), whoseNorthumberland family once owned land in the area, includingNorthumberland Park in Tottenham, where the club is located.[4]

The boys initially held their meetings under lampposts in Northumberland Park or in half-built houses on the adjoining Willoughby Lane in Tottenham. In August 1883 the boys sought the assistance of John Ripsher, the warden of TottenhamYMCA and Bible-class teacher atAll Hallows Church, who became the first president of the club and its treasurer.[5][6] A few days later he presided over a meeting of twenty-one club members in the basement kitchen of the YMCA at Percy House or its annex on the High Road, which became the club's first headquarters. Ripsher, who continued as president until 1894, supported the boys through the club's formative years, reorganising it and establishing the club's ethos.[7] The stability he provided in the early years helped the club survive, unlike many others of the period that did not.[8] Ripsher found new premises for the club when the boys were evicted in 1884 after a YMCA council member was accidentally hit by a soot-covered football: first at 1 Dorset Villa, a church-owned property on Northumberland Park where they stayed for two years, then to the Red House on High Road around 1885–86 after they were again asked to leave, this time for playing cards in church.[9][10] The Red House, which stood beside the entrance gate to White Hart Lane but was demolished in 2016 during the ground's redevelopment,[11] was the club's headquarters until its move to 808 High Road in 1891. It was later bought by the club in 1921 and became its official address (748 Tottenham High Road) in 1935.[12][13] In April 1884, owing to letters for another London club namedHotspur being misdirected to North London, the club was renamed Tottenham Hotspur Football Club to avoid any further confusion.[14][15] The team were referred to as "Spurs" in press reports as early as 1883[16][17] (the use of "Spurs" for a team called Hotspur predates the formation of Tottenham Hotspur),[a] and they have also been called "the Lilywhites" after the white jerseys they have worn since the late 19th century.[18][19]

Early years

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The first and second teams of Spurs sitting down posing for a photograph in 1885
Spurs' first and second teams in 1885. Club president John Ripsher top row second right, team captainJack Jull middle row fourth left,Robert Buckle bottom row second left.

The boys played their early matches on public ground atTottenham Marshes, where they needed to mark out and prepare their own pitch, and on occasions had to defend against other teams who might try to take it over.[2] Local pubs were used as dressing rooms. Robert Buckle was the team's first captain,[20] and for two years the boys largely played games among themselves, but the number offriendly fixtures against other clubs gradually increased. The first recorded match took place on 30 September 1882 against a local team named the Radicals, a game Hotspur lost 2–0.[21] The first game reported by the local press was on 6 October 1883 against Brownlow Rovers, which Spurs won 9–0.[16] The team played their first competitive match on 17 October 1885 against St Albans, a company works team, in the London Football Association Cup. The match was attended by 400 spectators, and Spurs won 5–2.[22] In the early days Spurs were essentially a schoolboy team, sometimes playing against adults, but older players later joined, and the squad strengthened as they absorbed players from other local clubs.[3] Some of the early members such as Buckle, Sam Casey, John Thompson andJack Jull stayed with the club for many years as players, committee members or directors; for example Jull played until 1896, while Buckle served in various roles on the club committee and was on the first board of directors of Tottenham formed in 1898 until he left in 1900.[23][24]

Spurs attracted the interest of the local community soon after their formation, and the number of spectators for their matches grew to 4,000 within a few years. As their games were played on public land, no admission fees could be charged for spectators. In 1888 Tottenham moved their home fixtures from the Tottenham Marshes to Northumberland Park, where they rented an enclosed ground and were able to charge for admission and control the crowd. The first match there was on 13 October 1888, a reserve match that yieldedgate receipts of 17 shillings.[23] A week later they were beaten 8–2 byOld Etonians in their first senior game at the ground.[20] Spectators were usually charged3d a game, raised to6d for cup ties. By the early 1890s, a cup tie may draw a few thousand paying supporters.[23] In the early days there were no stands except for a couple of wagons as seats and wooden trestles for spectators to stand on, but for the1894–95 season, the first stand with just over 100 seats and a changing room underneath was built on the ground.[25] The club attempted to join theSouthern League in 1892 but failed when it received only one vote.[26] Instead, the club played in the short-livedSouthern Alliance for the1892–93 season.[27]

Spurs initially played in navy-blue shirts with a letter H on a scarlet shield on the left breast and whitebreeches.[28] The club colours were changed in 1884 or 1885 to light blue and white halved jerseys and white shorts, inspired by watchingBlackburn Rovers win theFA Cup at theKennington Oval in 1884, before returning to the original dark blue shirts for the1889–90 season.[29] From 1890 to 1895, the club had red shirts and blue shorts, changed in 1895 to chocolate brown and gold narrow striped shirts and dark-blue shorts.[30] Finally, in the1898–99 season, the strip was changed to the now familiar white shirts and navy-blue shorts.[31]

Professional status

[edit]

The club became unwittingly involved in a controversy known as the Payne Boots Affair in October 1893. A reserve player fromFulham, Ernie Payne, agreed to play for Spurs but arrived without any kit as it had apparently been stolen at Fulham. As no suitable boots could be found, the club gave him 10 shillings to buy his boots. Fulham then complained to theLondon Football Association that Tottenham had poached their player, and accused them of professionalism breaching amateur rules. On the latter charge, the London Football Association found Tottenham guilty, as the payment for the boots was judged an "unfair inducement" to attract the player to the club.[23] Spurs were suspended for a fortnight, had to forfeit their second-round match againstClapham Rovers in theFA Amateur Cup and were therefore eliminated from the competition.[32] Despite the punishment, the controversy had an unexpected positive effect on the club. Press coverage of the incident raised the national profile of what was then a local amateur club, and gained them sympathy for what many thought was unfair treatment. Invitations from other clubs to play games increased, and attendance at their matches rose.[33] The publicity also brought on board local businessman John Oliver, who became chairman in 1894 after Ripsher retired, and provided funding for the club.[34]

With an increasing number of teams to play against, the quality of Spurs' opposition also improved. To compete against better teams, the club committee, led by the second club president John Oliver, agreed that the club should turn professional. Robert Buckle made the proposal at a meeting on 16 December 1895, which was accepted after a vote, and the club gained its professional status on 20 December 1895. Spurs made a failed attempt to join theFootball League, but they were admitted to Division One of the Southern League in mid-1896.[35] They also participated in other leagues, initially the United League and laterWestern League, in which they did not always field the full first team.[23][36] The team was almost entirely rebuilt over the next two years; the first two professional players, Jock Montgomery and J. Logan, were quickly recruited from Scotland (a number of Scottish footballers would have significant influences in the club's history), and in 1897 they signed their first international,Jack Jones.[36]

On 2 March 1898, Spurs decided to become a limited company—the Tottenham Hotspur Football and Athletic Company—to raise funds and to limit the personal liability of its members. Eight thousand shares were issued at £1 each, but only 1,558 were taken up by the public in the first year.[37] A board of directors was formed with Oliver as chairman, but he retired after the company reported a loss of £501 at the end of the season in 1899.[23] Charles Roberts took over as chairman and remained in the post until 1943.[38]

Soon after the club became a limited company, on 14 March 1898,Frank Brettell was appointed the first manager of Spurs.[39] He signed several players from northern clubs, includingHarry Erentz,Tom Smith and, in particular,John Cameron, who signed fromEverton in May 1898 and was to have a considerable impact on the club. Cameron became player-manager the following February after Bretell left to take a better-paid position atPortsmouth, and led the club to its first trophies: the Southern League title in1899–1900 and the1901 FA Cup. In his first year as manager, Cameron signed seven players:George Clawley,Ted Hughes,David Copeland,Tom Morris,Jack Kirwan,Sandy Tait andTom Pratt. The following yearSandy Brown replaced Pratt, who wanted to return to the North despite being the top goalscorer. They, together with Cameron, Erentz, Smith and Jones, formed the 1901 Cup-winning team.[40]

Move to White Hart Lane

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Spurs and Notts County Players on the pitch at the opening game at White Hart Lane
First game atWhite Hart Lane, Spurs vsNotts County for the official opening on 4 September 1899

OnGood Friday 1898 a match was held againstWoolwich Arsenal at Northumberland Park, attended by a record crowd of 14,000. In the overcrowded ground, fans climbed up onto the roof of the refreshment stand to get a better view. The stand then collapsed under their weight causing a few injuries, which prompted the club to start looking for a new ground. In 1899 the club moved a short distance to a piece of land behind the White Hart pub.[41] The White Hart Lane site, actually located behindTottenham High Road, was anursery owned by the brewery chainCharringtons. The club initially leased the ground from Charringtons, but development of the ground was restricted by the terms of the lease. In 1905, after issuing shares towards the cost of purchase, Spurs bought the freehold for £8,900 and paid a further £2,600 for a piece of land at the northern end.[42] By then the ground had a covered stand on the west side and earth mounds on the other three sides.[43]

The ground was never officially named, but it became popularly known as White Hart Lane, also the name of a localthoroughfare.[44] The first game at White Hart Lane was a friendly againstNotts County on 4 September 1899 that Spurs won 4–1,[45] and the first competitive game on the ground was held five days later againstQueens Park Rangers, a game won by Spurs 1–0.[46] With an effective attacking triangle of Jones, Kirwan and Copeland, Tottenham won 11 games in their first 13 games in the1908–09 season. On 28 April 1900, they finished top of the Southern League, and won the club their first trophy.[47] After the win, the club was dubbed "Flower of the South" by the press.[48]

1901 FA Cup

[edit]

Tottenham first took part in the FA Cup in the1894–95 season, but never got beyond the third round proper in six years.[49] In the1901 FA Cup, Spurs managed to reach the final after beating Preston North End,Bury,Reading andWest Bromwich Albion; all apart from Reading were Football League Division One teams of the1900–01 season. Thefinal against Division OneSheffield United was played atCrystal Palace and attended by 110,820 spectators, at that time the largest crowd ever for a football match.[50] The game ended in a 2–2 draw, with both of Spurs' goals coming from Sandy Brown, and a disputed goal from Sheffield. The final was the first to be filmed, and it contained the first referee decision demonstrated by film footage to be incorrect, as it showed that the ball did not cross the line for the Sheffield goal.[50][51]

Tottenham Hotspur players of the 1901 FA Cup Final posing in a group
The squad for the1901 FA Cup final againstSheffield United

In the replay atBurnden Park, Bolton on 27 April 1901, Spurs won 3–1 with goals from Cameron, Smith and another by Brown. By winning the FA Cup, Spurs became the onlynon-League club to have achieved the feat since the formation of the Football League in 1888.[52] The club also inadvertently introduced the tradition of tying ribbons in the colours of the winning team on the FA Cup when the wife of a Spurs director tied blue and white ribbons to the handles of the cup.[53] The win started a trend for Spurs' success in years ending in a one, with further FA Cup wins in1921,1961,1981 and1991, theLeague Cup in 1971, the league in1951, and in1961, which is thedouble winning year.[54]

Following the 1901 Cup win, Spurs failed to repeat the success in the next few seasons but they were runners-up in the Southern League twice, and won theLondon League in the1902–03 season as well as the Western League in the1903–04 season.[55][56] They went on their first overseas tour, toAustria andHungary, in May 1905.[57] Cameron left on 13 March 1907, citing "differences with the directorate",[23][58] and he was replaced in April 1907 byFred Kirkham, a referee with no managerial experience. Kirkham was disliked by players and fans alike, and he left on 20 July 1908 after a year as manager.[59]

Early decades in the Football League (1908–1949)

[edit]

Election to the Football League

[edit]

Tottenham resigned from the Southern League in 1908 and sought to join the Football League. Their initial application was unsuccessful, but after the resignation ofStoke from the league for financial reasons, Tottenham won election to the Second Division of the Football League for the1908–09 season to replace them.[60] As Spurs had no manager following Kirkham's departure, the directors took on the role of choosing the team, while the club secretaryArthur Turner was tasked with overseeing the team's affairs.[61] Spurs played their first league game in September 1908 againstWolverhampton Wanderers and won 3–0, with their first ever goal in the Football League scored byVivian Woodward.[62] Woodward was also instrumental in the club's immediate promotion to theFirst Division after finishing runners-up in their first year. Before the start of the following season, Woodward left football to pursue other interests, although he soon returned to the game and joinedChelsea. Spurs struggled in their first year in the First Division, but avoided relegation by beating Chelsea in the last game of the season with goals fromBilly Minter and a former Chelsea playerPercy Humphreys, sending their opponents down instead.[63]

A programme from 1910, showing a cartoon of a Spurs cockerel
Spurs cockerel in a 1910 official programme

The club started an ambitious plan to redevelop White Hart Lane in 1909, beginning with the construction of the West Stand designed byArchibald Leitch. The North and South stands were then built in the early 1920s, with the East Stand completed in 1934, bringing the capacity of the finished stadium to almost 80,000.[42] A bronze cockerel was placed on top of the West Stand in 1909. The cockerel was adopted as an emblem because Harry Hotspur, after whom the club was named, was believed to have gained the nickname wearing fighting spurs in battles, and spurs were also worn byfighting cock.[64] Tottenham had initially used spurs as a symbol in 1900, as Harry Hotspur was said to have charged into battles by digging in his spurs to make the horse go faster, a symbol that evolved into a fighting cock.[65]

In April 1912Jimmy Cantrell,Bert Bliss andArthur Grimsdell arrived at the club.[66] Late that yearPeter McWilliam was appointed manager. He became a significant and popular figure at the club, managing the team in two separate periods, both interrupted by world wars.[67] The first significant signing by McWilliam was wingerFanny Walden, who was signed for a record £1,700 in April 1913,[68] later signings included goalkeeperBill Jaques and right-backTommy Clay.[69] McWilliam's record in the early years was poor, and Tottenham were bottom of the league at the end of the1914–15 season when league football was suspended owing to theFirst World War that had started a year earlier. During the war years, White Hart Lane was taken over by the government and turned into a factory for making gas masks, gunnery and protection equipment.[70] The London clubs organised their own matches, and Tottenham played their home games at Arsenal'sHighbury andClapton Orient's Homerton grounds.[71]

When football resumed in 1919, the First Division was expanded from 20 to 22 teams. The Football League offered one of the additional places to 19th-placed Chelsea, who would otherwise have been relegated with Spurs for the1915–16 season, and the other, controversially, to Arsenal, who had finished only sixth in Division Two the previous season.[72][73] This decision cemented a bitter rivalry that continues to this day,[30] a rivalry that had begun six years earlier when Arsenal relocated fromPlumstead toHighbury, a move opposed by Tottenham, who considered Highbury their territory, as well as by Clapton Orient and Chelsea.[74][75] Matches between the two clubs, called theNorth London derby, became the most fiercely-contested derby in London.[76]

Interwar years

[edit]
Image on Tottenham High Road in 1921, with captain Arthur Grimsdell holding the FA cup surrounded by fans
Tottenham Hotspur captainArthur Grimsdell displays the cup to fans onTottenham High Road after Spurs' victory in the 1921 final, the first win by a London-based team in 20 years.

In the first season after the war McWilliam took Tottenham straight back to Division One when they becameDivision Two Champions of the1919–20 season. They won with what was then a league record of 70 points, losing only 4 games all season with 102 goals scored.[77] Two players signed that season,Jimmy Dimmock andJimmy Seed, became crucial members of the team together with Grimsdell.[78] Other notable players of the period include Tommy Clay,Bert Smith andCharlie Walters. The following year Spurs reached their secondFA Cup final after beating Preston North End in the semi-final with two goals from Bliss. On 23 April 1921, in a game dominated by Walters, Spurs beat Wolverhampton Wanderers 1–0 inthe final atStamford Bridge, with 20-year-old Dimmock scoring the winning goal.[79][80] They also won their firstCharity Shield the same year. Following their FA Cup victory in 1921, Spurs players started to wear the cockerel emblem on their shirts.[30]

At McWilliam's instigation a nursery club was established atNorthfleet in about 1922, an arrangement that was formalised in 1931 and lasted until the Second World War.[81][82] Thirty-seven Spurs players, nine of whom became internationals, started their playing career at Northfleet. They includeBill Nicholson,Ron Burgess,Taffy O'Callaghan,Vic Buckingham andTed Ditchburn.[82]

In the1921–22 season, Spurs finished second toLiverpool in the league, their first serious challenge for the title. After the success of the two post-war seasons, Spurs only managed to finish mid-table in the next five. The team had begun to deteriorate, and new signingsJack Elkes andFrank Osborne could not overcome weaknesses in other positions.[83] They were in first place for a while in 1925, until Grimsdell broke his leg and they dropped down the table.[80] McWilliam left forMiddlesbrough in February 1927 when Middlesbrough offered him significantly better pay while the Tottenham board refused his request for a smaller increase.[84]Billy Minter, who first joined the club as a player in1907 and became the first player to score 100 goals for the club in 1919,[85] took over as manager. In the1927–28 season, his first full season in charge, Spurs were unexpectedly relegated despite finishing with 38 points, only 6 points behind 4th-placedDerby County. One factor in their relegation may have been the sale of Jimmy Seed toSheffield Wednesday—Wednesday had looked certain to be relegated, but Seed helped them escape, beating Tottenham twice along the way, and they went on to win the League Championship title in each of the next two seasons.[86]

Minter struggled to return Spurs to the top flight despite signingTed Harper in February 1929. Harper was a prolific goalscorer in the few years he was at the club; his 36 league goals scored in a season in 1930–31 remained a record until 1963, when it was broken byJimmy Greaves.[87][88] The stress of being manager affected Minter's health; he resigned, and was given another position at the club in November 1929.[89]Percy Smith was appointed manager at the start of 1930, and he strengthened the team with imported and home-grown talents includingGeorge Hunt,Willie Hall andArthur Rowe. The team, aided by the goal-scoring exploits of Hunt, were nicknamed the "Greyhounds" in the1932–33 season as they raced up the Second Division from near the bottom of the table, and won promotion after finishing second toStoke City.[90] Spurs only managed to stay in Division One for two seasons; injuries (especially to Rowe and Hall) left the team weakened and at the bottom of the table in the1934–35 season by April 1935. Smith then resigned, claiming that the club's directors had interfered with his team selection.[91]

Jack Tresadern took over from caretaker managerWally Hardinge in July 1935, but failed to lift the club out of the Second Division in the three years of his tenure. He promoted centre-forwardJohnny Morrison in place of fans' favourite George Hunt, and decided to sell Hunt to rival Arsenal in 1937, a decision that made him unpopular. He left in April 1938 forPlymouth Argyle when it became apparent that he would likely be sacked at the end of the season.[92] Peter McWilliam was brought back as manager, and he tried to rebuild the team by promoting young players from Northfleet including Nicholson, Burgess and Ditchburn, but his second stint at the club was again interrupted by world war.[67] Spurs also failed to advance beyond the quarter-finals of the FA Cup in the 1930s, getting that far three years running from 1935 to 1938. Despite Tottenham's lack of success in this period, 75,038 spectators still squeezed into White Hart Lane in March 1938 for acup tie againstSunderland—the club's largest gate until it was surpassed in 2016 when more than 85,000 attended the2016–17 UEFA Champions League home match againstMonaco held atWembley Stadium.[93]

War and post-war lull

[edit]

On 3 September 1939Neville Chamberlain declared war, and league football was abandoned with only three games played. Nevertheless, matches continued to be arranged and played during theSecond World War. The London clubs first played in theWartime League andFootball League War Cup, and Spurs won the Regional League South 'C' in1940. After a reorganisation in 1941, they also competed in the Football League South. Owing to the difficult wartime conditions, Spurs along with other London clubs refused to travel long distances for the matches drawn up by the Football League and decided to run their own competitions: London War League and London War Cup. They (eleven London clubs and five other clubs from the south) were temporarily expelled from the Football League; after paying a £10 fine they were readmitted, but they played in the Football League South in the way the London clubs had suggested.[94] McWilliam went back to the North during the war and the team was managed by Arthur Turner; under him Spurs won the regional league twice.[95][96] Charles Robert who had been chairman since 1898 died in 1943, and he was replaced by Fred Bearman.[97] As it was difficult to field a full squad in the war years, many young players, among themSonny Walters,Les Medley,Les Bennett andArthur Willis, gained their first playing experience for the club in this period.[94] Spurs also shared White Hart Lane with Arsenal when Highbury was requisitioned by the government and used as anAir Raid Precautions centre.[98]

After the war ended, McWilliam decided that he was too old to return to the club, and a former Arsenal playerJoe Hulme was given the job of managing Tottenham. Hulme failed to win promotion for the club, although Spurs managed to stay in the top half of the Second Division for the three seasons he was manager,[97] and they reached the semi-final of theFA Cup in 1948.[99] Players who joined the squad under Hulme includeEddie Baily,Len Duquemin,Harry Clarke andCharlie Withers. Football was popular in the post-war era, and although in the three post-war seasons during which Spurs languished in the Second Division, some games still drew large crowds, particularly for cup ties.[100] Hulme was sacked after he refused a suggestion to resign following an illness in March 1949.[99]

Arthur Rowe and title win (1949–1958)

[edit]

League title

[edit]

In May 1949 Rowe became Spurs manager at a salary of £1,500 a year. He inherited the squad assembled by Hulme except for the one crucial signing he made when he took over,Alf Ramsey.[101] Rowe introduced a new style of play,Push and run, which proved to be highly successful, and transformed the players into a team that were hard to beat in the1949–50 season. Rowe started his tenure as manager with a 4–1 victory atBrentford, the beginning of an unbeaten run of 23 League and Cup games between 27 August 1949 and 14 January 1950. With a free-scoring attack force, the team won the Second Division convincingly with six games yet to play. They ended the season nine points in front, elevating them back into the top flight.[102][103]

After a shaky start to their1950–51 season when they were trounced 4–1 at home by theBlackpool side ofStanley Matthews, Tottenham won eight consecutive games in October and November that included a 7–0 defeat ofJackie Milburn'sNewcastle.[102] Some considered the team of this season the best in Tottenham's history;[104] guarding the goal was Ditchburn, one of Spurs' best ever goalkeepers, who was aided in defence by Ramsey, Clarke, and Willis; also influential were the captain Burgess and Nicholson, with the five forwards of Baily, Medley, Duquemin, Bennett and Walters completing the regular starting eleven.[102][105] They finished the season ahead ofManchester United by three points, having won their First Division Championship title in the penultimate game of the season by beating Sheffield Wednesday with a solitary goal from Duquemin. That was Tottenham's first ever League title.[106]

Spurs Way

[edit]

The push and run tactics developed by Rowe were successful in his early years as manager.[107] Rowe credited McWilliam for learning to play a quick passing game,[108] which he developed into a style involving players playing in triangles, quickly laying the ball off to a teammate and running past the marking tackler to collect the return pass. Keeping to Rowe's maxim of "make it simple, make it quick", this method proved an effective way of moving the ball at pace with players' positions and responsibilities being totally fluid. It became an attractive fast-moving attacking style of play regarded by Tottenham fans to be the Spurs Way, which was adjusted and perfected in the later period under Bill Nicholson.[102][109]

The great fallacy is that the game is first and last about winning. It is nothing of the kind. The game is about glory, it is about doing things in style and with a flourish, about going out and beating the lot, not waiting for them to die of boredom.

Danny Blanchflower, 1972[110]

Spurs finished second in the1951–52 season, beaten to the title by a young Manchester United team. A bad winter and the poor state of the White Hart Lane pitch were contributory, as the "push and run" style of play required a good firm playing surface. The following years witnessed a period of decline, as great players aged but younger players such asTony Marchi andTommy Harmer were not yet experienced enough, and with injuries and other teams adapting to Spurs' revolutionary style of play, it meant a struggle for the once-dominant team.[102][111] Spurs could only finish tenth in the1952–53 season. The "push and run" team also started to disperse; Medley, Willis, Bennett and Burgess left to join other teams while Nicholson moved into coaching.[102] In 1954 Rowe signed future captainDanny Blanchflower for a club record fee of £30,000. Blanchflower won theFWA Footballer of the Year twice while at Tottenham.[112]

Post-Rowe

[edit]

The stress of managing the team had affected Rowe's health, and he suffered a breakdown in 1954; he resigned after falling ill again the following year. Rowe's assistant and long-time club servantJimmy Anderson stepped into the breach as manager, but the season ended with Spurs in the lower half of the table.[113] With Blanchflower in the team, Ramsey was dropped from the line-up, and he soon left to start his managerial career withIpswich Town, later guidingEngland to aWorld Cup win.[114] Spurs were almost relegated at the end of the1955–56 season, finishing just two points above the drop zone. In the1956–57 season, under the guidance of Bill Nicholson as coach, the creative pairing of Blanchflower and Harmer, and the scoring prowess ofBobby Smith, the club experienced a revival and finished in second place, albeit eight points behind the winners, the "Busby Babes" of Manchester United. Tottenham also fared well in thefollowing season, finishing third.[115][116] As manager, Anderson started to build a new team by signing, bringing in or promoting some of the players who became members of the team that saw major success later:Cliff Jones,Terry Medwin,Peter Baker,Ron Henry,Terry Dyson,Maurice Norman and Smith.[117]

Bill Nicholson and the glory years (1958–1974)

[edit]
Tottenham Hotspur F.C. in 1960 withDanny Blanchflower and both goalkeepers,Bill Brown andJohn Hollowbread, among others in the team withBill Nicholson as manager

In October 1958, with the pressure of a poor start to the season and failing health, Anderson resigned, to be replaced by Bill Nicholson.[118] Nicholson had joined Tottenham as an apprentice in 1936, and the following sixty-eight years saw him serve the club in every capacity from boot room to president. He became the most successful Spurs manager, guiding Tottenham to major trophy success three consecutive seasons in the early 1960s: thedouble in1961, the FA Cup andEuropean Cup semi-final in 1962 and theCup Winners' Cup in1963.[119][120]

In Nicholson's first game as manager, on 11 October 1958, Spurs beat Everton 10–4, their then record win,[121] but the team finished 18th in the league in hisfirst season in charge. In the following1959–60 season, Spurs improved to third place in the league, two points behind the championsBurnley. They also beatCrewe Alexandra 13–2 in the1959–60 FA Cup with five goals coming fromLes Allen. It remains the highest scoring FA Cup tie of the 20th century and is still the club's record win.[122][123] In his first two years in charge, Nicholson made several signings—Dave Mackay andJohn White, the two influential players of the Double-winning team, as well as Allen and goalkeeperBill Brown.[123]

Double winners

[edit]
15 Spurs players posing for a photograph after disembarking from an aeroplane in Rotterdam, flight attendants and aeroplane in the background
Spurs players of 1961, including club legendsCliff Jones,John White,Bobby Smith,Dave Mackay, andDanny Blanchflower.Jimmy Greaves was signed a month or so after this picture was taken.

The1960–61 season started with a 2–0 home win against Everton, the beginning of a run of eleven wins.[124] The winning run was interrupted by a 1–1 draw againstManchester City, followed by another four wins before the unbeaten streak was broken by a loss to Sheffield Wednesday atHillsborough in November.[125] It remained the best ever start by any club in the top flight of English football until it was surpassed by Manchester City in 2017.[126] The title was won on 17 April 1961 when Spurs beat the eventual runners-up Sheffield Wednesday at home 2–1, with three games still to play.[127]

In this Double-winning season only seventeen players were used in all forty-nine league and cup games, three of them playing only once.[116][128] The team was built around the quartet of Blanchflower, Mackay, Jones, and White; completing the side were Smith (top scorer of the season), Allen, Henry, Norman, Baker, Dyson and Brown, with Medwin, Marchi, and a youngFrank Saul among the reserves.[128][129] Spurs reached the final of the1960–61 FA Cup, beating along the way Sunderland 5–0 in the sixth-round replay and Burnley 3–0 in the semi-final. Spurs metLeicester City in the1961 FA Cup final and won 2–0, with Smith scoring the first and setting up the second for Dyson,[127] helped in part by Leicester being effectively reduced to ten men owing to injury (no substitutions were allowed at that time). Spurs became the first team in England to win the Double in the 20th century, and the first sinceAston Villa achieved the feat in1897.[128][130]

First European triumph

[edit]
Danny Blanchflower being held aloft by other Spurs players, holding the Cup Winners' Cup trophy after winning the cup in 1963
Danny Blanchflower with the Cup Winners' Cup trophy in 1963, carried by other Spurs players

Tottenham competed for the first time in aEuropean competition in the1961–62 European Cup. Their first opponents wereGórnik Zabrze, who beat Spurs 4–2. After the match the Polish press described Spurs players as "no angels"; in response, in the return leg at White Hart Lane, some Spurs fans dressed up as angels holding placards with slogans such as "Glory be to shining White Hart Lane", and other fans joined in by singing the refrains of "Glory Glory Hallelujah". Spurs won 8–1 to the sound of fans singing "Glory glory hallelujah, and the Spurs go marching on", which became an anthem for Tottenham from that night onwards.[131] Spurs eventually lost in the semi-final to the holdersBenfica, who went on to win the competition.[132]

A month later Spurs won the FA Cup again after beating Burnley in the1962 FA Cup final.[133] The first goal of the game was scored byJimmy Greaves, who was signed in December 1961 for £99,999 (so as not to be the first £100,000 player).[134] Greaves became the top goal scorer for Tottenham with 220 league goals and 321 goals in all appearances for the club, and the most prolific scorer ever in thetop tier of English football.[135]

In the1962–63 European Cup Winners' Cup, Spurs reached the final, beatingRangers 8–4 on aggregate,Slovan Bratislava 6–2, andOFK Belgrade 5–2 on aggregate. Spurs' 5–1 win in theCup Winners' Cup final againstAtlético Madrid in Rotterdam on 15 May 1963, during whichTerry Dyson scored a goal from 25 yards out, made Tottenham the first British team to win a European trophy.[136]

Continuing success

[edit]

By 1964 the Double-winning side was beginning to break up owing to age, injuries and transfers. Captain Danny Blanchflower hung up his boots that spring at the age of 38, troubled by a knee injury, and Dave Mackay was sidelined for a long period with his leg broken twice—the first occurred during Spurs' defence of theCup Winners' Cup against Manchester United, resulting in the 10-men Spurs being eliminated from the competition.[137] In the summer of 1964, John White was tragically killed by lightning on agolf course.[138] Nicholson rebuilt the team with new players, most of them imports, includingAlan Mullery,Pat Jennings,Cyril Knowles,Mike England,Terry Venables,Jimmy Robertson,Phil Beal,Joe Kinnear, andAlan Gilzean who formed a goal-scoring partnership with Greaves.[139] The rebuilding culminated in a win at the1967 FA Cup final over Chelsea with goals from wingers Robertson and Saul, and a third-place finish in the league.[140][141]

The team failed to make much of an impact in the following two seasons, reaching only in1969 the semi-final of theLeague Cup, a competition created in 1960 but one in which Tottenham did not participate until 1966.[142] Mackay, Jones and Robertson left the club in 1968, followed by Venables in 1969. In their place came the home-grown playersSteve Perryman,Ray Evans andJohn Pratt,[142] and new signingMartin Chivers.Martin Peters also arrived fromWest Ham United for a record fee of £200,000 in 1970 in part-exchange for a reluctant Greaves,[142][143] whileRalph Coates was signed in the summer of 1971 for £192,000 fromBurnley.[144] Gilzean recreated the goal-scoring partnership with Chivers that he had with Greaves, this time aided by the blindside runs of Peters.[145] The revitalised team reached theLeague Cup final in 1971, where they beat Aston Villa 2–0 to win their first League Cup with Chivers scoring both goals.[145] They won the League Cup again in 1973 after beatingNorwich City by a single goal from Coates in thefinal.[146]

The 1971 Cup win and a third-place finish in the1970–71 season earned Spurs a place in theinaugural UEFA Cup. They reached the final after a battling performance to draw againstA.C. Milan at theSan Siro stadium in the second leg of the semi-final, giving them a 3–2 win on aggregate.[147] In the first leg of theUEFA Cup final against Wolverhampton Wanderers, Chivers scored twice to give Spurs a 2–1 lead. In the return leg at White Hart Lane, team captain Mullery headed in a goal in his last game for the club for a 3–2 win on aggregate.[148][149] With this victory, Spurs became the first British team to win two different European trophies.[147] In total Nicholson had won eight major trophies in sixteen years; his spell in charge was the most successful period in the club's history.[119]

Decline and revival under Keith Burkinshaw (1974–1984)

[edit]

Although Tottenham managed to reach four cup finals in four years and winning three of them from 1971 to 1974, the team began to decline as Nicholson was unable to sign the players he wanted, in part because of his refusal to meet the demands forunder-the-counter payments.[150] The early seventies was also the beginning of a period of increasing football violence; rioting by Spurs fans inRotterdam in their loss toFeyenoord in the1974 UEFA Cup final added to his disillusionment. Nicholson resigned after a poor start to the1974–75 season and a 4–0 loss to Middlesbrough in the League Cup, but his tenure ended on a sour note. He had sought to be succeeded by Blanchflower as manager andJohnny Giles as player-coach, but the chairman Sidney Wale was angered by Nicholson contacting the pair without informing him first. The club then severed all ties with a £10,000 payoff, even though Nicholson had wanted to stay on as an advisor, and refused him atestimonial (Nicholson was later brought back as advisor by Keith Burkinshaw and was only given a testimonial in 1983 under a different chairman).[151][152]

Terry Neill was appointed manager by the board, and Spurs narrowly avoided relegation at the end of the 1974–75 season. Spurs performed better the following season, in whichGlenn Hoddle played his first game for the club. A former Arsenal player, Neill was never accepted by the fans, and he left to manage Arsenal in mid-1976, replaced by his assistantKeith Burkinshaw whom he had recruited the previous year.[153][154]

Relegation

[edit]

In Burkinshaw's first year as manager in the1976–77 season, Tottenham slipped out of the First Division after 27 years in the top flight. Many of the early '70s Cup-winning team had by now left or retired. This was followed in the summer of 1977 by the sale of theirNorthern Ireland international goalkeeper Pat Jennings for a bargain £45,000 to Arsenal as Burkinshaw had started to useBarry Daines, a move that shocked the club's fans and one that Burkinshaw later admitted was a great error. Jennings played on for another seven seasons for Spurs' arch-rivals.[155][156]

Despite relegation, the board kept faith with Burkinshaw and the team immediately won promotion to the top flight, although it took until the final league game of the season for them to be promoted. A sudden loss of form at the end of the1977–78 season meant the club needed a point in the last game atSouthampton. To Tottenham's great relief, the game ended 0–0 and Spurs returned to the First Division. Early in the season, Spurs had won 9–0 at home toBristol Rovers, with four of their goals coming from debutant strikerColin Lee. The glut of goals proved significant later on as Tottenham won promotion through goal difference.[157]

Cup wins and European success

[edit]
Players from Ajax and Tottenham in the European Cup Winners' Cup tie in 1981, Steve Perryman attempting to intercept a ball
Ajax vs SpursCup Winners' Cup first round in 1981. Notable Spurs players in this match includeSteve Perryman,Osvaldo Ardiles,Graham Roberts,Steve Archibald,Ricardo Villa, andGlenn Hoddle (not all shown here).

In the summer of 1978, Burkinshaw caused a stir by signing for £750,000 twoArgentinian internationalsOsvaldo Ardiles andRicardo Villa—players from beyond theBritish Isles in English football were rare at the time.[158] This was also a period of rebuilding as young players were brought in from the youth team, such asMark Falco,Paul Miller,Chris Hughton andMicky Hazard, as well as other players signed from other clubs such asGraham Roberts,Tony Galvin, and in particular the twin strike force ofGarth Crooks andSteve Archibald.[159][160]

Osvaldo Ardiles andRicardo Villa holding the FA Cup trophy won in1981

Spurs opened the 1980s by reaching the100th FA Cup final in 1981 against Manchester City, and won the replay 3–2 in a match notable for the winning goal from Ricardo Villa.[161] They lifted the FA Cup again the next season, beating Queens Park Rangers in the1982 final. Although they were also in contention for three other trophies that season, they finished fourth in the First Division, lost to Liverpool in theLeague Cup final in extra time, whileBarcelona won at home in theCup Winners' Cup semi-final after a 1–1 draw at White Hart Lane.[162]

The club began a new phase of redevelopment at White Hart Lane in 1980, starting with the rebuilding of the West Stand initiated by a new chairman Arthur Richardson.[163] The West Stand was demolished and a new stand, which took 15 months to complete, opened in 1982. Cost overruns on the project, which rose from £3.5 million to £6 million, as well as the cost of rebuilding the team in the return to Division One resulted in financial difficulties for the club. In this period, property developer and Spurs fanIrving Scholar began buying up shares in the club. He took advantage of a rift in the boardroom between Richardson and former chairman Sidney Wale, and persuaded Wale to sell his shares.[163][164] Scholar bought up 25% of the club for £600,000, and with the help of Paul Bobroff who had bought 15% of shares from the family of previous chairman Bearman, took control in December 1982.[165][166] Scholar inherited a club in debt to the tune of nearly £5 million, what was then the largest debt in English football, but arights issue after he took over brought in a million pounds. In 1983, a new holding company, Tottenham Hotspurplc, was formed with the football club run as a subsidiary of the company. With a valuation of £9 million, the company wasfloated on theLondon Stock Exchange, the first sports club to do so.[164][167] Together withMartin Edwards of Manchester United andDavid Dein of Arsenal, Scholar transformed English football clubs into business ventures that applied commercial principles to the running of the clubs to maximise their revenues, a process that eventually led to the formation of thePremier League.[168]

There used to be a football club over there.

—commonly misattributed to Keith Burkinshaw, 1984
The quote is actually by journalist Ken Jones and refers to the Frank Sinatra's song "There Used to Be a Ballpark". It is generally taken to be a comment on the commercialisation of football.[169][170]

In 1984, Tottenham reached thefinal of theUEFA Cup. After 1–1 scores in both legs againstAnderlecht, Tottenham emerged the victor whenTony Parks saved a penalty in thepenalty shootout.[171] This was the third of the major trophies won by the club under Burkinshaw in the 1980s. Several weeks before this victory, Burkinshaw announced that he would be leaving at the end of that season after disagreements with the directors and becoming disenchanted with the club.[172][170]

Shreeves and Pleat (1984–1987)

[edit]

Burkinshaw was succeeded as manager by his assistantPeter Shreeves in June 1984. According to Scholar,Aberdeen managerAlex Ferguson, who joined Manchester United two years later, had reneged on an agreement to take over.[173] Tottenham enjoyed a strong start to the 1984–85 season and looked poised to win the league title by the winter, but a series of poor home results in 1985 resulted in the team being leapfrogged by eventual champions Everton and runners-up Liverpool.[164] Their final position of third place in the league should have secured them a UEFA Cup place, but theHeysel disaster on 29 May 1985, which saw 39 spectators crushed to death when Liverpool fans rioted at the1985 European Cup final, resulted in all English clubs being banned from European competitions.[174] In 1986, Perryman departed after 19 years at the club (17 years in the first team) and a record 655 league appearances.[175] The same year Spurs also sold its training ground atCheshunt that the club had owned since 1952 for over £4 million.[167] The1985–86 season proved disappointing despite the signings ofChris Waddle andPaul Allen in the summer of 1985, and Shreeves was sacked at the end of the season.[174]

Luton Town managerDavid Pleat was appointed the new manager following Shreeves' dismissal. For much of1986–87, Spurs played with what was for that time an unusual five-man midfieldformation: Hoddle, Ardiles, Allen, Waddle andSteve Hodge.[176] The lone strikerClive Allen scored 49 goals in all competitions that season, still a club record.[177] Tottenham remained in contention for all three major domestic honours throughout the season, but finished the season empty-handed. In the League Cup, Tottenham lost to eventual competition winners Arsenal in the semi-final.[178] Spurs also missed out on the First Division title to Everton, and stumbled to a 3–2 loss in theFA Cup final toCoventry City, whose winning goal was deflected offGary Mabbutt's knee for an own goal in the final minutes.[176][179] The close season of 1987 saw the sale of Glenn Hoddle toMonaco after a decade as the driving force in Tottenham's midfield.[176]

Terry Venables (1987–1993)

[edit]

In October 1987, Pleat quit the club following allegations about his private life.[180] He was succeeded by former playerTerry Venables, who had by then built up an impressive managerial record. He inherited a Spurs side that was struggling in the league with a quarter of the1987–88 season played. Earlier in the season veteran goalkeeperRay Clemence had to retire after suffering anAchilles tendon injury,[181] and new signings by VenablesTerry Fenwick andPaul Walsh failed to lift the team, which finished in 13th place.[182] Striker Clive Allen was also less prolific in attack in this season, and he was sold to French clubBordeaux in March 1988.[183]

To invigorate the Tottenham side, Venables paid a national record £2 million for Newcastle midfielderPaul Gascoigne in June 1988, and also signed strikerPaul Stewart from Manchester City for £1.7 million.[184] Spurs made a shaky start to the1988–89 season; incomplete refurbishment of the East Stand caused the postponement of the opening game againstCoventry just a few hours before kickoff, which earned the club a two-point deduction (later replaced by a £15,000 fine), and this was followed by a string of losses in October.[185] They were second from bottom at the end of October, but improved to ninth place by the turn of 1989 and finished sixth in the final table.[186]

Cup win and boardroom drama

[edit]

By the end of the 1980s and the beginning of 1990s, Spurs had become mired in considerable financial difficulties, with a debt reported to be £20 million in 1991.[187] The East Stand was refurbished in 1989 but its cost had doubled to over £8 million, while the company's attempts to diversify into other businesses such as the clothing firmsHummel UK and Martex failed to generate the income expected and were in fact losing them money.[167][188] July 1989 saw the arrival at White Hart Lane of England strikerGary Lineker from Barcelona for a fee of £1.2 million; however, the cash-strapped club was unable to pay Barcelona in full even though Waddle was sold days later toMarseille for £4.25 million.[182] Scholar had to organise a secret £1.1 million loan fromRobert Maxwell, which caused an uproar and resulted in an attempt to oust Scholar from the boardroom when it was revealed.[188][189] Maxwell, who first ownedOxford United and thenDerby County, became interested in the club, putting Derby County up for sale so that he could acquire Tottenham.[167] Venables, who had previously attempted to buy the club but failed, then joined forces with businessmanAlan Sugar in June 1991 to forestall a takeover by Maxwell and gain control of Tottenham Hotspur plc, buying out Scholar for £2 million.[165][190][191]

With Lineker and Gascoigne in the team, Spurs finished third in the1989–90 title race won by Liverpool.[192] In the following1990–91 season, they began the season unbeaten in ten games, but failed to rediscover their earlier league form in the second half of the season, eventually finishing tenth in the final table.[193][194] Despite the middling ranking, this season remains a highlight for Tottenham for their performances in the1990–91 FA Cup. A 3–1 semi-final win over Arsenal featured a 30-yard free kick from Gascoigne considered to be one of the best goals ever seen in the competition.[195] In thefinal againstNottingham Forest, Gascoigne suffered seriouscruciate ligament damage in his knee when he made a reckless tackle on opponentGary Charles.[196] Winning the match 2–1 after extra time, Spurs became the first team to collect eight FA Cups, a record later surpassed by Manchester United in 1996.[197] The excitement in North London over the win also had the unexpected result of prompting Sugar, who had little knowledge of the club's history (and was alleged to have asked "What Double?" when someone mentioned Tottenham's Double),[198] to contact Venables and jointly buy the club.[199]

Gascoigne was a transfer target for Italian clubLazio, but his knee injury (aggravated later in a nightclub incident) meant that he missed the1991–92 season, and his transfer to Lazio was put on hold. By the summer of 1992, his knee had recovered and he completed his move to Lazio for £5.5 million, reduced from the £7.9 million fees agreed before his injury.[199] Gary Lineker then announced in November that he would be leaving Spurs at the end of the season to play in Japan, while Paul Walsh and Paul Stewart also left the club.[199]

In the 1991–92 season, Venables became chief executive of the club, and Shreeves again took charge of first-team duties. During the summer of 1992, Venables decided to return to team management; Shreeves was sacked, and a European style of management was instituted withDoug Livermore the head coach and Clemence the assistant. Although Sugar and Venables began as equal partners with each investing £3.25 million in the club, Sugar's financial clout allowed him to increase his stake to £8 million in December 1991, thereby gaining control of the club.[199] In May 1993, after a row at a board meeting, Terry Venables was controversially dismissed from the Tottenham board by Sugar, whose decision was overturned in theHigh Court but reversed on appeal.[200] Despite being initially seen as a saviour of the club, the ousting of a popular figure, later aggravated by a perceived lack of investment in the club, earned Sugar long-lasting animosity from some fans who repeatedly called for his resignation.[187][191]

Beginning of Premier League football (1992–2004)

[edit]

Spurs were one of the five clubs that pushed for the founding of thePremier League, created with the approval ofThe Football Association to replace the Football League First Division as the highest division of English football.[201] To coincide with the massive changes in English football, Tottenham made major signings, including wingerDarren Anderton, defenderNeil Ruddock,[199] and strikerTeddy Sheringham for what was then a club record £2.1 million from Nottingham Forest. The Sheringham transfer was later the subject of allegations of "bungs" against Forest managerBrian Clough.[202] In thefirst ever Premier League season—Venables' final year as Spurs' manager—Spurs finished eighth. Teddy Sheringham was the division's top scorer with 22 goals, 21 of which were scored for Tottenham.[203]

Ardiles, Francis and Gross

[edit]

The departure of Venables saw Tottenham return to a conventional management setup after two seasons of a two-tier structure. Former player Osvaldo Ardiles took charge of the first team. In the1993–94 season, Sheringham's injury in October 1993 impacted on Spurs' performance, and relegation became a real possibility.[204] In the end, the club managed a 15th-place finish, its survival only guaranteed by a win in the penultimate game of the season.[205] By this time Spurs had come under investigation for financial irregularities alleged to have taken place in the 1980s while Irving Scholar was chairman, and in June 1994 the club was found guilty of making illegal payments to players. Spurs were fined £600,000, had twelve league points deducted for the1994–95 season and were banned from the1994–95 FA Cup. Following an appeal the number of points deducted was reduced, but the fine was increased to £1.5 million. A further arbitration (after Sugar threatened to sue the FA) quashed the points deduction and FA Cup ban, although the fine remained in place.[206]

Despite the penalty, the club aimed to have a successful season in 1994–95, and signed three players who had appeared at thatsummer's World Cup: German strikerJürgen Klinsmann and two Romanians,Ilie Dumitrescu andGheorghe Popescu.[207][208]Forward players in Spurs line-up already included Sheringham, Anderton andNick Barmby, and Ardiles chose to play five attacking players, dubbed the "Famous Five" of Klinsmann, Sheringham, Anderton, Barmby, and Dumitrescu.[209] Their debut in the1994–95 season against Sheffield Wednesday in August 1994, which Spurs won 4–3, was described as a "breathtaking exhibition of football", but the imbalance in the team also leaked goals (33 in 15 games).[210][211] Spurs struggled in September with a series of defeats, and after the team lost 3–0 in the League Cup in October,[212] Ardiles was dismissed. At that time Spurs were just two places above the relegation zone, although they would have been 11th in the table with the deducted points that were later restored.[211]

Ardiles was replaced byGerry Francis, who alleviated relegation fears and oversaw the club's climb to seventh place in the league, just missing out on a1995–96 UEFA Cup place. When the FA Cup ban was lifted, Spurs reached the FA Cup semi-final where they were defeated 4–1 by eventual winners Everton.[213] Klinsmann was top scorer at the club with twenty-nine in all competitions, but he felt that Spurs would not be able to challenge for the title in future seasons, and returned to his homeland to sign withBayern Munich.[214][215] Barmby, Dumitrescu and Popescu also departed, and Francis signed the likes ofRuel Fox andChris Armstrong for more than £4 million each but spurned the chance to signDennis Bergkamp who was a fan of Glenn Hoddle and was interested in joining Spurs.[214][216] Other signings include future captainLedley King who did not start in the first team for a few years. Francis' transfer dealings failed to deliver European qualification or higher, and Spurs finished eighth in 1996 and tenth in 1997. Sheringham left in the summer of 1997 for Manchester United whileLes Ferdinand joined the team for a record £6 million andDavid Ginola for £2.5 million from Newcastle. Ferdinand was soon hit by injury, and in November 1997, Francis decided to resign after Spurs were beaten 4–0 by Liverpool.[217][218]

Aerial view of White Hart Lane stadium
White Hart Lane as it appeared from the late 1990s until 2016

Christian Gross, coach of Swiss championsGrasshoppers, was chosen as the successor to Francis. Gross failed to turn around the club's fortunes in the1997–98 season, and the team battled against the drop for the remainder of the campaign.[219] Klinsmann returned to Spurs in December on loan, and four goals in a 6–2 win away to Wimbledon in the penultimate game of the season was enough to secure survival. By the end of the season, the renovation of the White Hart Lane stadium was completed. White Hart Lane was converted into an all-seater stadium in the 1990s, the South Stand was rebuilt, and a new tier added to the North Stand, leaving the stadium with a capacity of about 36,240.[42] The stadium remained in this form bar some minor changes until 2016.[42]

George Graham and League Cup win

[edit]

After losing two of the first three games of the1998–99 season, Gross was sacked, and former Arsenal managerGeorge Graham was hired to take over.[220][221] Graham signedSteffen Freund, who became a fans' favourite, as well asTim Sherwood.[222][223] Fans were critical of Graham due to his association with Arsenal and disliked his defensive style of football, especially whenArsène Wenger was starting to achieve major success at Arsenal with an attacking football style previously associated with Spurs.[224] Nevertheless, in Graham's first season as Spurs manager, 1998–99, the club secured a mid-table finish and won theLeague Cup. In the final againstLeicester City atWembley Stadium, full-backJustin Edinburgh was sent off after an altercation withRobbie Savage, but the ten-men Spurs secured a dramatic victory throughAllan Nielsen's diving header in the 93rd minute of the game.[225] To cap a good season, David Ginola won both thePFA Players' Player of the Year andFootball Writers' Association Footballer of the Year awards inthe year Manchester United won theTreble.[226][227]

The club finished mid-table the following year. In May 2000, Tottenham signed Ukrainian strikerSerhii Rebrov fromDynamo Kyiv for a club record £11 million. But Rebrov was not a success at White Hart Lane, managing just ten goals over the next four seasons.[228]

New ownership and Glenn Hoddle

[edit]

In late 2000, Sugar decided to sell his share holding in the club,[229] a decision he blamed on the hostility of fans towards him and his family.[230] 27% of his 40% share holding in Tottenham were sold for £22m toENIC Sports PLC,[231][232] and he stepped down as chairman in February 2001 on the completion of the sale.[54][233] The rest of his shares were sold in 2007 for £25m.[234] ENIC, owned byJoe Lewis andDaniel Levy with the latter responsible for the running of the club, would eventually acquire 85% of Tottenham.[235][236] The club was transferred into its private ownership in 2012.[237] A month after Levy took over as chairman, George Graham was sacked as manager for alleged breach of contract by vice-chairman David Buchler after Graham commented on the financial position of Spurs.[238]

Team management passed to former Tottenham playerGlenn Hoddle, who took over in the final weeks of the2000–01 season from caretaker manager David Pleat. His first game was a defeat to Arsenal in the2001 FA Cup semi-final.[239] That summer, club captainSol Campbell joined Arsenal on aBosmanfree transfer. The loss of a transfer fee by Spurs, the move to their bitterest rivals, and the perceived underhanded fashion in which he negotiated his move (claimed to be a record £100,000 per week)[240] led to long-term enmity towards Campbell from Spurs fans.[241] Hoddle turned to more experienced players in the shape of Teddy Sheringham who returned to Spurs in May 2001, as well as new signingsGus Poyet andChristian Ziege. Spurs played some encouraging football in the opening months of his management, but they ended the2001–02 season in ninth place. They reached theLeague Cup final, where they lost to Blackburn, despite being seen as the favourites after their 5–1 defeat of Chelsea in the previous round.[242][243]

The only significant outlay before the following campaign was the £7 million signing ofRobbie Keane, who joined fromLeeds United.Jamie Redknapp also joined earlier on a free transfer.[244] The2002–03 season started well, with Tottenham top of the league after three successive wins, and Hoddle voted manager of the month in the division for August.[244] They were still in the top six as late as early February, but the season ended with a tenth-place finish, the result of a barren final ten games of the league campaign that delivered a mere seven points. Several players publicly criticised Hoddle's management and communication skills. In the following2003–04 season, Spurs started the season poorly, gaining only four points out of six games. With Spurs struggling third from bottom at the table, Hoddle was sacked by Levy, and Pleat again took over as caretaker manager.[245]

Resurgence and the Champions League (2004–2014)

[edit]
Robbie Keane preparing to take a penalty at White Hart Lane
Robbie Keane prepares to take apenalty at White Hart Lane, 2005.

In June 2004, Tottenham appointed French team managerJacques Santini as head coach, withMartin Jol as his assistant andFrank Arnesen as sporting director.[246] In early November, after only 13 games in charge, Santini decided to quit the club, making his the shortest stint by any Spurs manager.[247] Santini was replaced by Jol,[248][249] and the team managed to secure a ninth-place finish in the2004–05 season. In June 2005, when Arnesen moved to Chelsea, Spurs appointedDamien Comolli as sporting director. Among the players signed by Jol wereEdgar Davids in 2005,[250]Dimitar Berbatov in 2006,[251] andGareth Bale in May 2007.[252] Players who left includedMichael Carrick, who went to Manchester United for a reported £18.6 million in 2006.[253]

During the2005–06 season, Spurs spent six months in the top four. Going into the final game of the season, they led Arsenal by a point, but were defeated in their final match—away to West Ham—after many players including Keane and Carrick succumbed tofood poisoning from a meal they had the night before.[254] Spurs were pipped to aUEFA Champions League place, but gained a place in the UEFA Cup and achieved their highest finish for 16 years. In2006–07, they finished fifth for the second-straight year.[255]

Tottenham and Chelsea players lining up before the match at the 2008 Carling Cup final
2008 Carling Cup final, Spurs beat Chelsea 2–1.

The2007–08 season saw the club win only one of their first ten League matches, their worst start in 19 years. Jol was sacked, learning of his removal just before a UEFA Cup game on 25 October 2007.[256]Juande Ramos, formerly ofSevilla, then replaced the Dutchman as manager. Captained by Ledley King, Spurs went on to win the League Cup, beating Chelsea 2–1 in theLeague Cup final in February 2008.[257]Luka Modrić was signed towards the end of the season,[258] but Berbatov and Keane were sold to Manchester United and Liverpool respectively in the summer as both wanted to leave.[259] Tottenham made their worst start to a season in the club's history in2008–09, their failure to register a win in eight League games leaving them bottom of the Premier League. Ramos and director of football Damien Comolli were dismissed on 25 October 2008, amid Levy's criticism of the failure to recruit suitable replacements for Berbatov and Keane.[260][261]

Harry Redknapp

[edit]

Portsmouth managerHarry Redknapp was appointed as Ramos' replacement, and Tottenham reverted to a traditional setup with Redknapp responsible for both coaching and player transfers.[260][262] Redknapp took the club out of the relegation zone by winning 10 out of the 12 points available in his first two weeks in charge, and finished the 2008–09 campaign eighth in the league table. The January transfer window saw the return of Keane andJermain Defoe to the club after spells at Liverpool and Portsmouth respectively,[263] later joined byPeter Crouch signed in the summer,[264] andRafael van der Vaart in 2010.[265]

North London derby at the Emirates, Koscielny attempting to head the ball with goalkeeper Gomes reaching for it while other players look on
North London derby at theEmirates in 2010 that finished 2–3.[266] Spurs players here includeLuka Modrić,Jermaine Jenas, andGareth Bale.

The team's performance improved in the two following seasons. Notable matches in the2009–10 season include the 9–1 home win againstWigan Athletic, with Defoe scoring five, a record win in the top flight for the club,[267] and a 2–1 against Arsenal, with goals from Bale and debutantDanny Rose, giving them their first Premier League victory against their rivals.[268] Spurs finished the2009–10 season in fourth place, and reached the qualifying rounds of the Champions League for the first time in their history.[269] In the2010–11 season, they qualified for thegroup stages of theChampions League,[270] came top of their group and went on to beatA.C. Milan 1–0 on aggregate in theknockout stage.[271] At the quarter-finals, Spurs suffered a heavy defeat againstReal Madrid after Crouch was sent off early in the game, and the 10-men team was beaten 4–0 at theSantiago Bernabéu Stadium, and 5–0 on aggregate.[272][273] Earlier in the season they won at theEmirates with goals from van der Vaart and Bale, their first win at Arsenal in 17 years.[266]

At the start of the2011–12 season, the home league game to Everton was cancelled because ofrioting in Tottenham a week before the game, and Spurs then lost the next two games.[274][275] Tottenham managed to record ten wins and one draw in their next eleven Premier League matches,[276] and finished the season in fourth place in the Premier League but failed to qualify for the Champions League.[277] On 13 June 2012, after brief contract renewal talks during which Redknapp and the Tottenham board failed to agree terms, Redknapp was dismissed by the club.[278]

Villas-Boas and Sherwood

[edit]

Following Redknapp's departure, the club appointed former Chelsea andPorto coachAndré Villas-Boas as manager. Shortly after his appointment, the club pipped Liverpool for the signature ofSwansea City midfielderGylfi Sigurðsson. Several days later, the club also resolved the protracted transfer saga surroundingAjax defenderJan Vertonghen.[279] They were soon followed byHugo Lloris andMousa Dembélé, while Modric left for Real Madrid.[280] In the2012–13 season, they finished fifth. Despite winning a dramatic match againstSunderland with a goal from Gareth Bale in the final match of the season, Arsenal won their last match to take the2013–14 Champions League spot, and Spurs dropped to the Europa League for the second successive season.[281] In their concurrent2012–13 Europa League campaign, they were eliminated in the quarter-finals by Swiss sideBasel on penalties.[282]

At the beginning of the2013–14 season, Bale moved to Real Madrid for what was then a world record transfer fee of €100.8 million (£85.1 million).[283] This money paid for several players signed in that transfer window, includingChristian Eriksen andErik Lamela.[280] Following a 6–0 defeat against Manchester City and a 5–0 defeat against Liverpool, Villas-Boas was dismissed from his role on 16 December 2013.[284] A week later, former Spurs player Tim Sherwood became Villas-Boas' replacement as manager as a stopgap measure.[285][286] Although Sherwood led Spurs to a sixth-place finish in thePremier League,[287] his results against the top teams were disappointing, and he was sacked on 13 May 2014.[286][288]

Pochettino era (2014–2019)

[edit]
A group of Spurs player in 2016, with Harry Kane, Dele Alli, Christian Ericksen, Son Heung-min, Victor Wanyama, Mousa Dembele, Jan Vertonghen and Toby Alderweireld
Some of Spurs' starting line-up in the 2016–17 season, includingHarry Kane,Dele Alli,Christian Eriksen,Son Heung-min,Jan Vertonghen andToby Alderweireld

Mauricio Pochettino was appointed Tottenham manager on 27 May 2014, on a five-year contract.[289] In his first season Spurs finished fifth in the2014–15 Premier League with 64 points, and were runners-up in the2015 Football League Cup final. Pochettino chose to promote young players, and in his second season in charge, Spurs had the youngest team in the Premier League.[290][291] A new generation of players that includedHarry Kane,Dele Alli, andEric Dier were all aged 22 or younger that season.[292] Spurs had a much improved2015–16 season, but their title challenge ended with a 2–2 draw at Stamford Bridge on 2 May 2016, and they finished third behind winners Leicester.[293][294] The following2016–17 season began with a series of 12 unbeaten league matches, but the team performed inconsistently during the first half of the season.[295][296] They put in a much better performance in 2017, including a win in the North London derby that ensured a higher finish in the Premier League than their rivals Arsenal for the first time in 22 years.[297] Their early inconsistency meant that Spurs were unable to overhaul the lead of the eventual champions Chelsea in the league table (13 points over Spurs at one stage in March),[298] and finished the season in second place with 86 points, their highest ever points tally since the Premier League began.[299] This is their highest ranking in 54 years since the1962–63 season under Bill Nicholson,[300] and the team also achieved their first unbeaten home run in 52 years since the1964–65 season.[301][302]

New stadium

[edit]
Tottenham Hotspur Stadium

The construction of a new stadium was initiated at on land adjacent to White Hart Lane in 2015.[303] The new stadium has a seating capacity of 62,062, considerably greater than the 36,000 of White Hart Lane. A section of the North Stand was removed to allow building work on the new stadium to proceed next to the old stadium.[304] The removal of part of the stand reduced the capacity of the stadium, and European matches were held atWembley Stadium for the 2016–17 season to comply with the ticketing requirement for European games.[305] A club attendance record of 85,512 spectators was reported for the2016–17 UEFA Champions League game againstBayer Leverkusen, which Spurs lost 1–0.[306] Spurs played their last game at White Hart Lane on 14 May 2017, a 2–1 victory over Manchester United that secured their second place in the Premier League.[307]

In the summer of 2017, White Hart Lane was demolished to allow the new stadium to be completed, and all Tottenham's home games were played at Wembley for the2017–18 season.[308] As the stadium has a higher capacity, this season saw a series of record attendances for Premier League games, the highest at the North London Derby on 10 February 2018 when 83,222 spectators witnessed Spurs' 1–0 win over Arsenal.[309][310][311] Tottenham failed to make any new signings in the summer transfer window of 2018, the first club not to do so in the Premier League.[312] They also failed to sign anyone in the next transfer window in January.[313] They nevertheless had their best start in the Premier League in the2018–19 season,[314] ended by a home defeat against Manchester City.[315] After some delay, the new stadium,Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, was completed and opened on 3 April 2019.[316] The first game at the stadium, the Premier League game againstCrystal Palace, was won by Tottenham 2–0, withSon Heung-min scoring the first-ever official goal at the new stadium.[317]

Tottenham started the2018–19 UEFA Champions League poorly, gaining only one point in the first three games of thegroup stage.[318] They managed to qualified for theknockout phase with a late equalising goal against Barcelona.[319] After beatingBorussia Dortmund in the Round of 16, the team staged a dramatic win on away goals (4–4 on aggregate) against Manchester City in the quarter-final,[320][321] followed by a last-gasp victory overAjax in the dying seconds of the semi-final, achieved with ahat-trick byLucas Moura to overcome a 3–0 deficit on aggregate in the second half of the return leg. Tottenham reached their first ever Champions League final.[322][323] However, they were beaten 2–0 by Liverpool in an uninspiring final, and finished runners-up.[324]

2019–present

[edit]

Mourinho, Espírito Santo and Conte

[edit]

The2019–20 season started poorly for Tottenham, winning only three of their first 12 league games and struggled in the cup tournaments, including a disastrous 7–2 defeat toBayern Munich in theChampions Leaguegroup stage.[325] As a result, Pochettino was subsequently sacked on 19 November 2019, to be replaced byJosé Mourinho as coach the following day.[326][327] In a season disrupted by theCOVID-19 pandemic, Mourinho failed to lift the team to qualify for theChampions League for the first time in five years, but managed to qualify for the2020–21 Europa League.[328][329][330] In the following2020–21 season, Tottenham had a good run of form in the first few months, withHarry Kane andSon Heung-min forming a formidable goal-scoring partnership,[331] seeing Spurs to the top of the league table in late November following a win 2–0 againstManchester City.[332] However, a string of bad results saw them dropping down the league table through the second half of the season,[333][334] and Mourinho's defensive style of football further drew criticisms.[335][336] Mourinho was dismissed from Tottenham on 19 April 2021, just six days prior to theLeague Cup final, to be replaced by ex-Tottenham player and interim head coach,Ryan Mason, for the remainder of the season.[337][338] Tottenham lost 1–0 to Man City in theLeague Cup final and finished seventh in the league table, thereby qualifying for the inaugural2021–22 UEFA Europa Conference League (UECL) but failing to qualify for either Champions or Europa Leagues the first time since the2009–10 season.[339]

On 30 June 2021,Nuno Espírito Santo was named the new manager of Tottenham,[340] but was replaced byAntonio Conte in early November after only four months in charge, the shortest tenure as permanent manager in the club's history since Santini.[341][342] Despite an early exit in the Conference League, Conte guided Spurs to fourth and back to aChampions League spot at the end of the2021–22 season, after two seasons out of the European competition.[343] Conte left on 26 March 2023 following his criticism of the players and the club, and his assistantCristian Stellini then served as the acting head coach,[344] followed again by Ryan Mason.[345] In February 2023,Harry Kane brokeJimmy Greaves' all-time goalscoring record.[346] At the end of the season after having scored a total of 280 goals for Spurs, Kane left forBayern Munich, breaking both clubs' respective outbound and inbound transfer records in addition to theBundesliga overall record.[347]

Ange Postecoglou and Europa League win

[edit]

Ange Postecoglou was appointed the manager of Tottenham in June 2023.[348] The ultra-attacking style of Postecoglou, dubbed "Ange-ball" with focus on possession, high-pressing and fast passing,[349][350] proved to be highly successful for a time. He started the first 10 games of the2023–24 season unbeaten with 8 wins and 2 draws, which gave Tottenham their best start in a top-flight season since 1960–61.[351] The number of points accrued was the highest ever by any Premier League manager in their first ten league games,[352] and Postecoglou was the first manager to have won Premier League Manager of the Month for the first three months of any season.[353] The tactic became less successful as injuries mounted and other teams learned to exploit Spurs' weakness in their high defensive line,[354][355] nevertheless Postecoglou led the team to qualification for the2024–25 UEFA Europa League after finishing fifth in the league.[356]

In Postecoglou's second season in charge, Spurs had their worst season in the Premier League, losing 22 games, which equalled their all-time club record for most league losses in the 1934–35 season.[357] However, the club also ended their 17-year trophy drought, winning theEuropa League final in May 2025 with a 1–0 victory over Manchester United.[358] Despite the win, Postecoglou's poor league record in the2024–25 season which led to both Spurs' lowest-ever Premier League finish of 17th position just one place above the relegation zone and lowest-ever points tally in the Premier League of 38 points resulted in his sacking 16 days later in June 2025.[359] He was replaced byThomas Frank.[360]

In October 2023, Tottenham Hotspur launched its Legacy Numbers to allocate a number to every player who has represented the club in a senior competitive fixture since its first match on 13 October 1894.[361]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^For an example of clubs called Spurs, see report of a match in The Referee, 14 November 1880, page 6

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcThe Tottenham & Edmonton Herald 1921, p. 4.
  2. ^abCloake & Fisher 2016, Chapter 1: A crowd walked across the muddy fields to watch the Hotspur play.
  3. ^abWelch 2019, p. 20.
  4. ^Donovan 2017, p. 39.
  5. ^The Tottenham & Edmonton Herald 1921, p. 5.
  6. ^"John Ripsher".Tottenham Hotspur Football Club. 24 September 2007.Archived from the original on 30 June 2018. Retrieved29 May 2017.
  7. ^Spencer, Nicholas (24 September 2007)."Why Tottenham Hotspur owe it all to a pauper".The Telegraph.Archived from the original on 9 May 2019. Retrieved29 May 2017.
  8. ^Welch 2019, p. 41.
  9. ^Goodwin 1988, pp. 10–11.
  10. ^"Northumberland Development Project, Tottenham".Haringey Council. October 2009. Retrieved8 August 2019.[permanent dead link]
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  12. ^Donovan 2017, p. 35.
  13. ^Donald Insall Architects (April 2016)."The Red House, 748 Tottenham High Road".Haringey Council. Archived fromthe original on 16 June 2021. Retrieved8 August 2019.
  14. ^"History: Year by year".Tottenham Hotspur Football Club. Archived fromthe original on 16 July 2011. Retrieved22 December 2010.
  15. ^Goodwin 2003, p. 10.
  16. ^abThe Tottenham & Edmonton Herald 1921, p. 6.
  17. ^"Pastime: St. Peter's (2nd Eleven) v Tottenham Hotspur".The Sportsman. 25 November 1884. p. 4. Retrieved11 July 2019.
  18. ^Nilsson, Leonard Jägerskiöld (2018).World Football Club Crests: The Design, Meaning and Symbolism of World Football's Most Famous Club Badges. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 56.ISBN 978-1-4729-5424-4.Archived from the original on 16 July 2023. Retrieved14 September 2020.
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  20. ^abDonovan 2017, p. 38.
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  22. ^Welch 2019, p. 22.
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  29. ^Shakeshaft, Burney & Evans 2018, pp. 22–23.
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  32. ^Tongue 2016, Chapter 1: Early days (1863–1899).
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  34. ^Powley, Adam; Gillan, Robert (2015).Shankly's Village: The Extraordinary Life and Times of Glenbuck and its Famous Sons. Pitch Publishing.ISBN 978-1-78531-125-3.[permanent dead link]
  35. ^Welch 2019, p. 28.
  36. ^abGoodwin 2003, pp. 14–15.
  37. ^Morrow, S. (2003).The People's Game?: Football, Finance and Society. Springer. p. 82.ISBN 978-0-230-28839-3.
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  39. ^Goodwin 1988, p. 58.
  40. ^Goodwin 2003, pp. 15–19.
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  48. ^The Tottenham & Edmonton Herald 1921, p. 28.
  49. ^Welch 2019, p. 37.
  50. ^abTongue 2016, Chapter 2: Taking Shape (1901–1920).
  51. ^Cloake & Fisher 2016, Introduction.
  52. ^Welch 2019, p. 40.
  53. ^Lennox, Doug (2009).Now You Know Soccer. Dundurn. p. 89.ISBN 978-1-77070-613-2.
  54. ^abHughes, Simon (16 February 2001)."The crestfallen cockerels".The Telegraph.Archived from the original on 24 August 2017. Retrieved8 July 2017.
  55. ^Goodwin 2003, p. 26.
  56. ^"Club Honours".Tottenham Hotspur Football Club.Archived from the original on 20 November 2018. Retrieved19 November 2018.
  57. ^Powley & Cloake 2012, p. 88.
  58. ^Fennelly, John."In Step with Cameron's Army"(PDF).Tottenham Hotspur Football Club. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 11 August 2017. Retrieved27 June 2017.
  59. ^Goodwin 1988, pp. 20–22, 59.
  60. ^Goodwin 2003, pp. 28–29.
  61. ^Welch 2019, p. 47.
  62. ^"'Sir' Vivian – A Spurs Great".Tottenham Hotspur Football Club. 8 September 2015.Archived from the original on 25 June 2017. Retrieved30 June 2017.
  63. ^Welch 2019, p. 50.
  64. ^The Stadium Tour Experience. Vision Sports Publishing Ltd. p. 32.
  65. ^"Northumberland Development Project".Haringey Council. September 2015. Archived fromthe original on 7 June 2019. Retrieved17 August 2017.
  66. ^Welch 2019, pp. 60–61.
  67. ^abGoodwin 1988, pp. 60–61.
  68. ^Welch 2019, p. 61.
  69. ^Goodwin 2003, p. 36.
  70. ^Hytner, David (13 May 2017)."Goodbye White Hart Lane: an iconic stadium remembered by those who knew it best".The Observer. Retrieved30 August 2017.
  71. ^Goodwin 2003, p. 34.
  72. ^Jon, Spurling (2004)."Chapter Two: Sleaze and the Tory MP".Rebels for the Cause: The Alternative History of Arsenal Football Club. Mainstream.ISBN 978-1-84018-900-1.
  73. ^Soar, Phil; Tyler, Martin (2005).The Official Illustrated History of Arsenal. Hamlyn. p. 40.ISBN 978-0-600-61344-2.
  74. ^Goodwin 1988, p. 24.
  75. ^Goodwin 2003, p. 30.
  76. ^Mannion, Damian (25 November 2016)."London derbies ranked on ferocity of rivalry, including Tottenham v Arsenal and West Ham v Chelsea".talkSport.Archived from the original on 28 May 2019. Retrieved28 May 2019.
  77. ^Goodwin 1988, p. 27.
  78. ^Welch 2019, p. 62.
  79. ^Tongue 2016, Chapter 3: Capital Gain (1921–1939).
  80. ^abGoodwin 1988, p. 29.
  81. ^"Soccer's Kindergarten: Kent's Nursery Clubs of the 1930s"(PDF).Soccer History: Issue 6. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 6 October 2011. Retrieved1 July 2017.
  82. ^abWelch 2019, p. 75.
  83. ^Goodwin 2003, pp. 45–46.
  84. ^Goodwin 2003, p. 47.
  85. ^"Robbie's 100 – The Facts".Tottenham Hotspur Football Club. 20 January 2008.Archived from the original on 22 November 2018. Retrieved22 November 2018.
  86. ^Goodwin 1988, pp. 31–32.
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  89. ^Goodwin 2003, p. 52.
  90. ^Goodwin 1988, pp. 55–56.
  91. ^Goodwin 1988, pp. 61–62.
  92. ^Goodwin 2003, pp. 59–62.
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  97. ^abGoodwin 1988, p. 38.
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  99. ^abGoodwin 2003, p. 68.
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  101. ^Goodwin 2003, p. 72.
  102. ^abcdefWelch 2019, Chapter 10: It's All About Triangles.
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  104. ^Goodwin 2003, p. 73.
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  106. ^Goodwin 1988, p. 39.
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  108. ^Welch 2019, Chapter 7: Success is the Best Revenge.
  109. ^Goodwin 2003, p. 72–73.
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  114. ^Welch 2019, Chapter 11: One of the Good Guys.
  115. ^Lipton 2017, Chapter 3: The Greatest.
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  119. ^ab"The Bill Nicholson years – glory, glory – 1960–1974".Tottenham Hotspur Football Club. 25 October 2014.Archived from the original on 19 August 2020. Retrieved22 March 2018.
  120. ^Davies 1972, Chapter 5: Bill Nicholson.
  121. ^Goodwin 2003, p. 88.
  122. ^Powley & Cloake 2012, p. 99.
  123. ^abWelch 2019, Chapter 12: Going Up, Up, Up.
  124. ^Goodwin 2003, p. 90.
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  128. ^abcWelch 2019, Chapter 13: What's the Story, Eternal Glory?.
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  143. ^Law, Matt (26 February 2015)."Why Tottenham legend Jimmy Greaves will not attend the Capital One Cup final against Chelsea".The Telegraph.Archived from the original on 30 December 2018. Retrieved29 December 2018.
  144. ^Welch 2019, Chapter 18: The Mullery Final.
  145. ^abWelch 2019, Chapter 17: Park Lane Roars.
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  147. ^abGoodwin 1988, p. 48.
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