From the tactical revolution of Mauricio Pochettino to the hapless tenure of Ossie Ardiles, Tottenham Hotspur’s managerial history in the Premier League era tells a story of soaring ambition and crushing disappointment. Using comprehensive statistical data covering every permanent and caretaker appointment since 1992, this article ranks the best and worst to have sat in the White Hart Lane and the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium dugout.
Few clubs have experienced such wild extremes of managerial fortune as Spurs. The north London club has oscillated between periods of genuine title contention and years of mid-table mediocrity, and the figures make for fascinating reading. Points-percentage, the proportion of available league points actually won is the most reliable single metric for comparing managers across different eras, since it accounts fairly for the number of games managed.
Former Tottenham Hotspur midfielder, Jamie O’Hara, and many other football pundits are calling for the immediate replacement of current Tottenham Hotspur interim manager. They claim that Tudor lacks the ability required to galvanise the struggling Spurs team into a winning team that is capable of avoiding relegation to the Championship.
Tottenham Hotspur Manager’s Premier League Records 1992-93 to 2025-26
The Ranking: Points Percentage in the Premier League
Across 23 distinct managerial spells in the Premier League, Spurs have averaged a points percentage of approximately 51%, meaning the club has historically secured just over half of available points. The gap between the best and worst, however, is dramatic, a chasm of over 60 percentage points separating the elite from the failures.
The data tells a clear story at the top end. Tim Sherwood’s short-lived tenure produced a startling 63.64% points return, albeit across just 22 games. Mauricio Pochettino’s five seasons sit just below at 63.04% from 202 games, making his the most statistically impressive sustained period in the Premier League era. Antonio Conte (62.50%) and André Villas-Boas (61.11%) also rank among the elite, though each had their tenures ended abruptly and controversially.
The Best: A Golden Age Under Pochettino
No manager defines Tottenham’s Premier League identity quite like Mauricio Pochettino. Between 2014 and 2019, the Argentine transformed Spurs from perennial top-half underachievers into genuine Champions League regulars, famously threatening the title race in 2015–16 and ultimately guiding the club to a Champions League final in 2019. His points percentage of 63.04% from 202 Premier League games is the benchmark that every successor has been judged against.

What made Pochettino exceptional was not just the win rate, but the manner of it. Working without trophy wins, a frustration he and fans shared, he instilled a coherent tactical identity built on high pressing, youth development and competitive intensity. Players like Harry Kane, Dele Alli and Son Heung-min flourished under his tutelage. A goal difference of +166 across 202 games is a testament to his attacking ambition.
Antonio Conte’s arrival in late 2021 provided a different kind of excellence, harder-edged, defensively organised and ruthlessly pragmatic. His 62.50% points return included a top-four finish and Champions League qualification in 2021–22. Harry Redknapp, the populist hero who guided Spurs to their first Champions League campaign in 2010, sits fourth overall at 57.87% across a substantial 144-game sample.
“Under Pochettino, Spurs felt like a club going somewhere. Under others, they felt like a club going in circles.”

The Worst: Years of Drift and Decline
At the other end of the spectrum, the numbers are damning. Ossie Ardiles, adored as a player at the club, proved catastrophically out of his depth as manager. His 1993–94 tenure produced a points percentage of just 38.27% from 54 games, with a negative goal difference and an attacking philosophy so open that it left the defence chronically exposed. He was sacked after a 3–0 home defeat to Notts County.

Jacques Santini managed just 11 Premier League games before his mysterious resignation in October 2004, returning an anaemic 39.39%, though the small sample makes a fair verdict difficult. More telling is Juande Ramos, appointed on the back of a League Cup triumph and riding high from European form, whose league management produced a desperate 39.05%, a figure that contributed to Spurs sitting bottom of the Premier League by the time he was dismissed in October 2008.
George Graham’s three years represent perhaps the most baffling appointment in the club’s modern history. Hired from rivals Arsenal, where he had won two titles but was sacked for financial misconduc, Graham brought a stifling defensive philosophy entirely at odds with the club’s attacking traditions. His 42.96% points return from 97 games was accompanied by tedious football that drove fans to distraction, though he did deliver the 1999 League Cup.

The Middle Ground: Missed Opportunities
Several managers occupy an interesting middle territory, capable enough to avoid disaster, but unable to reach the heights the fanbase craved. José Mourinho’s 54.60% return from 58 games sits below the club average of 51% by only a few points on the surface, yet the decline in the second half of his tenure was steep: a fourth-place league finish in 2020–21 all but secured before he was dismissed 72 hours before the League Cup final.
Harry Redknapp at 57.87% stands out as the great “what if”, his four years included qualification for the Champions League and consistent top-four challenges, but he was controversially overlooked for the England job and eventually dismissed by Daniel Levy despite a strong finish to 2011–12. Glenn Hoddle’s 42.70% across two years (2001–2003) tells the story of a tactically innovative manager limited by a thin squad, while Gerry Francis’s three years (1994–1997) at 46.22% were characterised by caution rather than ambition.

The Post-Pochettino Malaise
Since Pochettino’s dismissal in November 2019, Tottenham have employed seven different managers in the space of six years, a statistic that speaks to a structural dysfunction beyond any individual’s failings. The data bears out the turbulence: Mourinho at 54.60%, Nuno Espírito Santo at 50.00% from just 10 games, Conte at 62.50% (the sole bright spot), Cristian Stellini’s caretaker stint at a disastrous 33.33%, Ange Postecoglou at 45.61% in his two seasons, Thomas Frank at 37.18% in the current campaign, and now Igor Tudor’s arrival with a 0.00% return from one PL outing.
Postecoglou is a particularly complicated case. His overall points return of 45.61% in the league was below par, yet he delivered the club’s first trophy in 17 years, the 2025 UEFA Europa League, making his tenure impossible to judge by statistics alone. Similarly, Conte’s 62.50% return looks excellent in isolation, but his departure amid a now-infamous press conference tirade and mid-season resignation left the club in chaos.
Full Statistical Table — All PL Era Managers

✦ ✦ ✦
Verdict: What the Numbers Ultimately Tell Us
Football statistics alone cannot capture the full picture, Ange Postecoglou won a European trophy on a threadbare budget, Ossie Ardiles was undermined by a chaotic transfer policy not entirely of his making, and Tim Sherwood’s small sample distorts his ranking. But as a broad map of managerial quality in the Premier League era, the data is revealing.
Pochettino stands alone as the definitive best: a sustained 63.04% return across five full seasons, a Champions League final, and a playing identity that still resonates. The worst, in terms of sustained poor performance with adequate resources, is George Graham, brought in for credibility, he delivered neither results nor entertainment across three underwhelming years.
The pattern that emerges most starkly is the post-2019 managerial carousel. In the six years since Pochettino, no full-term appointment has matched his benchmark. The club’s ambitions, a billion-pound stadium, world-class infrastructure, now demand a manager capable of sustaining 60%-plus points returns. The data confirms that Spurs have found that standard only once in over three decades. Finding it again remains the great challenge.




















