Tottenham just did something which sums Daniel Levy up as £218m outlay confirmed

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Tottenham chairman Daniel Levy is as forensic as they come and will be well aware of the causal link between investment in the playing squad and success in the Premier League.

Yes, disruptors like Aston Villa, Newcastle United, Brighton and Nottingham Forest – all of whose budgets are substantially smaller than Spurs’ owing to PSR – have proven it is possible to do more with less.

But even with Tottenham and Man United gasping for air in the bottom half of the Premier League, reports of the demise of the so-called ‘Big Six’ have been greatly exaggerated.

PositionTeamPlayedMPWonWDrawnDLostLForGFAgainstGADiffGDPointsPts
12Crystal PalaceCrystal Palace226972528-327
13Man UtdManchester United2275102732-526
14West HamWest Ham2275102743-1626
15TottenhamTottenham22731245351024
16EvertonEverton214891828-1020
17WolvesWolves2244143251-1916

While hardly rags-to-riches stories, Villa and Newcastle’s qualification for the Champions League in the last two season are the exceptions, not the rule.

The revenue gap between the haves – Tottenham, Arsenal, Chelsea, Liverpool and the two Manchester clubs – and the have-nots mean the Big Six are insulated from failure in the long-term.

There may be single campaigns or even periods of several seasons when the footballing strategy goes pear-shaped enough to negate the protectionary impact of increased investment in the squad.

Bur zooming out on the graph, football’s financial structures and the commercial pull of the Big Six means they are more or less guaranteed to remain at the top of the hierarchy.

There are leagues within leagues, however, and Spurs fans watching Ange Postecoglou’s side flounder this season will rightly point out that their club are currently the ugly duckling of the Big Six.

Even accounting for their biblical list of injuries, the North Londoners are nowhere near where they should be – but why?

Tottenham’s injuries

PlayerInjuryPotential Return
Dominic SolankeKnee Injury08/03/2025
Guglielmo VicarioAnkle/Foot Injury25/02/2025
Destiny UdogieThigh Injury16/02/2025
Brennan JohnsonCalf/Shin/Heel Injury16/02/2025
Timo WernerThigh Injury09/02/2025
Micky van de VenThigh Injury02/02/2025
Cristian RomeroThigh Injury30/01/2025
Pape Matar SarrOther26/01/2025
Diop Djed-Hotep SpenceOther26/01/2025
Sergio ReguilonOther26/01/2025
Yves BissoumaThigh Injury26/01/2025
Wilson OdobertThigh InjuryNot Available
SOURCE: Premier Injuries

It’s easy to fall back on easy platitudes when discussing Tottenham’s cultural issues, but it does look like the environment within the club is a barrier to success.

Shoddy recruitment, a lightweight sporting structure, and Daniel Levy’s micromanagement are also regularly cited as root causes for the club’s 17-year trophy drought.

With Spurs currently seeking fresh investment, the hope among supporters is that a new minority owner – former Newcastle supremo Amanda Staveley, perhaps – could inject some gumption.

What exactly will happen to the proceeds generated by a minority equity sale isn’t clear.

Levy says the extra capital will go towards investment in the team as well as infrastructure projects, although he and ENIC could just as easily pocket the money themselves if it is a private share transfer.

Incidentally, Spurs have been granted planning permission to build a hotel on the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium site, which is set to be exceedingly expensive…

In any case, if the club want to compete at the top end of the Premier League again and, significantly, make a return to lucrative Champions League football, greater football spending is needed.

But based on the latest information direct from Tottenham HQ, fans may be sceptical that increased investment will materialise.

Tottenham slash wage bill

When challenged on Spurs’ relatively modest investment compared to their peer group, the hierarchy have pointed out that spending has always increased with revenue.

And that is true, but the margin between the two metrics is widening. In layman’s terms, spending is increasing but not as fast as turnover is rising.

And the latest financial data from the Deloitte Football Money League, which has access to official data before club accounts are publicly available, shows this trend is accelerating.

In 2022-23, Spurs spent £251m on wages. In 2023-24? The figure was £218m.

That drop-off was attributable primarily to the absence of Champions League football, which delivers bonuses that are encompassed in the wage bill figure.

However, as a percentage of revenue, Spurs’ spending on wages decreased from 46 to 42 per cent, which – when all clubs have filed their accounts – will be comfortably the smallest in the Premier League.

How much does Daniel Levy earn as Spurs chairman?

When Cristian Romero took a not-so-subtle swipe at Spurs’ management earlier this season, he was far from the first to criticise Levy and his peers’ methods.

"Manchester City competes every year, you see how Liverpool strengthens its squad, Chelsea strengthens their squad, doesn't do well, strengthens again, and now they're seeing results – those are the things to imitate,” the World Cup winner said.

Photo by Ryan Pierse/Getty Images

"You have to realise that something is going wrong, hopefully, they [the board] realise it."

"The last few years, it's always the same – first the players, then the coaching staff changes, and it's always the same people responsible.

"Hopefully they realise who the true responsible ones are and we move forward because it's a beautiful club that, with the structure it has, could easily be competing for the title every year."

Since 2001, when Joe Lewis and ENIC bought Tottenham, Levy has trousered around £51m from his salary and performance-related bonuses.

That is – by some margin – the most any executive at a Premier League has earned over the same period.

From ENIC’s perspective, he warrants that salary. After all, the club’s enterprise value has increased by a staggering 6,000 per cent in his time as chairman.

Photo by Catherine Ivill – AMA/Getty Images

As the owner of around 30 per cent of the club’s equity, Levy will also cash in both when the minority investment is complete and, in the longer term, ENIC divest their remaining interest in Spurs.

Given that the club have been appraised by Levy at around £3.75bn, it will be an extraordinary payday for the owners who paid have only spent around £200m of their own money to fund it.

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