So qualifying for European football in his first season after losing his star player and backing that up with the clubs first major trophy in 20 years and first European trophy in 40 years, getting the club back into the CL while managing their biggest injury crisis in years is being out of his depth.
Rightio…..
Let’s bring this in here.
Winning the Europa League in the first season that teams from the CL didn’t drop down into it (and let’s be honest when you look at the teams that would have dropped down - most of them were significantly better than any team in the EL) does not paper over the cracks of finishing 17th in the league and a win percentage of 46.53%, while having £300m+ spent on players over 4 transfer windows (closer to £400m if you include Kulusevski & Porro who were on loan prior to Ange).
What it tells you is the bloke that won things in the 14th best and most single team dominated league in Europe over the last 40 years, was not really up to the task of guiding Spurs back into a position where they would regularly challenge for CL qualification.
Tactically found out time and time again, because, it’s a bit harder to win in the EPL - he couldn’t find a way to consolidate position and results when things didn’t quite go entirely his way - that’s the sign of a manager who just isn’t very good.
But this isn’t shocking or surprising - this played out exactly the way everyone with any sort of reasoned thought process expected it to - just an average manager, completely out of his depth and the luck that brought him a trophy was not going to run into next season.
So yes, Dreamie, absolutely, clearly out of his depth - a fortunate win in a competition that was easier to win than the anything else Spurs could have achieved this past season doesn’t change that.