Tottenham are looking for a new manager after sacking Mauricio Pochettino less than six months after he took them to the Champions League final.
Pochettino, along with his coaching staff, has paid the price for a poor run of domestic form in 2019, bringing an end to a five-and-a-half-year spell at the club.
Spurs say they will announce their new coaching staff “in due course”, with former Manchester United and Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho an early favourite to take the reins.
That impacted arrivals in the summer and although Spurs broke their transfer record in signing Tanguy Ndombele, also adding Giovani Lo Celso and Ryan Sessegnon, Pochettino did not deem it enough.
The Argentinian complained regularly about an unsettled squad and results suffered as, with the same players, they looked a shadow of the side they used to be.
Pochettino was determined to complete the rebuild job and remained committed to the cause, but Levy had other ideas.