Discover which Tottenham stars will benefit from their new incoming head coach Roberto De Zerbi
Tottenham Hotspur. The name alone usually conjures images of flair, ambition, and a certain north London swagger. But this season? It’s been a brutal, soul-crushing descent into footballing purgatory. Three managers have come and gone, each leaving the club further mired in a desperate relegation battle that has stretched for agonising months. The dressing room, once a hive of competitive spirit, has often looked like a fractured mess, devoid of confidence and belief, staring down the barrel of a first relegation since 1977.
Igor Tudor’s fleeting 44-day reign yielded precisely zero Premier League wins, a statistic as damning as it is despairing. He left the club languishing in 17th, the grim reaper of the Championship hovering ominously. Into this maelstrom, this crucible of crisis, steps Roberto De Zerbi. The 46-year-old Italian, a tactical savant revered across Europe, has agreed to a monumental five-year contract at Spurs, reversing an earlier decision to wait until summer. This isn’t just an appointment; it’s a statement, a gamble, and perhaps, the desperate roll of the dice Tottenham needs.
It is a significant and undeniably bold move given the dire circumstances. De Zerbi isn’t merely a manager; he’s an architect of identity. His teams don’t just play football; they *possess* it, aggressively. They press relentlessly, suffocating opponents and demanding an almost surgical level of technical quality from every single player on the pitch. His philosophy is clear, demanding, and utterly captivating when executed correctly.
Whether seven games is enough time to etch any semblance of this intricate tactical blueprint onto a fractured squad in a fight for survival is the million-dollar question. But if Spurs do defy gravity and maintain their Premier League status, granting De Zerbi a full pre-season to sculpt his vision, there are players already embedded in the squad who stand poised on the precipice of an astonishing transformation under his tutelage. The canvas might be messy, but the artist has arrived.
We delve into the potential beneficiaries, the five Spurs stars most likely to ignite and thrive under the dynamic reign of their new Italian maestro.
1. Cristian Romero

If there’s one player in the current Spurs squad whose very essence — his personality, his playing style, his sheer audacity — screams “Roberto De Zerbi,” it is Cristian Romero. The Argentine World Cup winner is aggression personified, confrontational, uncompromising, and completely allergic to the passive art of sitting back. These are not just qualities; they are De Zerbi’s commandments for his defenders. At Brighton, his centre-backs were not merely guardians of the goal; they were the first wave of attack, expected to carry the ball forward with conviction under pressure, to break lines, and to dictate the tempo of how the team operated without possession.
Romero possesses all these attributes, and he possesses them at an elite level. This season, his individual brilliance has often been undermined by the sheer chaos swirling around him, rather than any decline in his own formidable standards. Under a manager who not only understands his unique skillset but actively builds a system to amplify his strengths, Romero has the potential to rediscover the form that made him one of the Premier League’s most dominant defenders. He isn’t just a player De Zerbi will tolerate; he’s exactly the kind of fiery, ball-playing leader De Zerbi will want marshalling his defence, setting the aggressive tone from the very back.
2. Destiny Udogie


De Zerbi’s full-backs at Brighton were not merely wide defenders; they were dynamic, multi-faceted attacking threats. They were expected to arrive late into the box, to pin back opposition wingers, and to contribute directly to the team’s goalscoring efforts, often operating in inverted roles or making surging runs into the heart of the attack. Pervis Estupiñán served as the quintessential model – dynamic, physical, and a constant menace down the flank. Destiny Udogie, with his electrifying pace and power, fits this demanding profile to a tee.
The Italian left-back possesses raw physical gifts that would be coveted by almost any club in the Premier League. He is a powerhouse in transition, capable of driving forward with the ball, eating up ground, and proving incredibly difficult to contain once he builds a head of steam. The frustration this season has been the glaring absence of a consistent system that can truly unleash his unique talents. Still only 22, Udogie stands on the cusp of becoming one of the most effective and explosive full-backs in the league under De Zerbi’s meticulous supervision. Expect him to be a key outlet, a tireless engine, and a genuine goal threat.
3. Xavi Simons


Xavi Simons arrived at Tottenham last summer burdened with enormous expectations, a prodigious talent destined for greatness. By any honest assessment, he has been criminally underutilized and poorly served. A player of his extraordinary technical quality and creative intelligence was always going to struggle to shine consistently in a team that has spent the majority of the season flailing without any discernible shape, structure, or tactical identity. Yet, he has shown enough in fleeting, incandescent moments – including two beautifully taken goals against Atletico Madrid in the Champions League – to unequivocally suggest that the world-class talent is undeniably there.
He simply needs an environment that not only allows him to express it but actively encourages and empowers him to do so consistently. De Zerbi meticulously crafts his systems around technical midfielders and attackers who can operate with surgical precision in tight spaces, receive the ball under intense pressure, and make lightning-quick, decisive decisions. This, precisely, is Xavi Simons. With a clearly defined role, a tactical framework that understands how to position and protect a player of his delicate but devastating profile, the Dutch international could finally blossom into the creative heartbeat Spurs supporters so desperately crave.
4. Mathys Tel
Mathys Tel has been one of the genuine, undeniable bright spots of an otherwise grim, forgettable season. The 20-year-old Frenchman has consistently showcased his blistering pace, directness, and an innate instinct for conjuring moments of magic on the big occasion. His electrifying performance against Atletico Madrid was a stark reminder of what he is truly capable of when afforded the licence and, crucially, the confidence to express himself. He has been steadily growing in influence in recent weeks, and the arrival of Roberto De Zerbi could represent the perfect confluence of timing and opportunity for him to make that step permanent, to transition from exciting prospect to indispensable star.
De Zerbi possesses an almost unparalleled track record of developing raw, young attacking players into formidable Premier League talents. At Brighton, players like Leandro Trossard, the mesmerizing Kaoru Mitoma, and the prodigious Evan Ferguson all made significant, career-defining strides under his innovative management. Tel shares many of the same foundational ingredients: the explosive athleticism, the insatiable willingness to run in behind defences, and the technical quality to exploit space at breakneck pace. A full pre-season immersed in De Zerbi’s demanding yet nurturing coaching staff, operating within a system purpose-built to harness his strengths, could truly make all the difference, unleashing a genuine star.
5. Dominic Solanke


Dominic Solanke’s most recent season at Spurs has been a chapter of profound frustration. Goals have dried up with alarming regularity, his confidence has fluctuated wildly mirroring the abysmal performances of the team around him, and he has been unable to recapture the electrifying form that made him such an attractive, sought-after proposition when he made the switch from Bournemouth. Some of this, undoubtedly, is circumstantial; it is an almost impossible task to effectively lead the line when the team behind you is a disorganised mess, utterly devoid of creativity and coherent strategy. Some of it, too, has been down to an unfortunate string of nagging injuries that have hampered his rhythm.
However, Roberto De Zerbi has a remarkable knack for reigniting and extracting goals from his strikers. At Brighton, the veteran Danny Welbeck enjoyed a genuine career resurgence under his astute management. De Zerbi’s intricate system is meticulously designed to create clear-cut chances, with the aggressive pressing structure forcing turnovers in dangerous, advanced areas, and the dynamic full-backs consistently providing inviting crossing options that intelligent centre-forwards can ruthlessly exploit. Solanke’s intelligent movement, his robust ability to hold the ball up, and his growing link-up play make him exquisitely suited to thrive within this kind of attacking philosophy. If De Zerbi can restore belief and provide him with a coherent, chance-creating system, the goals, undoubtedly, will flow once more. He could be the spearhead of this new, aggressive Spurs.
Game Highlights: Glimpses of a New Dawn
The De Zerbi revolution is a tactical ballet, demanding precision and passion. While his immediate impact will be focused on survival, imagine the thrilling glimpses we could see even in these final, desperate games:
Matchday 32 vs. Aston Villa (Hypothetical): The ball, as always, starts from the back. Romero, under pressure, doesn’t panic. He feigns a pass wide, then with a sudden burst of acceleration, drives into midfield, splitting two Villa attackers before releasing Xavi Simons with a perfectly weighted pass. Simons, now operating in the half-space, receives on the turn, evades a challenge with a silky pirouette, and plays a probing through-ball. The move doesn’t quite come off, but the intent, the audacity, is palpable. Later, Udogie, instead of hugging the touchline, makes a surging diagonal run into the box, arriving late to meet a cut-back. His powerful shot is blocked, but the attacking presence is unmistakable – this is a new type of full-back.
Matchday 33 vs. Fulham (Hypothetical): Spurs are pressing high, almost suffocating Fulham’s build-up. A quick turnover, forced by Solanke’s intelligent pursuit, sees the ball fall to Tel on the left wing. He picks it up, dribbles aggressively, drawing two defenders before unleashing a thunderous, rising shot that smashes against the crossbar. The crowd roars, sensing the hunger. Moments later, Tel gets his moment. A perfectly weighted through-ball from Simons finds Solanke, who holds off his defender, lays off to Tel surging past him. The young Frenchman takes a touch and fires low and hard into the bottom corner. A De Zerbi goal, born from pressing, intricate passing, and decisive finishing. It’s not just a goal; it’s a statement of intent, a whisper of what’s to come.
The Road Ahead: Prediction
The immediate future for Tottenham under Roberto De Zerbi is undeniably precarious. Seven games to implement a complex, demanding system while staring relegation in the face is an unenviable task. However, De Zerbi is not just a tactical mastermind; he’s a motivator, a leader who instils belief and a fierce competitive spirit. While the wins might not come easily, I predict a visible, tangible shift in performance and identity almost immediately.
Spurs will survive this season, likely with a few gritty, hard-fought results that hint at their newfound direction. The fear of relegation will spur them on, and De Zerbi’s impact will be enough to scrape them over the line, perhaps finishing 15th or 16th. But the real magic will begin in the summer. With a full pre-season, targeted reinforcements that fit his philosophy, and the opportunity to truly embed his tactical principles, Roberto De Zerbi will transform Tottenham Hotspur. Next season, expect a revitalised, tactically coherent, and aggressively entertaining Spurs side. My prediction for the 2025/26 season? Tottenham will finish within the European qualification spots (6th or 7th), perhaps even challenging for a top-four position if De Zerbi’s vision clicks into place as effectively as it did at Brighton. The rollercoaster has hit rock bottom, but with De Zerbi at the helm, the only way is up. Get ready, North London – the football is about to get electrifying.

