Premier League side Tottenham Hotspur have sacked manager Jose Mourinho and his staff following a poor run of results that sees the north-London side in seventh position in the table with six rounds of matches to play in the 2020-’21 campaign.

“Jose and his coaching staff have been with us through some of our most challenging times as a club. Jose is a true professional who showed enormous resilience during the pandemic. On a personal level I have enjoyed working with him and regret that things have not worked out as we both had envisaged. He will always be welcome here and we should like to thank him and his coaching staff for their contribution,” Tottenham chairman Daniel Levy said in a statement on the club’s website.

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The Athletic reported that the decision to part ways with Mourinho was related to the breakaway European Super League formation.

European Super League: All you need to know about the new breakaway football tournament

Ryan Mason will take charge of the team for the rest of the season.

The timing of Mourinho’s departure is quite interesting with the club set to take on Manchester City in the final of the Carabao Cup on Sunday. The 58-year-old Mourinho was dismissed after only 17 months in charge, even though he could have led the club to their first silverware since 2008.

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But Spurs, who are one of the twelve clubs that announced that they had signed up for the European Super League, have decided to pull the trigger on a manager that has failed to match expectations ever since replacing Mauricio Pochettino in November 2019.

Mourinho guided Spurs to Europa League qualification at the end of the 2019-’20 season but had failed to show clear progress in north London. Mourinho’s men made a flying start to the Premier League season that saw them top the table at the initial stage of the league but their challenge fell apart around Christmas.

The north Londoners are now facing a tough task on their hands to qualify for next season’s Champions League.

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Leipzig boss Julian Nagelsmann is the bookmakers’ favourite to replace Mourinho, while Leicester manager Brendan Rodgers is also a contender.

Nagelsmann has also been linked with Bayern Munich, who are set to lose boss Hansi Flick in a move that could have persuaded Tottenham to act on Mourinho now rather than wait until the end of the season.

Mourinho in decline

Mourinho’s abrupt exit is the latest setback in a once-glittering managerial career that now appears on the decline.

The former Porto, Chelsea, Inter Milan, Real Madrid and Manchester United boss was appointed by Tottenham in November 2019, less than 12 hours after Mauricio Pochettino had been dismissed.

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But unlike Pochettino, who led Tottenham to the 2019 Champions League final and regularly finished in the top four, Mourinho was unable to spark a response from his squad.

Tottenham finished sixth last season and went out of the Champions League in the last 16.

Amid reports of player discontent with Mourinho’s conservative tactics and boring training sessions, the Portuguese coach had been losing his grip on the job for several weeks.

He had a public spat with on-loan Real Madrid star Gareth Bale about his fitness for an FA Cup defeat at Everton and claimed Toby Alderweireld was absent from the squad due to a late return from the international break when the Belgian was actually pictured at the training ground.

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With Tottenham unlikely to qualify for the Champions League, there are also fears star striker Harry Kane will ask to leave in the close-season.

Only during his spell at Portuguese club Leiria has Mourinho posted a lower win ratio in all competitions (45 percent) in his managerial career than he did with Tottenham (51 percent).

Tottenham dropped 20 points from winning positions and blew a 2-0 first leg lead against Dinamo in the Europa League.

For the first time, Mourinho suffered 10 league defeats in a single season.

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Having branded himself the ‘Special One’ after winning the 2004 Champions League with Porto, Mourinho won the Premier League title three times in two spells with Chelsea.

He also led Inter Milan to Champions League glory in 2010 and won La Liga with Real Madrid.

But his second spell at Chelsea ended in acrimony in 2015 when he was sacked after losing the support of key players.

A two-year spell in charge at Manchester United brought Europa League and League Cup glory, but again Mourinho’s failure to keep his stars happy led to his sacking in 2018.

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Mourinho’s last game with Tottenham was a frustrating 2-2 draw at Everton on Friday that extended the team’s winless run to three matches and prompted the axe to fall.

(With AFP inputs)