Folks, I've seen a lot of bad runs in my time behind the mic, but what's happening to Tottenham Hotspur right now is something I never thought I'd witness. Not in the modern era. Not to a club of this stature.
Thirteen games without a league win in 2026. Thirteen. The last time Tottenham went this long without tasting victory was 1934/35 - and if you're doing the math, that's 92 years ago. Most of the people reading this weren't even born yet. Heck, their grandparents weren't born yet.
The latest humiliation? A 3-0 thrashing at the hands of Nottingham Forest, a team that's been fighting its own battles this season. When you're getting destroyed by three goals at home, you know something is fundamentally broken.
Here's the number that should terrify every Spurs supporter: 17th place. One point - one single point - above the relegation zone. This is a club that was playing Champions League football just a few years ago. A club that built a billion-dollar stadium. A club with world-class facilities and resources that most teams in this league can only dream about.
And they're staring down the barrel of the Championship.
I've talked to lifelong Tottenham fans this week, and the pain in their voices is real. These aren't fair-weather supporters - these are people who've been going to White Hart Lane since they were kids, who've stuck with the club through thick and thin. They deserve better than this.
The questions are mounting. Where's the leadership? Where's the fight? Where's the pride in the shirt? Because right now, from the outside looking in, it looks like a team that's given up. A team that's accepted its fate.
There's still time to turn this around - mathematically, they're not down yet. But time is running out fast, and confidence is a fragile thing. Once it's gone, it's nearly impossible to get back.
This isn't just a bad run. This is a historic collapse that will be talked about for generations. And if they don't wake up soon, Tottenham will be playing Middlesbrough and Sunderland next season instead of and .

