EPL Index
·23 marzo 2026
Former Spurs star reveals his worries about the future of the club

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Yahoo sportsEPL Index
·23 marzo 2026

Tottenham Hotspur find themselves navigating unfamiliar terrain, and with it comes a deeper question about identity. As results continue to slide, Darren Bent has voiced a concern that speaks to more than form, it addresses mentality, resilience and expectation.
A 3-0 defeat at home to Nottingham Forest has sharpened the sense of unease around Spurs. It was not merely the loss, but the manner of it, second best across the pitch, lacking urgency and clarity at a moment that demanded both.

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The Premier League table has tightened in a way few at Tottenham would have anticipated. Spurs now sit just one point above West Ham and two behind Nottingham Forest, with seven games remaining. The margins are small, but the implications are vast.
There is a growing possibility that Tottenham could drop into the bottom three, even if only temporarily. In a campaign where expectations were set far higher, this represents a psychological shift as much as a competitive one.
Bent’s concern reflects that broader anxiety. The issue is not simply whether Spurs can accumulate enough points, but whether they are equipped for the type of fight required.
Speaking on talkSPORT, Bent offered a candid assessment of Tottenham’s situation. “I do worry if Spurs drop into the bottom three, even if it’s for a game.

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“Look at the teams that are down there, no disrespect to Burnley, they have been there before and they know what it takes in terms of trying to get out of there, that mentality.
“Forest have been down there, West Ham have been, relegated not too long ago.
“Spurs, it probably never crossed their mentality this season that they’d be in this position.
“They’ve got good players, but I just wonder if they have got the right kind of mentality for this type of fight.
“So far the signs of that are no.”
These remarks cut to the core of Tottenham’s predicament. Experience in relegation battles often shapes behaviour, composure, decision making under pressure. Spurs, by contrast, are encountering this environment without that recent memory.
The remaining schedule offers both challenge and opportunity. Brighton, Leeds and Everton are still to visit north London, fixtures that will demand control and composure. Points at home may prove decisive.
Yet the underlying numbers underline the scale of the task. Tottenham have lost 15 of their 31 league matches and conceded 50 goals. Those figures point to structural issues that cannot be resolved overnight.
The comparison with last season adds further weight. Eleven wins then, seven so far now, a drop that reflects inconsistency and vulnerability.
For Igor Tudor and his players, the coming weeks will define their campaign. Relegation battles are often shaped by mentality as much as quality, by the ability to absorb pressure and respond collectively.

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Bent’s concern may feel uncomfortable, but it resonates. Spurs must demonstrate that they can adapt, that they can find resilience in adversity, and that they are capable of navigating a fight they never expected to face.
The answers will come quickly, and they will come under pressure.









































