Evening Standard
·01 de maio de 2026
Tottenham: Roberto De Zerbi delivers impassioned rallying cry as relegation prediction renewed

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Yahoo sportsEvening Standard
·01 de maio de 2026

Italian is adamant his side can win their remaining fixtures, including Sunday’s trip to face Aston Villa
Roberto De Zerbi remains adamant Tottenham have what it takes to win their remaining Premier League games as he delivered an impassioned rallying cry ahead of another crunch clash in the relegation fight.
Before last weekend’s 1-0 win over Wolves, Spurs’ first league win in 118 days, De Zerbi had insisted that his side were capable of winning each of their last five games.
That rallying cry came at the end of Spurs’ 2-2 draw at home to Brighton, in which they conceded a 95th-minute equaliser from Georginio Rutter, and De Zerbi has since been keen to stay positive.
Speaking ahead of visiting Aston Villa, he delivered a passionate monologue, detailing the negative coverage around the club and how it was his job to ensure none of that filtered into the dressing room.

Instant impact: Roberto De Zerbi
Getty
“I can't change my face or myself depending on who is in front of me. Clear, honest and what I feel I say,” De Zerbi said.
“The most important challenge now is to silence the voice inside of us, inside of the players, inside of the staff and inside of the fans. This voice can produce negative thoughts.
“The voice says, ‘we are unlucky, we have too many injuries, we lost Xavi Simons and he was the last two games one of the best players and most important players for us, our medical staff is not good enough and the pitch of the stadium is not good, the pitch of the training ground is not good, it is impossible to win two or three games in a row because we have not won too many games in 2026,’ I think it is all negative things.
“And it is rubbish because I want to keep my focus on ourselves and the quality of my players.”

Xavi Simons’ ACL rupture is a huge setback for Tottenham
PA
De Zerbi said his positivity stems from the reality of Spurs’ situation, insisting he is not blind to the problems at the club, but that he has seen enough in his first month in charge to believe they can stay up.
“I'm not [being] positive, I want to be realistic, it's different being positive, not positive because today is sunny, it's Italian weather, and I'm positive, no, no. I want to be realistic, and for that I'm like, so I feel this pressure to change the perspective. The same perspective you can see in different ways,” De Zerbi continued.
“One way is we are unlucky, we are at the bottom of the table. The other perspective is, yes, but we play with Pedro Porro, with Udogie, with Bentancur, with Bissouma, with Palhinha, with Gallagher, with Richarlison, with Kolo Muani. Kolo Muani two years ago, PSG paid £70 million [for him].
“He's not stupid, he's a top player. Mathys Tel is one of the best young players in Europe. Richarlison is in the Brazilian national team, he's not in a different team.”







































