Thomas Frank insists he will lead Tottenham into next week’s North London derby with Arsenal, despite a 2-1 defeat against Newcastle United extending a damaging winless Premier League run and increasing pressure, as Spurs stay only five points above the relegation zone in 16th place.
Spurs have now gone eight league matches without victory, drawing four and losing four, and remain one of just two Premier League sides, along with Burnley, yet to win a game in 2026, raising fresh questions over Frank’s future before facing the current league leaders.
The recent sequence is Tottenham’s poorest Premier League spell since a nine-game winless streak between May and October 2008, a run that ended with Juande Ramos losing the job, and frustration again
grew at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium as supporters booed the team off at half-time and full-time.
Frank was asked directly whether he expected to stay in charge during the 12-day gap before hosting Arsenal, and replied first with a brief answer, saying: "1,000%. " Frank then added: "I'm also 1,000% sure I didn't expect us to be in the position we are in, with 11 or 12 injuries. "
Tottenham’s manager argued that the situation requires composure, not panic, and referred to previous examples at Spurs and elsewhere, stating: "There were a few before me, here at Tottenham and many other clubs, that have lost their heads. I have to stay calm. We have to get through this together. I am convinced I will be [in charge]. "
Frank again highlighted the impact of a long absentee list, which has included James Maddison, Dejan Kulusevski, Rodrigo Bentancur, Mohammed Kudus, Ben Davies, Lucas Bergvall, Richarlison, Pedro Porro and Destiny Udogie, and said club decision-makers are well aware of how the injuries have shaped performances this season.
Asked whether those in charge properly recognise that effect, Frank replied: "Of course they understand that. You can put 11 players in a lineup and then you guys can judge. Of course that affects things, but it is my job to find solutions with the players available. If you see them out there, they are running hard. It is tough for them. When you have things going against you, it shows your true colours. "
The head coach also accepted scrutiny but stressed responsibility is shared across the club structure, explaining: "I understand the question. It is easy to point at me, but it is never only the head coach, ownership, players or staff. It is everyone. Everyone knows what position we are in and what we need to improve on. That is what we are working hard on. "
On the pitch against Newcastle, Malick Thiaw put Tottenham behind, Archie Gray equalised, then Jacob Ramsey struck a left-footed winner four minutes later, and that quick response from Newcastle left Spurs unable to recover, extending a barren league run that has deepened the anxiety among home fans.
The narrow gap to the bottom three could have been smaller, but 18th-placed West Ham conceded a late goal in a 1-1 draw with Manchester United, slightly easing immediate danger for Spurs, although overall momentum remains negative as the derby with Arsenal approaches at a crucial stage of the season.
8 - Tottenham Hotspur are winless in eight Premier League games (D4 L4), their longest run since going nine without victory from May to October 2008 under Juande Ramos. Concern. pic.twitter.com/xqUPasICaKOptaJoe (@OptaJoe) February 10, 2026
Frank rejected the idea that changing manager is always the answer, saying: "I think there are a lot of studies that show it is not the right thing to do. The only thing I am focused on is fighting. We understand we are not in a good situation. But with everything in life, you need to stay calm and keep going. "












