Roberto De Zerbi has apologised to Tottenham Hotspur supporters after criticism over comments he made about Mason Greenwood resurfaced following his appointment as Spurs head coach. The backlash came from supporter groups who questioned whether De Zerbi’s earlier remarks matched the club’s stated values.
The Italian coach addressed the issue in his first club interview and said he never wanted to downplay violence against women or violence against anyone more broadly. He added that he was sorry if his words had offended anyone. Those comments came after fresh scrutiny of remarks he made while managing Marseille, where he described Greenwood as a “good guy” and said the player had paid a “heavy price.”
Why the issue followed him to Tottenham
The controversy did not begin in north London. It followed De Zerbi from Marseille, where Greenwood played under him. After Spurs moved to appoint De Zerbi, several supporters’ groups raised objections and asked the club to reaffirm its commitment to equality, respect and integrity. That turned what could have been a routine managerial unveiling into an early off-field pressure point.
What De Zerbi said in response
De Zerbi tried to frame his position as one rooted in protecting vulnerable people. He said he had consistently tried to stand with those who need protecting and insisted he had no intention of minimising violence. The apology was aimed at cooling tensions rather than reopening the full debate, but it showed the club understood the issue had become part of the reaction to his arrival.
The football pressure around the appointment
Spurs also face a football problem that leaves little room for a slow start. Tottenham sit 17th in the Premier League with 30 points from 31 matches, just one point above the relegation zone, while De Zerbi has signed a five-year deal and said he will stay regardless of the outcome this season. That means the new manager enters the job carrying two pressures at once: results and trust.
What this means next
For now, the apology may ease some of the immediate anger, but it is unlikely to end the story on its own. De Zerbi still has to convince parts of the fanbase that he understands why the issue mattered, while also trying to pull Tottenham clear of danger on the pitch. That makes this more than a standard first-week controversy. It is already part of the test of his Spurs tenure.
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