During the press rounds to promote his new autobiography, Hugo Lloris told the Guardian that Pochettino's work at Tottenham was largely under-appreciated: "Daniel [Levy] always tried to make the right decision for the club and we were also a bit unlucky. At our best with Mauricio, we had to compete with the Chelsea of [Roman] Abramovich, the Man City of [Pep] Guardiola, the Liverpool of Jurgen Klopp. It was really tough because if the club was ready to invest £50m, the others will invest £100m.
"But I feel we didn’t give the high credit that Mauricio deserved because he brought a new generation of players - Christian Eriksen, Dele Alli, Harry Kane and many more - to a new level. He created something really special in the building. You could feel the unity and we really enjoyed competing for each other. We brought the club to the next step, but we had three finals and we could not score one goal in those games."
A huge part of Pochettino's project revolved around his almost unparalleled ability to improve young players, a trait which will serve Chelsea well even after only a year there thanks to his work with Cole Palmer. Tottenham, even to this day, are still relying on coaching miracles to bail out whatever else happens within the club. There feels like a lingering belief from upstairs that the playing squad doesn't require the level of surgery - or as Pochettino often referred to it, a 'painful rebuild' - that is actually needed in order to compete. The latent loss of a genuine world-class player in Kane is now starting to hurt.
Postecoglou has talked about wanting to win the Premier League with Spurs, and those in senior roles, such as chairman Levy and sporting director Johan Lange, insist they want to compete in both the short term and long term. But they only signed one starter during the summer transfer window in Dominic Solanke, with the rest of their business geared towards the future, leaving Postecoglou with a squad that is simultaneously raw and stale. To be uber-critical of Tottenham, the project seems a bit half-arsed, neither one way or the other enough to yield results. That's been the case even since the glory days of Pochettino's miracles.
The saving grace for Spurs is despite all of this, they are only three points off the top four. If they had beaten Ipswich as expected, they'd be sitting in third place. The Premier League is as competitive as ever and there is little to separate title contenders such as Arsenal from those in crisis like United (just four points, to be exact). Tottenham are not alone in this kind of rut.
Postecoglou should have enough good will in the bank to survive the season, with much of fan frustration directed towards Levy and owners ENIC instead. Results can only get so bad though, and further bruisings through the winter will make it tough for even his most ardent supporters to stand by him.