On 28 December 2025, Tottenham Hotspur won a football match—a scrappy 1-0 victory at Selhurst Park, barely worth a headline.
Nobody knew it then, but that afternoon in South London would be the last time Spurs claimed three Premier League points. That was 100 days ago.
In the time since, the world has moved on. The January transfer window has opened and closed. Managers have come and gone—two of them at Spurs alone. Champions League matches have been played, including a brief, surreal period when Tottenham were still involved. And through it all, not a single league win.
Tottenham are the only club without a Premier League win in 2026, drawing five and losing eight of their 13 league games since the turn of the year.
They have failed to win 13 consecutive league games for the first time since 1935. These are not the numbers of a team in a rough patch; these are the statistics of a club in freefall.
What makes this so difficult to process is the sheer volume of excuses already exhausted. Thomas Frank was sacked in February. Igor Tudor replaced him but lasted less than a month.
Roberto De Zerbi is now the third manager of a season that began with genuine Champions League ambitions. At some point, the managerial carousel stops being an explanation and becomes part of the problem.
Only three teams have endured longer runs without a win from the start of a calendar year: Derby County in 2007-08, Sunderland in 2002-03, and Middlesbrough in 2016-17. All three were relegated. The company Spurs are keeping in the record books should terrify every supporter.
Since the start of last season, Tottenham have lost twice as many league games as they have won. That is not a blip; that is structural collapse dressed up in a Europa League winner’s medal.
Cristian Romero called the remaining fixtures “seven finals.” He is right, but finals require teams capable of winning them. De Zerbi has inherited not just a relegation battle, but a club that has forgotten what winning feels like.
The calendar does not lie. One hundred days without a win. Seven games to save a season and possibly much more.