Tottenham Hotspur coach Roberto De Zerbi is keen to silence the negativity in his players’ heads as they battle to avoid relegation from the Premier League, sitting two points below the safety zone with four games to go.

Spurs won their first league game since December at bottom side Wolverhampton Wanderers last weekend, but faced a major setback when attacking midfielder Xavi Simons suffered a cruciate ligament rupture, ruling him out for the season.

De Zerbi’s men visit fifth-placed Aston Villa on Sunday, and the coach, who took charge a month ago, wants to be rid of the negativity surrounding the team’s performances.

“Listen, I want to be clear one time. The most important challenge now is to silence the voice inside of us, inside of the players, inside the staff, the fans,” he told reporters on Friday.

“This voice produces negative thoughts and the voice says ‘we are unlucky, we have too many injuries. We lost Xavi Simons and he was in the last two games one of the most important players for us.

“‘Our medical staff is not good enough, the pitch of the stadium is not good… winning two or three games in a row is impossible because we hadn’t won a game in 2026’. I think it’s all negative things and it’s rubbish.”

De Zerbi said the focus should be on the quality of the Spurs players, who have picked up four points from the last two matches.

“We go to play against one of the best teams… but if Tottenham win at Villa Park it’s not a miracle. Maybe we lose but we have the quality to win this game. It’s not a miracle. We have to be positive,” he said.

MADDISON ROLE

De Zerbi said midfielder James Maddison, who has returned to the bench but is yet to play after suffering a cruciate ligament injury in August, can play a role in the last few games of the campaign.

“I’d like to play with him because he is a special player but we have to consider physical condition, a lot of things, but I think he can be important in the next three games,” the manager added.

The Italian promised that Spurs, who finished 17th last season, will do everything they can in the summer transfer market to avoid another struggle.

“In summer we can do everything. Everything. We have a lot of time to spend speaking about football, about the transfer market, about everything we can improve. We will,” he said.

KINSKY ARRIVAL

Tottenham Hotspur goalkeeper Antonin Kinsky said the arrival of head coach Roberto De Zerbi has instilled a positive mindset as the club battles to avoid relegation from the Premier League this season.

De Zerbi became the club’s third manager of the 2025-26 season when he joined Spurs in late March on a long-term contract, replacing Igor Tudor and taking over a team that was already sliding towards the danger zone.

Spurs are 18th in the Premier League table with 34 points, two behind 17th-placed West Ham United, with four matches remaining in the season.

“By the way he (De Zerbi) speaks, what you read and what you hear from him is that he believes in us and that is a big message that he gives us overall: that the quality is there in the squad,” Kinsky said in an interview with Sky Sports on Friday.

“It’s just not to speak about it but to show it. With the combination, with the style that he wants to play, I think our squad fits to that so I believe this is going to work.

“Now we have four points from three games, there is four left and I hope and I believe that this is the right way.”

Spurs ended a 16-game winless run in the league with a victory over already relegated Wolverhampton Wanderers last week, with Kinsky producing a crucial late save from Joao Gomes’ free-kick to secure all three points.

“It’s very precious. If we wouldn’t bring three points from there, of course, it would be much more difficult now,” the 23-year-old said about the win against Wolves.

“We are not closer but at least we didn’t get further (away). So, the difference is still just two points.”