By Rachel Lara Cohen
This time last year Spurs were coming off the back of a hellish run of four consecutive defeats. In all of these the team failed to score, culminating in mid-December in a 3-0 home defeat to Everton in the snow, during which Jess Naz picked up an injury and Ash Neville got a red.
Bethany England’s January 2023 signing provided a vital lift and got the team scoring again, but did not immediately stem the run of defeats. Instead, the run eventually extended to nine, spanning four and a half months and resulted in Rehanne Skinner’s departure in March 2023.
As a consequence, the start of 2023 saw Spurs increasingly mired in a relegation battle, from which it finally escaped under Vicky Jepson’s interim leadership by closing out the season with two wins, three draws and another three losses.

Today, as 2023 draws to a close, Spurs are in a much better position. They lie sixth in the league, the team has already accrued all but three of the total points managed last season (15 of 18) and barring a unbelievable nightmare in the second half of the season will be well clear of relegation. There have been a couple of bad losses (7-0 and 4-0) against the two Manchester teams. But Spurs now have an identifiable style. They have also shown that they can learn from these losses and bounce back, as they did to close out the first half of the season by initially drawing with, and then four days later, beating Arsenal. To put the icing on that: across all 180+ minutes, facing a previously out-of-reach-rival, Spurs were never behind.
In the following I review Spurs Women’s 2023 in eight parts, covering the club’s relationship with its women’s team, the team’s style of play, signings, existing players, supporters, and things needing to be addressed in 2024. I end with a pick for goal of the year and a summary of 2023 in numbers.
1. The club gets serious
Spurs fans (and women’s football fans) have been justifiably critical of the under-resourcing and lack of joined up thinking shown by Spurs to its women’s team. And while, earlier in 2023 comments from Daniel Levy reinforced the impression that the club was not serious, there have been signs that this is changing.
A key part of that was the (intra-WSL) record-breaking signing of Bethany England to bolster up a struggling team. England had won both individual and club honours and is the first (current) Senior Lioness to play at Spurs. It made a splash, but was also a signing that paid off in spades. When England arrived there was concern that she would not get the service to enable her to make a difference, but England’s efficiency in front of goal in 2023 was astounding. Her 12 goals in 12 games (from an expected goal return xG of just 5.3) has meant she remains one of the WSL’s top scorers for 2023, despite being absent from September to mid-December.
A second indication of the club getting serious was the recruitment of manager, Robert Vilahamn in summer 2023. Vilahamn posesses a clear vision of how he wants his teams to play. And, as he has noted in comments to the media, he was recruited because of the fit between this management style and ‘the Tottenham way’. Vilahamn’s recruitment coincided with Ange Postecoglou’s and the club’s attempt to re-focus on its ‘to dare is to do’ philosophy. As such it is both a sign of the club’s new agenda but also of a serious attempt to incorporate development of the women’s team within that club agenda.
Finally, and more practically this season we have seeen numerous reports, including an excellent behind the scenes piece in the Athletic, which indicate both that there is a plan for Spurs Women (on and beyond the field) and that this is starting to bear fruit.
2. Playing pretty football
Of course all supporters want their team to win but how nice is it to be playing football that makes you ‘ooh’ and ‘aah’? Ange Postecoglou has brought dramatic changes to Spurs’ men’s team, but the changes that Robert Vilahamn has wrought in the women’s team, a team that finished in the bottom third in 2022/23 and seriously lacked confidence, are arguably even more impressive.
This is most obviously seen in changes to the team’s passing patterns and statistics. Across the first ten games of the 2023/24 season Spurs have completed an average 418 passes per game with a pass completion rate of 79.2 percent. Compare that to last season when Spurs’ completed an average of 317 passes per game (101 fewer) with a pass completion of 74.5 percent (five points poorer). There has also been a jump in the number of progressive passes per game (from 27.6 to 38.3), meaning that the passing is more attacking, not simply that there is more passing around the back (although Spurs are also doing more of that).
If the statistics seem dry the football itself has, at least for periods, been scintillating. The ball whipping around, finding tight spaces through the middle of the pitch, using the wide areas. We have also seen a high press that has produced goals – most obviously two scored by Martha Thomas forcing defenders into making mistakes (against Bristol and Aston Villa – both part of the goal compilation below).
There is more to do, but 2023 has already given us a glimpse of what Robert Vilahamn wants from this team and that it will be fun watching it develop.
3. Signings to sing about
This summer’s new signings were not marquee; none attracted much fanfare. A couple arrived because they had not got much game-time in their previous clubs (Martha Thomas, Barbora Votíková), others were out of contract (Luana Bühler) or were relatively untested at this level and came on on-loan (Grace Clinton and Zhang Linyan). Yet, almost all have contributed significantly in 2023.
Martha Thomas has clearly been the standout. She lies third in the WSL golden boot race, with nine goals, two assists across all competitions (seven goals, one assist in the WSL). In the last two games she has dropped deeper and shown she was equally at home as provider, sending through a lovely ball for Jess Naz in the Conti Cup NLD, before herself scoring the winner at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in the WSL NLD.
If Thomas has been the shining star, Olga Ahtinen was perhaps as important in the first few games because she enabled Vilahamn to bed in a new style of play. Ahtinen’s combination with fellow-Finn, Eveliina Summanen, in the double pivot brought a fluency to the team. Her composure on the ball and in linking up defence and attack allowed Spurs to quickly adapt to Vilahamn’s dynamic and risk taking approach. Indeed, she remains Spurs’ top chance creator, despite not having played for the last four games. From what she has shown in 2023 it is likely that upon return from her MCL injury (hopefully January 2024) Ahtinen will play a big role in this developing squad.

Another summer signing, Luana Bühler, has also been a regular starter – playing at right centre-back alongside Molly Bartrip. Bühler’s on-the-ball skills have facilitated playing out from the back and the development of a more possession based style. She has had a few less good games recently, perhaps suffering from the loss of Ahtinen’s protective shield in front of her. But prior to this she has looked assured on the ball even in her own area.
The fourth signing to win a regular berth in the starting XI is Grace Clinton. Clinton leads the WSL in successful take-ons (32 in 10 games), and has given Spurs new ways to retain the ball. Her creativity was seen to good effect in the two North London Derbies, in which the repeatedly found ways through the Arsenal defence. It is a sign of her early impact at Spurs that she has been called-up to two England Senior squads since joining. Whether there is a chance that Clinton remains at Spurs beyond her season-long loan from Manchester United is unclear. Perhaps related to this, however, Vilahamn has said that he is not interested in the club bringing in loanees in the future because he believes Spurs should be developing their own players.
Unlike the above four players, Barbora Votíková has had little game-time. But she has become an instant fan favourite after her player-of-the match performance against Arsenal (and iconic responses in the gameday programme interview).
Our final summer signing, another loanee, Zhang Linyan, has looked lively in a few Conti Cup games, but struggled in her first start against Manchester City. That said, there is still time to see more from Zhang. And if it does not work, the good news is that this was a loan and so easily reversed.
In 2023, along with signings we also said goodbye to some significant players, notably Tinni Korpela, who moved to Roma, and left-back Kerys Harrop, who retired as the WSL record holder for most appearances (she has since been overtaken).
4. Improving existing players
It is one thing to sign new players. It is quite another to get more out of existing players. This season we have seen stalwarts rewarded with consistent minutes and positions. For instance, Molly Bartrip, who has had more minutes than any other player under three managers now, was given a Vice Captaincy. Playing in a style that affords her more of the ball has meanwhile dramatically improved her passing statistics (currently, 89 percent, her pass completion is second best in the whole WSL).
Last year Ashleigh Neville was moved from position to position. This year she has played most games at left-back. This consistency has enabled the development of relationships, which has improved her pass completion and progressive passes per game, while still allowing scope to display her defensive strengths in tackling and clearances.
We have also seen newer players thriving under Vilahamn. For instance, 2022 Norwegian signing Celin Bizet has scored two goals in the league, including a wonderful solo effort against Liverpool. While Eveliina Summanen (first signed in January 2022) has grown in stature in defensive midfield.

Vilahamn has also identified new ways to use existing players. Most notably, Angharad James at right-back. Vilahamn explained this as a way of getting the players who were best at keeping the ball onto the pitch. Initially it seemed an experiment doomed to fail, with James looking vulnerable in defence but she has grown into the role and had perhaps her best game since joining the club in December’s North London Derby.
If James at right-back was the early season surprise, attacker Kit Graham in defensive midfield has been a late-mid-season curveball. As noted previously, however, it has been an experiment that has thus far proved surprisingly effective, with Graham able to use her strength on the ball and distributional intelligence to play out from the back, while also revealing an impressive and previously under-utilised ability to win aerial balls.
5. The Support
Spurs’ support has become more visible online, but that has not yet translated into a consistently large offline support. The low-point came just prior to 2023, with barely 100 supporters witnessed the team’s depressing loss to Everton in December last year (the club reported an inflated 300). Across 2023 attendance at games has been above that floor but still relatively low. The exception has been games against Top Four teams, in the main stadium (marked in green in the chart below). Low-points have been mid-week games. For instance, the crucial relegation-battle against Leicester had roughly 300 in attendance.
Attendances at Spurs Home Games in 2023

In the first half of 2023 (Jan-May 2023; end of the 22/23 season) Spurs Women’s average home attendance was 5,907. This has dropped marginally to 5,462 in the 2023/24 season so far. These numbers are not terrible, but as the chart above shows, are massively boosted by occasional games in the main stadium. The averages would also be lower if all of the missing attendance data (largely from games at Brisbane Road) were included.
We can see that Spurs lag behind some big and some smaller clubs in terms of support (see chart below). Arsenal have jumped ahead, in part because they have held lots of games in their main stadium but also because they built on their links with the Lionesses, especially after Euro 2022. But Bristol City, a much smaller club than Spurs, albeit one with a longer history in top-tier women’s football and very good local marketing, has shown what is possible – averaging an impressive 8,825 supporters per game. Notably other clubs, like Aston Villa, Manchester United and Manchester City, regularly attract over 3,000 supporters to their women’s home grounds, whereas Spurs’ Brisbane Road attendance (the bars in blue above) typically hovers around 2,000.

Obviously some of this is about the quality of what is happening on the pitch. It is hard to get supporters out to see a team lose, and that happened a lot in 2023. This is exacerbated when most televised games are against top teams and so disproportionately feature Spurs losing. It will be interesting, however, to see whether the win against Arsenal in the main stadium (also televised widely) changes things. Perhaps the optimism of that historic victory, alongside the club’s improved social media output, will mean that more supporters return for games in 2024.
As a sidenote, the fact that the club is starting to provide transport for supporters to go to away games may also help build an energised (and louder) fanbase.
6. Things to address in 2024
Spurs are not the finished article. With a growing pre-Christmas injury list there are positions in which there are very limited options. Most obviously, with both Summanen and Ahtinen out, defensive midfield. But also full-back where Angharad James has surprised many but, like Ashleigh Neville on the other side, has played nearly every minute so far. Should either be unable to play in the future through injury or suspension, or just fatigue, Spurs minimally need a high quality backup.
More generally Spurs need a deeper bench. On the upside, and an indication of the clarity of Vilahamn’s training sessions, when substitutes come on, they have slotted into the system seamlessly. And in a few cases substitutes have created chances or shored up defence. Most obviously, Jess Naz has been a bright spark in her numerous substitute appearances, scoring, providing assists and making dangerous runs. We have also seen Ria Percival’s remarkable versatility, with her being used to fill various gaps (defensive midfielder, rightback, and #10). And there have been key cameos from defenders Amy Turner and Shelina Zadorsky at centre-back and left-back respectively.
But too often bench-players have seemed like place-fillers because Spurs are short of the game-changing substitutes that top clubs can call upon; who pose new problems for opposing teams. This is why new signings are needed. The good news is that we know that they are coming. Experienced Chinese midfielder, Wang Shuang, has already signed and there are heavy rumours that Australian international fullback Charli Grant’s signing is imminent, with at least one more expected.
Back on the pitch there are both defensive and attacking issues to address in early 2024. In defence (at least up until the NLD) Spurs have been weak at defending crosses into the box, especially aerial balls. This was most painfully exploited in the loss to City. For more on Spurs’ defensive frailties this season see Harsh Mishra’s review. In attack much is going well but in the absence of Ahtinen and Drew Spence the team has not always found a decisive final ball and too often chances have been low-quality with many from outside of the box. Improving the quality of chances has to therefore be high on the to-do list. That said, with the return of Beth England and with Martha Thomas in form Spurs have been lucky enough to have two players who can make something from very little.

7. Goal of 2023
On the subject of goals, this year has seen some great ones. A few that come to mind are Clinton’s long-distance scorcher against Brighton; Bizet’s solo-run against Liverpool and her finish to the team-goal of last season, against Reading; and Summanen’s rocket of a free kick against Bristol. But 2023 has seen two players assume responsibility for the majority of goal-scoring for Spurs, and my pick for the goals of 2023 were scored by them.
Runner up: Beth England scored a lot of great goals in the Spring. But perhaps her most important, as well as one of the most aesthetically pleasing, was her driving run followed by a curler into the far corner against Leicester at Brisbane Road – a goal that secured our first win in ten outings, and went a long way to ensuring Spurs’ survival in the top flight. That England had to beat a keeper in supreme form, in Leitzig, made it all the sweeter.
Winner: Perhaps this was not Martha Thomas’s best finish of the season, but her slide into the area to put the ball past Zinsburger in the North London Derby was by far the sweetest moment so far this season – and in 2023. That it topped off a ‘Barcelona-esq’ move that involved Thomas twice alongside almost every other member of the Spurs team (as shown below) is a sign of what is possible from this team. By now most Spurs fans will have the final pass sequence seared into our brains: Votíková to Graham to Neville to Clinton to Thomas to Bizet to Thomas (with Naz making the run to pull defenders away). Sheer class. And what a way to finish the year.

You can find all of Spurs 2023 goals on the club’s Youtube channel (see below).
8. 2023 in numbers

Thanks for reading. If you have comments you can leave them below or contact Rachel on twitter on @SpursWomenBlog or on other platforms with the same name.



Well done Rachel – what a great read overview of 23 I really hope we have signed the new Oz left defender as I was hoping we would have tried to get Ashleigh Plumtree from Leicester after the WC but Charlie Grant is a real coup if true … hopefully we will find out this week and then one other u mention is .. I wonder who that might be considering you are so right about our defenders not being able to clear crosses that well and especially with a GK in Spencer that rarely if never comes and catches a ball to ease the worry. Hopefully Vitikova will be used more now and Spencer will move on come this Summer when her contract ends and we go find a taller “top drawer” GK (seems the current Barca GK wants a move to the WSL ???) I agree with the stance on loaning players but I really hope we will find the money and go get Grace permanently…. boy has she been a revelation. All the new 6 signings have transformed the team in one way or another and 3 more in January would go a long way to complete the 1st team spine … then replace those destined to end their contracts this summer. Be interesting to see who goes this January to make room and agree with the podcast chat .. Pearse Ale Ayanne Brazil and maybe Heeps should be released and/or loaned to make room. As it was written
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I am excited by the news that we want another 2 attacking wingers … that would be the icing on the cake of a decent 1st team squad bar a better GK than Spencer in the ranks. Matilda Vinberg and Giovana Quieroz would be an upgrade on Ayanne and Naz for sure and release Clinton and Bizet from these roles as and when required so they can come and do serious damage in midfield attack. As for Spencer the sooner she goes the better (not sure our defence have much faith in her abilities to defend the last line) – we should have kept the Finn who was by far the better GK. I guess Robert would only take Gio is it were a buy not a loan … but my question would be .. is she really good enough for the WSL. she hasnt done much since she moved to Arsenal nor when on loan at Everton and that would be a worry.
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Agree Vinberg would be a coup. Less convinced we need Gio, especially not on loan. She has barely touched the ball for six months so will probably be a little off the pace in the first instance, so I would not expect her to get many starts (or much game time) this season. If she’s available to buy, maybe that makes sense as a longer term prospect, Agree that Ayane continues to not ‘fulfil’ her potential. Even despite closing out last season with four assists in relatively quick succession. But Jess Naz has had moments when she’s shone – the first (Conti Cup) NLD especially. And think that the amount of space she found in that game was part of why her runs scared Arsenal in the WSL NLD (and meant she was able to pull players out of position for Martha’s goal). It’s just a case of working out how she can maintain that across games.
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Sorry Rachel but I am on a different page than you pod ladies when it comes to Ayanne and Naz .. Naz has speed that I accept but very limited end product and an area one would have expected that would have improved over the seasons under England youth, Skinner and now Robert but it has not…. she is no way a Striker. I however agree she did well in the goal against Arsenal but I think she was really expecting the pass not the outcome result of an overlay run (I may be so wrong but it didnt look like a training move to me). As for Ayanne that open goal miss was the end for me … and I cannot understand why the club would offer her a 2 year extension and her partner Shelina only 1 ??? – she, Ayanne rarely puts in a shift and hardly ever defends which is required by all players when we are under hard pressure. Guess Shelina now may well take the olive bush hand of offer from Skinner and join West Ham and maybe Ayanne hopefully goes with her but that would be a real shame as Shelina for me still has quality from the bench for sure… losing the captain position (and not being offered vice) may well have not gone down so well so I expect her to go now that this has come to light
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In addition .. Be interesting though to see how Robert will use the 2 new Chinese signings. For me I just wish we could go get Maeva Clemaron back (assume her studies have finished). She was a real class Dembele type player for our women’s side (hard as nails) and we didnt get the chance to see more than one season with us – real shame.Anyhow as a long supporter (2 seasons before promotion), at last I have real hope that we are going somewhere but Grace Clinton for me is the player we need to find a way to capture if we can. Things just light up and change when she gets the ball – amazing young talent. She has no fear and equisite ball control.Looking forward to hearing your next pod and whatever happens in 2024 … I have to admit I really look forward to seeing our team play this season unlike last as I got the impression there was minimal interest from the Club in making our team any better until Beth arrived … this has really changed now with Robert’s signings. “If you make it they will come” and we are doing that now and hope the attendances do change but for me Leyton O is just a wee bit too far to go and maybe that has a lot to do with why we are finding it hard to swell the crowd unlike other WSL sides. I would imagine any support from the West just sticks to the weekly stream.
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Wow our first through the door is Matila Vinberg – what a coup indeed … well done Robert
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Well what can I say …. bring it one – what a team Robert is building for 2024 – A maze ING. Great signings thus far in the 2 Matildas and a fiesty Wang and then rumours that we also want Amanda Nilton from Juve a skillful left footed defender come midfield player. Wonder if we could also go get Ellie Roebuck to replace Spencer Then Giovana Quieroz from Arsenal who wants to join us to help strengthen the right wing… now that we have sorted out the left. What a team that would be If you build it they will come – should be our new motto now.
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well what can i say … a good point for your next podcast
After listening to the latest interview about the next game and new signings and then the reply … i really dont get it. I thought we were signings players good enough to go straight into the first team and make our weak left side stronger (not so it seems) … now we hear one has experience and 2 need development … whilst the likes of Arsenal just go and get a player we should be signing and now more stronger. What reallly is the ambition of our club? and … where is Amanda Nilsen? after all the hype as we will need her now that West Ham have got stronger.
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