Tottenham’s difficult start to the season continued on Tuesday as they were dumped out of the Carabao Cup on penalties by League Two Colchester.
Dark clouds appear to be circling at Spurs, even though they were in the Champions League final less than four months ago.
Here, the PA news agency takes a closer look at what is going wrong.
How bad is their form?
A painful rebuild

Boss Mauricio Pochettino warned that there was going to be a “painful rebuild” of his squad this summer, but it ended up being more painful than expected. The inability to sort out the future of a host of players before the season kicked off left them in limbo until the European transfer window shut at the start of the month. The likes of Christian Eriksen, Jan Vertonghen, Serge Aurier, Toby Alderweireld, Danny Rose and Victor Wanyama were all uncertain of their futures and it left Pochettino speaking of an unsettled squad. He was hoping it would be cured after September 2, but admitted on Tuesday night that his players need time to be reunited and that he is still working against “different agendas” within the dressing room.
Lack of cutting edge

Spurs’ Carabao Cup embarrassment was a result of their inability to break down a team who put 10 men behind the ball, and that has been an early theme of the 2019-20 season. They remain a devastating side on the counter-attack, but when there has been a wall to break down they simply have not got the creativity to get through. That saw them lose 1-0 to Newcastle, labour to a 0-0 draw at Colchester and need two late goals to beat Aston Villa.
Brittle at the back?

Spurs’ stingy defence used to be the foundation of their success – they conceded only 29 times in the 2016-17 Premier League season. But, even though four of the back five remain the same, they have become very leaky this term. In addition, they have been flaky when holding onto a lead. Twice they have drawn games from 2-0 up and they lost at Leicester having led 1-0 going into the final quarter.
A six-year itch?
Pochettino is now in his sixth season at the helm, and nine of his current strongest starting XI were in the side that challenged Leicester for the 2015-16 title. There has been virtually no turnover of the squad in recent years and there is a chance that it has all gone a bit stale for both the players and the manager. The players have been listening to the same man giving the same message for several years, and Pochettino has been unable to freshen up his squad in the way he would have liked. He spoke about the possibility of leaving the club had they won the Champions League.