Former Tottenham boss and curent U.S. men’s national team head coach Mauricio Pochettino spent five years at the helm in North London, but isn’t expecting to be part of the club’s immediate future following a change in management this week.Spurs owner Daniel Levy fired Ange Postecoglou earlier this week despite Tottenham winning the UEFA Europa League, opening the door for a new search to begin. Pochettino, who served as Spurs manager from 2014-19, led Tottenham to the 2019 Champions League final and overall won more than 150 matches in charge. He signed a two-year contract to become USMNT boss in September 2024, which would take the Argentine through the 2026 FIFA World Cup. Pochettino’s name has recently surfaced as a potential candidate for the open vacancy at Tottenham, but even he isn’t planning to leave his current role anytime soon.“After I left in 2019, every time that I was free, and the place of the position of the manager or head coach in Tottenham Hotspur, my name is appearing on the list,” Pochettino said following the United States’ 2-1 loss to Turkey in Hartford, Connecticut on Saturday. “If you have seen the rumors, I think there are 100 coaches in the list. I think, don’t be worried about that. “If something happened, you for sure you will see, but we cannot talk about this type of thing, because I think today, it’s not real,” he added. “It’s not realistic. And look at where I am, where we are. And the thing is, the answer is so clear, no? But we’re talking about it because it’s my club, like Newell’s or Espanyol.”Pochettino has registered a 5-0-4 record in his nine matches in charge of the USMNT, but Saturday’s home defeat extended the program’s current winless run to three matches in all competitions. The USMNT will try and break their slide on Tuesday against Switzerland before opening play at the CONCACAF Gold Cup.