Tuesday marked a year to the day since the Portuguese's exit from White Hart Lane, following a topsy-turvy 18 months at the helm.
Villas-Boas has since taken charge at Zenit St Petersburg but his White Hart Lane exit still rankles, leading him to air his grievances in an interview with TVI.
The crux of the 37-year-old's frustration stemmed from what he claims were chairman Daniel Levy's broken promises in relation to transfers, both in and out of the north London club.
"The chairman proposed a challenge to increase Tottenham's competitive level, but immediately [Luka] Modric left and we didn't get any of the targets I had identified, such as Joao Moutinho, Willian, Oscar or Leandro Damiao," Villas-Boas said.
"These were promises that were not kept
I had a group of players I had not chosen.
"In two years I lost [Rafael] van der Vaart, Modric, [Gareth] Bale, and all the promises made were unfulfilled.
"In any event I don't look at my time at Tottenham as a negative experience
It was an experience I needed to have."
Those comments have not sat well with Tottenham, with the club swiftly hitting back at Villas-Boas' claims.
"It's unfortunate that Andre has felt the need to pass comments like these," a Spurs spokesperson told Press Association Sport.
"Not only has he attempted to rewrite history, he has clearly forgotten the facts."
Villas-Boas' claim that Modric's move to Real Madrid came as a shock are understood to have irked Tottenham, as has the way he portrayed Van der Vaart's return to Hamburg.
The Portugese is believed to have been key in the Netherlands international's departure, while the club deemed many of his targets as unrealistic acquisitions.
Source : PA
Source: PA