Tag: English press

  • ‘Laughing stock’… or ‘village idiots’ who can’t hack an Aussie? Making sense of Ange ‘agenda’ claim

    ‘Laughing stock’… or ‘village idiots’ who can’t hack an Aussie? Making sense of Ange ‘agenda’ claim

    The tight rope Ange Postecoglou is walking is getting narrower.

    Get all the latest football news, highlights and analysis delivered straight to your inbox with Fox Sports Sportmail. Sign up now!!!

    That is to be expected when a big six club like Tottenham sits 14th on the Premier League table almost two-thirds of the way through the season.

    This time last week Spurs were still in the Carabao Cup, FA Cup and the Europa League.

    Now, only the latter remains.

    The results are not stacking up in the Australian’s favour, but there is an unshakeable feeling among his backers that if he was not an outsider in English football, he might be afforded more rope.

    It has been highly publicised that Tottenham have been hit with an injury crisis in recent months.

    It was back in December that Postecoglou grumbled “I’m just going to stop answering these questions. If people can’t see the obvious, I’m not going to point it out,” when asked yet another question about what is going wrong after his side were battered by Liverpool 6-2 at home.

    Spurs out of FA Cup with loss to Villa | 01:18

    Then on Sunday, he called out the English media once again, saying there is an “agenda” against his team.

    “There’s got to be a better appreciation for what a very small group of players have been doing for the last two and a half months,” he said.

    “It can’t be that people think that’s an excuse. That’s just not anywhere near close to objective analysis. That’s just agenda-driven stuff.

    “If it’s to get rid of me that’s fine. Good on ya. Go for it a million times.

    “But in terms of this group of players, what they’ve given over the past two and half months has been outstanding, it’s a credit to them, I can’t speak highly enough of them.”

    Yet, the questions keep coming despite the most glaring issue being clear for all to see.

    Postecoglou has been repeatedly forced to put out a makeshift defence with first choice goalkeeper Guglielmo Vicario, centre back pairing Cristian Romero and Micky van de Ven, and left-back Destiny Udogie all spending extended periods on the sidelines.

    Further afield, midfielders Rodrigo Bentancur and Yves Bissouma have been regularly unavailable, while their goal scoring stocks have suffered the blows of injuries to Dominic Solanke, Brennan Johnson and James Maddison at various times.

    Logically, it is no surprise that the losses have mounted.

    Liverpool sink Spurs in run to final | 02:05

    Just as they did for Newcastle United last season.

    The Magpies lost ten of their first 21 Premier League encounters last campaign.

    Undeniably, not good enough for a club with a lot of financial power considering its 80% per cent ownership by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, well-known for funding LIV Golf and spreading their wealth throughout the sporting world in recent years.

    But manager Eddie Howe faced nowhere near the level of scrutiny Postecoglou has received.

    It was widely accepted that the Englishman, who made his name by taking Bournemouth to the Premier League for the first time, had his hands tied by an injury-riddled squad.

    The added pressure of mid-week European competition, Newcastle played in the Champions League for the first time in 20 years, as well as cup fixtures and always demanding league schedule took its toll.

    It sounds familiar to Postecoglou’s current predicament.

    But unlike in Howe’s case, the English press, pundits, former players and fans have been baying for blood.

    And despite sometimes justified criticism of Postecoglou’s polarising tactics, some of the reasons for doing so have not always been fair.

    “Spurs’ Australian head coach is the latest target of the village idiots; the half-pint pundits and critics who prefer to laugh at the fact he finishes his sentences with ‘mate’ than listen to him contextualising his team’s problems,” football news correspondent for the UK Telegraph Matt Law wrote.

    The mockery unfortunately goes hand-in-hand with the club Postecoglou is at.

    Tottenham are repeatedly a laughing stock among rival fans courtesy of the well-documented absence of silverware in their trophy cabinet since 2008.

    The regularity with which they sack managers, Postecoglou is their 12th permanent manager this century, is the bud of many jokes.

    So too is the behaviour of their fans, who even wanted their own team to lose the penultimate game of last Premier League season at home to Manchester City, which they did 2-0, to deny arch enemies Arsenal the title.

    Therefore, of course, when an Australian arrived in north London with tales of how he has won a trophy in his second season with Celtic, Yokohama F. Marinos, the Socceroos, Brisbane Roar and South Melbourne, the punch lines were being written.

    Add to that the fact he had shown an unwavering commitment to attacking football, even when times are tough. That was until their last Premier League outing, a 2-0 victory away at Brentford, as a more defensive approach broke a seven-game winless streak in the league.

    Spurs sat deeper and gritted their teeth for 90 minutes, showing that they can be more resolute in defence, but Postecoglou is still spoken of as a madman.

    There are choruses of laughter in pubs and football clubs across England at Postecoglou’s and Tottenham’s expense, and they have only grown louder in recent days.

    Ange denies Tel initially rejected Spurs | 01:11

    In the past week, another dismantling by Liverpool, in the form of a 4-0 drubbing at Anfield in the second leg of their Carabao Cup semi-final after leading 1-0 following the first leg, was followed by a 2-1 defeat at Villa Park in the fourth round of the FA Cup.

    There is little shame in losing to the Premier League leaders, or Aston Villa have qualified for the Champions League Round of 16, but that did not prevent the pile on.

    Former Tottenham midfielder Jamie Redknapp was scathing on Sky Sports after the Liverpool loss, saying “I cannot remember a team in my lifetime go down with less of a fight with what Spurs did today”.

    “Not having one shot on target in the semi-final of a second leg when you’re trying to change the course of your history?” he added.

    Fellow former Spurs midfielder Jamie O’Hara, who has been a very vocal critic of Postecoglou, took to X to call for his sacking.

    “It’s time to go now, Ange is out of his depth. [Unai] Emery is on a different planet compared to him and his players bopped us off the park. Should have been five, we’re like reserve team playing in academy games that don’t matter, it’s crazy,” O’Hara wrote.

    It did not help things for Postecoglou either that Liverpool great Jamie Carragher opted to rub further salt into Spurs’ wounds.

    “It’s Tottenham!” Carragher said on Sky Sports. “When do Tottenham ever win a big game? When do Tottenham ever go and surprise, win against the odds?”

    The last few months it must have felt like Postecoglou was being forced to play game after game at a casino where the house always wins.

    With the injury crisis, the odds have been massively skewed against them, but the cup competitions kept the hope alive.

    Now, only the European dream remains to fulfil the Postecoglou prophecy of winning yet another trophy in his second season in charge of a team.

    Spurs finished fourth in the new look league phase of the Europa League with five wins, two draws and a loss to automatically advance to the Round of 16.

    Awaiting them will be one of Midtjylland, AZ Alkmaar, Real Sociedad or Galatasaray but arguably more important than the opponent they face, will be the respite Postecoglou’s injury hit squad receive.

    Their next European clash is not until March 6 as they will enjoy some much-needed breathing space between matches this month after a manic December and January.

    Tension eases as Spurs advance in Europa | 01:57

    Spurs played 17 matches across all competitions in that stretch as the casualty ward overflowed.

    It was reported by the UK Telegraph on Monday that Postecoglou has implemented a much-needed reset by affording the squad two days off this week to recharge the batteries before facing Manchester United at home in the league on Sunday.

    “The boys who are coming back, we’ll get the opportunity to give them a whole week of training, which is great,” Postecoglou said.

    “By the time we get to the back end of the week we should have something resembling a squad of players to prepare for a big game. That then folds into the following week when, again, we’ve got seven days and no midweek game to prepare for the next game.

    “So that gives us a real good opportunity to get some work into the guys who have been out for quite a while and give some rest to the guys who have been going at it. So by the time we get back to being in Europe and having midweek games we’ll be in a much better shape.”

    Postecoglou will be hoping the refresh, along with the possible returns of Vicario, Udogie, Maddison, Johnson and Wilson Odobert will be the morale booster the playing group desperately needs.

    Their frustrations came to the fore during the Villa loss on Sunday.

    “Spence ripped off his sock tape, threw it on the ground and headed straight down the tunnel with Yves Bissouma at full time,” The Athletic’s Jay Harris wrote.

    “Pedro Porro jumped up after being nutmegged and left in a heap on the floor by Marcus Rashford. He then brought Villa’s new striker down with a wild kick on the edge of the box and somehow escaped punishment. The Spain international received a yellow card in the final 10 minutes for a tackle on Ramsey.

    “Bentancur was booked for dragging down Rogers. Bergvall jumped into a tackle on Rogers and then clattered into him later on. He eventually picked up a booking for a foul on Ramsey, too.

    “These are the moments when Postecoglou needs his senior players, including the captain Son and Dejan Kulusevski, to calm everyone down.”

    Jovial Ange jokes before crucial goal | 00:57

    If the players can reset, they may be able to claw their way back to the days of Postecoglou’s honeymoon period at Spurs.

    The 59-year-old was a breath of fresh air when Tottenham amassed 26 points in his first ten games in charge, a Premier League record, when he took over last season.

    Most promising for Postecoglou is that the formula is still there.

    “The statistics still tell us this Tottenham team, for all their struggles this season, play a little differently to everyone else. The principles of play that had Postecoglou’s Spurs five points clear at the top of the table early last season remain in place,” Sky Sports’ Adam Bate wrote.

    “No team in the Premier League has won the ball high up the pitch more times than Tottenham. No team allows so few passes per defensive action. No team plays with more width than Tottenham. By design, it is supposed to be intense and expansive.”

    The numbers are a promising sign that if the medical staff can get most of their stars back on the pitch, the performances may turn quickly.

    Who knows what will happen in the Europa League knockouts, but for what it is worth, Howe’s Newcastle won nine and drew four of their final 17 Premier League games last season once the midweek grind subsided.

    They finished seventh, and currently sit sixth, two points shy of fourth-placed Chelsea and one of the lucrative Champions League places.

    Perhaps if Postecoglou is afforded the leniency of an Englishman, he may have the time to turn things around in a similar fashion.

    Who knows, they still have one chance to fulfil his trophy prophecy.

    Source link

  • ‘This was not Angeball’: How Spurs switch-up saved Aussie boss and ‘shamed’ Premier League great

    ‘This was not Angeball’: How Spurs switch-up saved Aussie boss and ‘shamed’ Premier League great

    Ange Postecoglou earned a first Premier League win for Tottenham this year with a distinctly different brand of football to ‘Angeball’ — and it did not go unnoticed in the UK press.

    Get all the latest football news, highlights and analysis delivered straight to your inbox with Fox Sports Sportmail. Sign up now!!!

    Here is what is being said after a remarkable 2-0 win at Brentford, which featured a makeshift central defensive pairing of Archie Gray and Ben Davies, plus a starring role from fullback Djed Spence.

    Writing for The Times, Gregor Robertson said that the pragmatic defensive display bore little resemblance to Postecoglou’s preferred MO of high-octane attacking football.

    “Spurs made sure of the win when (Pape Matar) Sarr, a substitute, prodded in a second on the break with three of the 90 minutes left to play, but the buccaneering early days of Ange-ball felt like a distant memory in the intervening hour, during which Brentford largely laid siege to the Tottenham penalty area,” Robertson wrote.

    “Spurs were still without nine players through injury, of course, and Postecoglou will have been proud of the way his patched up back four repelled Brentford’s early onslaught and barrage of crosses in the second half.”

    Writing for The iPaper, Oliver Young-Myles surmised: “Well, that wasn’t very Angeball-y.

    “A first Premier League win for Tottenham in almost 50 days brings some respite for Ange Postecoglou. And what was notable about the performance at Brentford was how different it was to the rinse-and-repeat style Spurs have played throughout the Australian’s reign.

    “They were gritty; sat deep for virtually the whole second half; scored a scrappy goal from a corner; managed the game maturely and sensibly. An accusation against Postecoglou is that his team can only play one way. Here was evidence that they can mix it up. Here’s their Anfield blueprint for Thursday.

    “Perhaps Postecoglou compromised, although he insisted that wasn’t the case.”

    Postecoglou said the game style was an unavoidable result of circumstances, rather than a major philosophical change.

    “They’re human beings, not robots,” he said of his players, who had come off a Europa League win three days earlier.

    “People want to dismiss it. They want to talk about excuses but that’s the reality. I know the reality. These guys are giving everything.

    “We knew we couldn’t go out there and dominate. Brentford had a week to prepare. We had 50-something hours. With the same group of players. With that context, the performance was outstanding.”

    Writing for The Sun, Tom Barclay said: “This was not Ange Ball, but, frankly, who cares?

    “Certainly not Tottenham fans, who were genuinely starting to worry about being sucked into a relegation battle and were singing “We are staying up” come the end. And probably not Ange Postecoglou either, whose need for this reviving win was becoming desperate.

    “The Aussie’s position has been coming under more and more scrutiny after a bleak winter culminating in one win in 11 league games. He has been able to point to a crippling injury crisis as a mitigating factor and progress in the cups as a reason to believe.

    “But make no mistake, the 59-year-old needed this victory and will have taken any means necessary to get it.”

    Ange Postecoglou celebrates victory with Spurs captain Son Heung-Min.Source: Getty Images

    Tottenham were boosted before the match with the signing of Kevin Danso from Ligue 1 club Lens, boosting their central defensive stocks.

    Yet writing for The Telegraph, Matt Law noted the remarkable defensive effort that came from a thrown-together line-up.

    “Kevin Danso’s arrival was announced on Sunday morning, but Postecoglou, while Tottenham waited for the defender’s international clearance, named a team with no recognised centre-backs,” Law wrote.

    “It looked like a recipe for another Spurs disaster and yet Archie Gray, who is naturally a midfielder, and Ben Davies, who is normally a left-back, stood up to the task manfully – as did Djed Spence, a right-back filling in at left-back.

    “Despite Tottenham’s two-goal winning margin, it was the brave defending of Spence and Co that got Spurs over the line, as Postecoglou waits for more reinforcements that could still include Chelsea’s Axel Disasi and players to return to fitness. Tottenham have agreed a deal to sign Disasi on loan, but the Frenchman had agreed terms with Aston Villa, who have been unwilling to meet Chelsea’s conditions. Talks were continuing into Sunday evening.”

    Relief for Ange but more work ahead | 01:09

    Writing for The Guardian, Nick Ames said that Postecoglou may be feeling more optimistic about his future after the result.

    “Disciplined, unfussy, a little scrappy and garnished with a dollop of luck. Tottenham have rarely known afternoons such as this under Ange ­Postecoglou but they summoned a textbook away performance, rolling up their sleeves and putting a halt to the previous seven weeks’ freefall.

    “Spurs had not won a league game since 15 December, and that was against the flimsy proposition of ­Russell Martin’s Southampton. This time they dealt with one of the division’s most exacting physical examinations and there was no doubting the importance to their manager, who leapt off his seat and punched the air when Pape Matar Sarr put matters beyond doubt late on.

    “It will not remove the unease around Tottenham, which was demonstrated by regular chants from the away ­section demanding that Daniel Levy step down. But they had to start somewhere and, with the Austria defender Kevin Danso arriving from Lens and a move for Axel Disasi in their sights before the transfer deadline on Monday, Postecoglou might feel cautious optimism that the darkest hour has passed.”

    Goal-scorer Pape Matar Sarr celebrates victory with Ange Postecoglou.Source: Getty Images

    Spurs’ performance was something of a surprise, with Brentford above them on the ladder and a particularly dangerous goalscoring threat at home this season.

    As is turned out, Postecoglou’s men burned one of his media sparring partners. Liverpool great Jamie Carragher predicted pre-game that they would be soundly beaten.

    “I’ll be absolutely shocked if Tottenham win there today,” Carragher said on Sky Sports. “When I look at that back four, they’ve been decimated.

    “I thought (Micky) Van de Ven was going to be involved today. Obviously they’ve lost their goalkeeper, they’ve brought one in [Antonin Kinsky], but when you actually look at that Tottenham back four, if they concede less than three today, I will be surprised.

    “I’m not criticising them – they’re young kids; Ben Davies is in there, he’s not a centre-back, he’s a left-back. Archie Gray’s done brilliantly for them, he’s an 18-year-old kid – to go away to Brentford, set pieces, long balls, what you’ve got to deal with as a centre back…”

    The Mirror concluded that Spurs had put “Jamie Carragher’s pre-match prediction to shame”.

    Source link

  • Late drama in title rivals’ thriller; VAR ‘injustice’ erupts as Man U woes deepen: PL Wrap

    Late drama in title rivals’ thriller; VAR ‘injustice’ erupts as Man U woes deepen: PL Wrap

    Mohamed Salah rescued Liverpool as the Egypt star’s late equaliser earned a pulsating 2-2 draw against title rivals Arsenal on Sunday.

    Arne Slot’s side were on the brink of only their second defeat this season until Salah netted with nine minutes left at the Emirates Stadium.

    Get all the latest football news, highlights and analysis delivered straight to your inbox with Fox Sports Sportmail. Sign up now!!!

    Liverpool had fallen behind to Bukayo Saka’s early opener and, although Virgil van Dijk equalised, Mikel Merino put Arsenal back in front before half-time.

    Salah’s eighth goal in 13 games in all competitions this season was aided by Arsenal’s latest rash of injuries, with defenders Gabriel Magalhaes and Jurrien Timber both forced off in the second half.

    Manchester City were the real winners on Sunday as the draw in north London ensured they finished the weekend on top of the Premier League.

    Unbeaten City, who beat Southampton 1-0 on Saturday, are one point ahead of second-placed Liverpool, with third-placed Arsenal sitting five points adrift of top spot.

    It was only the second time Liverpool had failed to win since Slot replaced Jurgen Klopp in the close-season, starting his Anfield reign with 12 victories from 13 games in all competitions.

    Barcelona pump Real Madrid in El Clasico | 00:59

    Even so, Liverpool will be happier with the point after showing impressive resolve to twice come from behind against a fellow title contender.

    Arsenal were left to lick their wounds after the defensive injuries that left them fatally exposed.

    They were already without Riccardo Calafiori, sidelined by an injury suffered against Shakhtar Donetsk in midweek, while William Saliba served a suspension following his dismissal in last weekend’s loss at Bournemouth.

    Mikel Arteta’s side have now gone two league games without a win, leaving them with only three victories in their last seven top-flight matches in a major setback to their hopes of a first title since 2004.

    – Saka’s perfect start –

    Saka, back from two games out with injury, had given Arsenal the perfect start in the ninth minute.

    Ben White’s sublime long pass sent Saka surging down the right flank before he deftly cut back into the Liverpool area, leaving Andrew Robertson trailing in his wake as he lashed a fierce close-range strike into the roof of the net.

    Merino nearly gifted Liverpool an immediate equaliser when he carelessly let the ball run to Salah, who rifled his shot just wide from the edge of the area.

    So often over the last two seasons, Arsenal have been dead ball masters thanks to their set-piece coach Nicolas Jover, but for once they were exposed as Liverpool drew level in the 18th minute.

    Luis Diaz beat Kai Havertz to flick on Trent Alexander-Arnold’s corner and Van Dijk got in front of Thomas Partey as the Dutch defender stooped to head home from close-range.

    But Arsenal’s prowess from set-pieces enabled them to regain the lead in the 43rd minute.

    Declan Rice’s teasing free-kick arrowed into the Liverpool area and Merino was perfectly placed to thump his header past Caoimhin Kelleher from six yards.

    A lengthy VAR check followed to confirm Merino was just onside as the Spain midfielder celebrated his first goal since his close-season arrival from Real Sociedad.

    Arsenal keeper David Raya plunged to his right to keep out Alexis Mac Allister’s header on the final seconds of a thrilling first half.

    Arteta’s already makeshift defence suffered another blow when Gabriel limped off with a knee injury after a challenge from Darwin Nunez early in the second half.

    Without their first choice centre-back, Arsenal adopted a more cautious approach and Raya was booked for time-wasting with over 20 minutes to play.

    But the Gunners lost Timber to an injury in the closing stages as their defensive issues reached crisis point and handed Liverpool a lifeline.

    With just nine minutes left, Arsenal’s under-manned rearguard was ruthlessly exposed as Alexander-Arnold’s lofted pass sent Nunez clear of teenage substitute Myles Lewis-Skelly.

    Nunez slipped in the unmarked Salah and he slotted home as Arsenal slumped to the turf in frustration.

    Defending champs fight back to 1-1 draw | 01:11

    VAR FURY AS MAN U PLUMMET TO NEW LOWS

    Manchester United’s under-fire manager Erik ten Hag said he could only fault his side’s finishing after a damaging 2-1 defeat for the Dutchman at struggling West Ham on Sunday.

    United slipped to 14th in the Premier League table after Jarrod Bowen’s controversial stoppage time penalty winner handed the Hammers all three points.

    Crysencio Summerville put West Ham in front against the run of play 16 minutes from time before Casemiro equalised.

    Ten Hag was furious at the award of the spot-kick after VAR intervened when Matthijs de Ligt clashed with Danny Ings inside the box.

    United captain Bruno Fernandes had a red card rescinded after being sent-off in a 3-0 defeat by Tottenham last month and Ten Hag highlighted the inconsistency of when VAR decides to challenge the referee’s on-field decision.

    “Before the season they explained the process of VAR – only when (it is) clear and obvious they should interfere,” said Ten Hag.

    Victory stun City in Melbourne derby | 01:07

    “What they didn’t do against Spurs, that was a wrong decision. Now they make a wrong decision interfering and both have big impact on the games. I don’t criticise the personnel, I criticise the process.” However, it was a familiar lack of wastefulness in front of goal that cost United a much-needed victory.

    Diogo Dalot missed an open goal, while Alejandro Garnacho and Fernandes were also guilty of missing huge chances in a dominant first-half display.

    “We created so many chances, played so good football, especially in the first half. How I want my team to play in and out of possession,” added Ten Hag.

    “Six or seven 100 per cent chances we should have scored. That is a point of improvement. But overall I had not so many criticisms of my team, apart from not scoring.” United’s return of eight goals from their first nine games is their worst in the Premier League era.

    Ten Hag’s men have won just three of those matches and drawn all three of their opening games in the Europa League to leave their manager clinging on to his job.

    But he claimed to have seen positive signs in a 2-1 win over Brentford last weekend and a 1-1 draw at Fenerbahce prior to their visit to the London Stadium.

    “At this moment the luck is definitely not on our side. Last season was not different and near the end we turned it around,” said Ten Hag.

    “We are so determined it will be the same (this season). We have to turn this around and it will turn around if we keep playing like we are now.

    “Brentford, Fenerbahce, today, we played really good football.”

    Ten Hag doubled down on his feelings of being hard down by at the moment when speaking to the BBC’s Match of the Day.

    The Dutchman is firmly pointing the finger at the referees for contributing to their lowly start to the season.

    “Three times this season we feel injustice,” he said.

    “We have to score, we created so many chances. We should’ve been two or three up. Second half we were forcing it but we allowed them into the game. When you are losing 1-0 you need big personality and character of the team and showed resilience to get back into it. Unfair and unjust the way we conceded the penalty.

    “I spoke with them (the referees). But the decision is made. There’s no way back and that’s football. That’s a third time I have felt injustice in the season and it has a big impact on our team and on our scores and where we are in the table. It’s not right.”

    The under-fire manager boss is feeling little sympathy from fans and the English press pack, however.

    Many believe it is a matter of when, not if, he will be given his marching orders and the UK Telegraph columnist Jim White believes the loss to West Ham is the sort of game that could be Ten Hag’s curtain call.

    “When the obituary of Erik ten Hag’s time in charge at Manchester United is written, this match might well serve as exhibit A,” White wrote.

    “Quite how his team managed to lose here for the third time is indicative of his time in charge – if never quite in control – at Old Trafford. “For the first half United looked smart, together, organised. They passed quickly and imaginatively, Bruno Fernandes at his quick-witted best. And they carved out chances. Loads of them. The trouble was, they wasted the lot.

    “Diogo Dalot was the most culpable, blasting over an empty net after dinking the ball over Lukasz Fabianski’s head. So bad was United’s finishing, it was only the manner of their misses that silenced the growing insurrection in the London Stadium stands: it is hard to be too revolutionary when you are smirking at others’ incompetence in front of goal.

    “And woeful as West Ham had been for 45 minutes, there was time for Julen Lopetegui to make adjustments. He duly did. Tightening, sharpening, probably reading the riot act, he managed to make West Ham look competitive again. So, the inevitable happened.”

    Source link

  • ‘I’m loving Big Ange instead’: Robbie Williams jumps on Postecoglou bandwagon

    ‘I’m loving Big Ange instead’: Robbie Williams jumps on Postecoglou bandwagon

    Ange Postecoglou has found an admirer in music royalty Robbie Williams.

    Following successful stints in the A-League, Japan and Scotland, the Australian coach has started his tenure at Tottenham with a bang. After toppling Manchester United last weekend, Postecoglou’s Spurs cruised towards a 2-0 victory over Bournemouth on Saturday, putting Tottenham at third spot on Premier League ladder with seven points from a possible nine.

    Postecoglou has won over local fans with tantalising new style of play, while the English press is lapping up his sharp sense of humour — and now Williams has hopped on the bandwagon.

    On Monday morning AEST, the 49-year-old shared a clip of himself belting out a rendition of his iconic 1997 anthem “Angels” with some updated lyrics in honour of Postecoglou.

    Stream Over 50 Sports Live & On-Demand with Kayo. Join now and start streaming instantly >

    READ MORE

    EPL WRAP: Reds ‘monster’ leaves PL ‘speechless’ in 10-man stunner

    WC KISS: FIFA forced into action as Spain football boss

    “And through it all, we’re playing the way we want to.

    “Big Ange Postecoglou, whether I’m right or wrong.

    “You can keep your Pochettino, Conte and Mourinho, and even Christian Gross.

    “Cause everywhere we go, I’m loving Big Ange instead.”

    Williams ended the video by muttering: “I guess I’m a Spurs fan now then.”

    Tottenham will next face Fulham at Craven Cottage on Wednesday, with kick-off scheduled for 4.45am AEST.

    Source link

  • Ange’s hilarious quip as star opens up on Aussie’s Spurs revolution

    Ange’s hilarious quip as star opens up on Aussie’s Spurs revolution

    England is jumping on the Ange Postecoglou bandwagon.

    Following successful stints in the A-League, Japan and Scotland, the Australian coach has started his tenure at Tottenham with a bang. After toppling Manchester United last weekend, Postecoglou’s Spurs cruised towards a 2-0 victory over Bournemouth on Saturday, putting Tottenham at second spot on Premier League ladder with seven points from a possible nine.

    Stream Over 50 Sports Live & On-Demand with Kayo. Join now and start streaming instantly >

    Ange steers Spurs to top of the league! | 01:24

    Postecoglou has won over local fans with tantalising new style of play, while the English press is lapping up his sharp sense of humour.

    While appearing on TNT Sports on Saturday, the 58-year-old was asked about his use of fullbacks Pedro Porro and Destiny Udogie as inverted midfielders, a tactic invented by the great Johann Cruyff and popularised by Manchester City boss Pep Guardiola.

    “I’m just copying Pep, mate,” Postecoglou quipped.

    “We do a lot of work on it. It is sometimes about instincts but it‘s trying to create a system that’s as fluid as can be.

    “If there’s space there forget you’re a full back, you’re footballer in space so go into the space and then it’s up to us to make sure we’re covering the gaps that are left.”

    “Once players realise they have the freedom to do that but it‘s still very structured then they don’t second guess themselves,” he continued.

    “They just say if there’s space inside I’ll just go and drive in there.

    “Both Pedro (Porro) and Destiny (Udogie), when they have the ball and are running with it, are really difficult to stop and if it’s in a central area it makes it more effective for us.”

    His Pep Guardiola quip was seen by many as hitting back at criticism from former Manchester United star Gary Neville, who this week said on Monday Night Football: “I do feel there is a flaw in the way they set up, however, it does come with some reward.

    “What you have here is the two full-backs in midfield, in [Destiny] Udogie and [Pedro] Porro, what I didn’t like about the way that Spurs deployed this system is that when these two centre-backs here were on the ball I felt as though they didn’t have that simple pass wide in any, way shape or form.”

    Neville continued: “I see the benefit of this system, you isolate your wingers one v one. They have taken the United wide players in.

    “So, from that point of view, I see the benefit of it. But from my point of view, you have players in a very uncomfortable position.”

    United mount unreal 3 goal comeback | 01:20

    Postecoglou’s men have so far shrugged off the departure of the club’s all-time record goalscorer Harry Kane to Bayern Munich, with new signing James Maddison at the heart of most of their good work.

    The England international’s first Tottenham goal in the 17th minute at Dean Court was just reward for the visitor’s dominance of the first half. The AU$79 million signing is already appearing a bargain as he thrives in Postecoglou’s system.

    “There wasn’t anyone happier than me when we got him,” Postecoglou said of Maddison.

    “Overjoyed with how he’s been so far.”

    James Maddison of Tottenham Hotspur. Photo by Luke Walker/Getty ImagesSource: Getty Images

    Maddison sang Postecoglou’s praises after Saturday’s win, confirming the Australian’s style of play factored into his decision to sign for Tottenham.

    “I‘ve said in interviews a couple of times, he’s a big pull for Tottenham and when I spoke to him, he hadn’t even been in the door yet in the summer,” he told TNT Sports.

    “He has a way about him the gaffer. He‘s an honest, straight down the line man.”

    “When Ange Postecoglou talks you believe what he‘s saying,” he continued.

    “It‘s non negotiable. You have to play his football.”

    Tottenham will next face Fulham at Craven Cottage on Wednesday, with kick-off scheduled for 4.45am AEST.

    Arsenal shockingly drop points at home | 00:43

    Source link

  • Another two PL superstars make Saudi moves as Reds pocket $77m in huge rebuild

    Another two PL superstars make Saudi moves as Reds pocket $77m in huge rebuild

    Brazil midfielder Fabinho has signed a three-year deal with Saudi Arabian side Al-Ittihad after completing his move from Liverpool on Monday.

    The 29-year-old was left out of Liverpool’s pre-season squads for trips to Germany and Singapore after Al-Ittihad made a £40 million ($51 million) bid for him.

    He will join Karim Benzema and N’Golo Kante at Al-Ittihad, one of four Saudi clubs controlled by the Gulf state’s sovereign wealth fund.

    Fabinho joined Liverpool from Monaco in 2018 and made 219 appearances for the Reds, winning the Champions League, Premier League, FA Cup, League Cup and Club World Cup.

    “Today I leave my home. It’s been five years wearing this jersey and always with the greatest honor and happiness possible,” Fabinho wrote on Twitter, which is being rebranded as X.

    “Since day one at Liverpool, I’ve been embraced by everyone,” he added. “In these five years, I grew as a player, as a man, I made dreams come true … With that jersey, I won every title a player can dream of.”

    MATILDAS NEWS

    NEXT GAME: Why Matildas’ next opponent could be decided by random drawing of lots

    TALKING POINTS: How Kerr mystery rallied Matildas; bold tweaks ignite win

    PLAYER RATINGS: Star reminds everyone ‘what we’ve been missing’ as every Aussie shines

    Fabinho ‘made dreams come true’.Source: Getty Images

    His departure comes after Liverpool captain Jordan Henderson ended his 12-year stay at Anfield last week, moving to Saudi Arabia to play for Al-Ettifaq, who are coached by Steven Gerrard.

    Fabinho’s compatriot Roberto Firmino left Merseyside to sign for Al-Ahli earlier this month.

    Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp has also seen midfielders Naby Keita, Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain and James Milner depart on free transfers since the end of last season.

    But the club have reinforced that area of the field with the signings of Alexis Mac Allister and Dominik Szoboszlai.

    Liverpool’s Brazilian trio of Firmino (L), keeper Alisson Becker and Fabinho celebrating their Champions League triumph in 2019/20. Only Alisson remains at the Reds.Source: AFP

    It comes after French winger Allan Saint-Maximin on Sunday signed a three-year deal with Saudi Arabia’s Al-Ahli after leaving English club Newcastle as the cash-rich and ambitious Gulf kingdom’s league snared another top-level player.

    “We pick the best, and he’s one of them,” Al-Ahli said on social media.

    The financial terms of the deal were not revealed but English press reports have estimated it to be in the region of £23 million.

    Saint-Maximin, 26, made 124 appearances for Saudi-backed Newcastle and scored 13 goals since joining from Nice in 2019.

    The exciting Saint-Maximin is leaving Newcastle.Source: AFP

    In an emotional social media post, Saint-Maximin wrote: “I fell for Newcastle, I had great opportunities to leave during dark days, but that was too late I was already in love, I wanted, I needed, I had to stay for helping my team to save the club from Premier League relegation because it meant the world for me.

    “Of course, during those dark days some may have had their doubts, but I always believed in this club and look where we are today, it’s just so beautiful. I’m leaving Newcastle as it should always have been and that’s my greatest trophy because I was a part of it.

    “Even though this chapter has ended, the story never stops. Newcastle is home now. I’ll continue to be your biggest supporter.”

    Source link

  • From club cricket to facing the Poms and Punter

    From club cricket to facing the Poms and Punter

    He worked reading gas meters after getting a shotgun up the nostrils at his old job. And for one glorious summer, 207cm paceman Ashley Gilbert came from nowhere to take on cricket’s titans, writes PAUL AMY.

    When Ashley Gilbert turned 50 last year, his family presented him with a cap he had worn more than two decades earlier.

    It had been placed in a glass frame and now sits on the desk of his home office.

    The blue Victorian Cricket Association cap is a reminder of Gilbert’s one and only season as a first-class cricketer.

    Twenty-five years ago, the 207cm fast bowler was reading gas meters for a living and playing District cricket for Carlton when he was called up to play a four-day match for Victoria against the touring England side.

    It was at the MCG and he rifled his right-arm pace at Michael Atherton, Nasser Hussain, Graeme Thorpe, Alex Stewart, Graham Hick and Mark Ramprakash.

    The game was drawn, with Gilbert helping wicketkeeper Peter Roach hold out the Englishmen on the last day.

    He had opened the bowling with Brad Williams in both of England’s innings, for tidy figures of 2-63 off 29 overs and then 2-44 off 13.

    Hussain, Hick, Stewart and Ramprakash were his victims.

    Ramprakash was also his adversary.

    The affable Gilbert admits that after dismissing the Englishman, he gave him some advice on the best way to get back to the changerooms.

    “I didn’t know if he’d played at the MCG before and I thought I’d give him some directions,’’ he quips.

    Ramprakash didn’t care for them. And on the last day, as Gilbert and Roach staved off defeat, he had the big fellow in his sights. They came together after Gilbert had got out of the way of a Dean Headley bouncer, exchanging hot words until the umpire intervened.

    The Herald Sun called it a “slightly comic scene as the 207cm tall Victorian looked down on the 175cm Ramprakash’’.

    After stumps, the English press popped questions at him as he headed to the carpark.

    The tour match, a Sheffield Shield game against Tasmania and four one-dayers for the Vics made up Gilbert’s season as a first-class cricketer.

    It left him with a welter of memories; all because, he says, he was “in the right spot at the right time’’.

    *****

    Ashley Gilbert’s cricket began at Lakes Entrance and finished a few years ago at Strathmore, in Melbourne’s north.

    Work transfers with the National Bank, cameos at country clubs, a bank holdup, dismissing Adam Gilchrist for a first-ball duck, two creamed Ricky Ponting drives and injuries are elements of his journey.

    It is one of the more unusual in Australian cricket.

    Gilbert was raised in Lakes Entrance, in east Gippsland, and played junior cricket for Lakes and Wy Yung.

    Leaving Year 12 before his final exams, he landed a job with the National Bank but had to move to the Korumburra branch in south Gippsland.

    He joined Leongatha Town in the Leongatha association, had three years away from cricket and then popped up briefly at Dalyston in the Wonthaggi association, playing alongside banking colleague Dean Cuman.

    Dalyston players of the day still recall the sight of the lanky young fellow delivering the ball from great heights, cypress trees at the bottom end of the ground serving as the sightscreen.

    A transfer with the bank had Gilbert packing his bags again, to Wangaratta in the north of the state.

    It was, he says, the first steps towards him becoming a big cricketer.

    There were about three games left in the season when he landed at “Wang’’.

    Gilbert joined a club called College. No one knew much about him.

    Picked in C Grade for his first game, he took “9-15 or something and made 80’’.

    A few weeks later he was in the club’s A Grade grand final team. He remembers the match for dropping the opposition’s best batter at slip before he had scored. He went on to make 180 not out. His team lost a high-scoring final.

    “It was a wonder anyone ever spoke to me again,’’ Gilbert says.

    “But Wangaratta cricket was awesome. It was unreal in those days. It had some great cricketers. I was playing Saturdays and Sundays, because there was a 35-over Sunday comp. When I was up there I fell back in love with the game. Best thing I ever did. Met about 1,000 blokes and ended up playing Country Week too.’’

    Gilbert dropped that catch in the grand final off the bowling of Barry “Bouncer’’ McCormick, who ahead of the 1992-93 season joined District club North Melbourne.

    Seeing McCormick do well, Gilbert decided to make the same move, driving from Wangaratta to Arden St on Thursdays, heading back home, working on Fridays and travelling back on Saturdays for games.

    He debuted for North Melbourne in 1994-95, under the captaincy of former league footballer Liam Pickering.

    Pickering was introduced to the newcomer at the indoor nets at Arden St. And when he batted, Gilbert let fly with a beamer.

    “He nearly knocked my head off! And I thought, ‘What the hell, who is this gigantor?’’ Pickering recalls with a laugh.

    They became tight.

    Gilbert was unfit and overweight when he arrived in District cricket. But as he put miles into his long legs, he had some good returns for the battling Kangaroos. Early in the 1997-98 season, he also had a falling out with them.

    “I got the flick. I was sacked after round two,’’ he says.

    “I had a minor disagreement with the chairman of selectors’ son, who was getting a game in the ones ahead of my mate. So I was shown the door.

    “But I was no good at the time. I was fat and lazy. I was probably cooked after lunch.’’

    Carlton came calling and Ian Wrigglesworth got him a job reading gas meters.

    Shortly before his departure from North Melbourne, the Northcote bank where Gilbert was working was held up.

    “I had the shotgun up the nostrils,’’ he says.

    “I never felt like he was going to shoot me but it wasn’t ideal. I thought, ‘F – k this, I’m out’, so I got out of it (banking). It was a good way for me to get out because I’d had a gutful of it.’’

    Reading gas meters was unglamorous work.

    But being on his feet all day got him fit. And by the end of his first season with the Blues, his bowling had gained him attention.

    Rodney Marsh called and invited him to winter in Adelaide at the Academy.

    Gilbert spent four months working on his cricket and another month playing in Brisbane.

    In early September, the Academy players lined up against the Australian team preparing to play at the 1998 Commonwealth Games.

    Adam Gilchrist and Mark Waugh opened the batting.

    “I stuffed that up for everyone,’’ Gilbert says.

    “Front-row seats to the greatest batsman in the world, Adam Gilchrist, and I just happened to nick him off first ball.

    “We didn’t see him bat. Off he went.’’

    He dismissed Steve Waugh too, caught behind.

    And the Academy team won the game, helped by runs from Marcus North and Nathan Adcock.

    Gilbert says his bounce rather than his pace was his biggest weapon.

    “If it was a seaming wicket, I was all right,’’ he says. “When it got flat, I wasn’t much good against good batters.’’

    *****

    After his time with Marsh and the Academy crew, Ashley Gilbert looked forward to going back to District cricket.

    But his recollection is that he went to state training before returning to Carlton. The Vics had earmarked him for some one-dayers.

    His first Mercantile Mutual Cup match was against South Australia; he picked up the wicket of Greg Blewett, “which was bloody nice’’.

    December brought the MCG match against England.

    Gilbert says it was surreal to come up against players he had watched on television.

    To watch them on TV was to think they would be easy to dismiss, he says. But it was different in the middle. Their bats seemed as wide as doors.

    By the last day, Gilbert reckons, all of the English players “had the shits with me’’. Off-spinner Robert Croft even bounced him.

    The clash with Ramprakash thrust the novice into the headlines.

    “England‘s volatile Mark Ramprakash stalked in 25 metres from point to confront towering Victorian pace bowler Ashley Gilbert and discharge a verbal rocket in a last hour of fireworks at the Melbourne Cricket Ground yesterday,’’ reported the great cricket writer Phil Wilkins.

    Gilbert recalls: “Apparently (Ramprakash) was trying to get into the changerooms after the game.

    “I was all for it until I heard he was a golden gloves at something. I said, ‘Righto, we might just have to back this up a little bit’.’’

    Three weeks later, Gilbert was picked to play his first Sheffield Shield match for the Vics, against Tasmania in a match that started on January 1.

    “I had to room with ‘Chuck’ (Victorian captain Darren Berry) because they were worried I was going to go out and not come home,’’ he says.

    The Tassie team featured Ponting, David Boon, Shaun Young and Jamie Cox.

    Ponting was out for nine in the first innings, caught behind off David Saker.

    “This is my favourite story and I tell it to anyone who will listen,’’ Gilbert says.

    “I was at mid-off when ‘Sakes’ was bowling to Ponting. ‘Sakes’ said to me, ‘Have your hands warm’. He bowled him a half-volley and Ponting just smashed it past me.

    “I went and got it and ‘Sakes’ said to me, ‘Now you might want to give yourself another 10m, because this one is going to be even easier to hit’. And he bowled him another one and Ponting smashed it again. If it had hit my hands it would have broken them.

    “And then ‘Sakes’ said to me, ‘Now get ready to celebrate’. And he bowled it a yard shorter and a yard quicker and it swung away and nicked him off. It was the best thing of all-time.’’

    In a drawn match, Gilbert took 2-58 off 20.4 overs and then 0-38 off 14.

    Bowling a short ball to Young “just to have a look’’, he was hit a long way out of the ground.

    Gilbert’s father, Bill, had made the trip to Tassie.

    “I’ve come a long way to see you get hit that far big fella!’’ Gilbert Senior bellowed as the few spectators at Bellerive Oval tried to find the ball.

    The official scorecard lists Gilbert at No. 11 in the batting order.

    “Yeah, that’s wrong,’’ he says. “After some searching net sessions, I’d been given the No. 10 spot ahead of Matty Inness!’’

    *****

    The match against Tasmania turned out to be his first and last Shield appearance.

    And his last match for the Vics was in a one-dayer against Queensland, when Matthew Hayden blitzed 152 not out.

    Gilbert’s nine overs went for 68.

    “I think I’m the only man who’s played for Victoria and called for a count,’’ he says.

    “I was bowling to Hayden and I didn’t think we had enough fielders. I thought someone had snuck off. He kept hitting me everywhere!’’

    Towards the end of the season, Gilbert began struggling with stress fractures of the back.

    He recovered but ahead of 1999-2000, he developed a bulging disc in his back. He returned at Christmas, then hurt a knee.

    “I had surgery and never heard from the Vics again,’’ he says.

    “I played one more year at Carlton and I was gone from District cricket by the time I was 30.’’

    Gilbert played a season at local level, with Bentleigh, and then retired.

    Fourteen years later, keen to “just get out the house’’, he made a comeback with Strathmore.

    “I might have only played eight games, because my body was rooted, but it was just awesome to be involved,’’ Gilbert says.

    “It was a good decision to go and play, because I got some good mates out it.’’

    Gilbert is still attached to Strathmore but he plays golf most Saturdays.

    Last week, he hit a hole-in-one at Northern Golf Club in Glenroy – and celebrated heartily.

    “Didn’t quite make it home for dinner. Had to get a Uber home,’’ he says with a chuckle.

    *****

    “Now and then’’, Ashley Gilbert is asked about his brief first-class career. And he often describes it as “awesome’’.

    Sometimes he wishes it had lasted longer.

    “But physically I couldn’t get there. And I don’t reckon I was quite good enough,’’ he says.

    “I was in the right spot at the right time. I was going well after being in the Cricket Academy all winter and (Damien) Fleming and (Paul) Reiffel were off playing for Australia. So there were a couple of spots available for Victoria and they picked me. Glad they did.’’

    The cap in the glass frame on his desk proves it.

    Before joining CODE Paul Amy was a sports reporter and editor for Leader Newspapers. He was also a long-time contributor to Inside Football and is the author of Fabulous Fred, the Strife and Times of Fred Cook.

    Source link