Tag: UK press

  • ‘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.

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    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”.

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  • ‘Out of his depth’: Ange sack predicted… but it’ll cost Spurs a fortune — UK View

    ‘Out of his depth’: Ange sack predicted… but it’ll cost Spurs a fortune — UK View

    Ange Postecoglou is on the brink of being sacked, UK pundits and press are saying – though it will cost Tottenham a fortune to part ways with the Australian manager.

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    A grim 2-1 home loss to relegation-threatened Leicester City has piled more pressure on Postecoglou and his injury-riddled squad.

    Former Spurs player Jamie O’Hara, a constant critic of the Australian, said an “inquest” should be held into the half-time address, after Tottenham conceded two goals in four minutes straight after the break.

    “It was one of the worst performances I’ve seen. Another shocking result, another shocking performance,” O’Hara said on Sky Sports.

    “I don’t know how Ange can stay in the job. I don’t know what needs to happen and I don’t know what happens at the top with (chairman) Daniel Levy.”

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    Ange Postecoglou barks orders against Leicester.Source: Getty Images

    O’Hara pointed out that Spurs had signed only a back-up goalkeeper thus far in the transfer window, despite the injury crisis; saying Levy’s leadership was an issue and the club was unwilling to pay star-level wages like other major Premier League clubs.

    Yet for on-field performances, the buck stops with Postecoglou.

    “Ange Postecoglou is out of his depth. Man management, in-game management, not good enough today. Running out of ideas, he tried to change the tactics against Everton last week and we were 3-0 down at half-time. We go 2-1 down against Leicester and I don’t see a change in a way that we play, I don’t see a change in the way we do things.

    “They’re a relegation fight. Spurs are in a relegation fight, I’m telling you now. Teams are picking up underneath them.

    “Every team around them, if you look at it — West Ham sacked their manager, Everton sacked their manager, Man United sacked their manager, Wolves sacked their manager.

    “One win in 11, 13 defeats in the Premier League. Unacceptable. Spurs are in a relegation fight and they need to buck up their ideas, sign some good players – quickly – and make a decision on what you’re doing with Ange Postecoglou.

    “Because at the moment, what he’s giving out ain’t good enough. And I know there’s injuries and I know there’s problems, but that is unacceptable. You can’t lose 13 games in the Premier League as a Spurs manager.

    “I know you’ve got the Carabao Cup semi-finals second leg against Liverpool, who are by far the best team in Europe at the moment, and you’ve clinging on to hope that we might get to a final and Ange gives it, ‘Well, we’ll win a trophy in my second season’. Do me a favour. You’re the Spurs manager, you’re 15th in the table and you’ve lost 13 games. That’s not acceptable.

    “I think he’ll get the sack after the Liverpool game (February 6). We’ll get beat.”

    Spurs manager Ange Postecoglou amid a poor loss to Leicester City.Source: Getty Images

    Knives are being sharpened in the UK press also.

    “A game that was supposed to ease fears of relegation brought another dismal defeat for Tottenham Hotspur, new levels of fury for the chairman, Daniel Levy, and left Ange Postecoglou under the kind of pressure most managers would not survive,” wrote Tom Allnutt in The Times.

    “Spurs have now mustered one win in 11 in the Premier League, against Southampton last month, while this made it four losses in a row, the bottom three creeping ever closer to a side in freefall and a club in open revolt with their supporters.

    “Tottenham’s injury crisis is well-documented and they were without ten players here, leaving the ones on the field either exhausted or unable to complete 90 minutes. Others, such as Richarlison, who came off with a sore groin, are returning only to break down again. For weeks this team have been down to their bare bones and, with the transfer window closing next Monday, the club are still to sign a single outfield player. That was the backdrop to the anger pouring down from the South Stand. The help Postecoglou has been calling for has simply not arrived.

    “Yet Postecoglou will know what awaits managers when results send a team tumbling down the Premier League and when the fans turn their rage towards the board. Levy was sitting blank-faced here as the calls for him to go rang around the stadium. Cristian Romero and Micky van de Ven could be back next weekend for the trip to Brentford but will Postecoglou be there to see it?”

    Utd pick up hard fought win over Fulham | 01:31

    Wrote Matt Law for The Telegraph: “As the chants of “we want Levy out” echoed around the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, Ange Postecoglou will surely have been aware that days such as this rarely end well for the chairman’s head coaches.

    “History tells us that when the fans turn on Levy, he usually turns on the manager and, no matter how desperate the club may have been not to rush into a decision on Postecoglou’s future, the Australian must now be in some peril.

    “The mood was mutinous at the final whistle of Tottenham’s 13th league defeat of the season. Rather than hurrying for the exits, fans hung around to vent at Levy over the loud music and moved a banner that said “24 years, 16 managers, one trophy. Time for change” down to the front row of the South Stand.”

    Ange Postecoglou is on thin ice after a loss to lowly Leicester.Source: Getty Images

    The Guardian’s Jacob Steinberg wrote: “It could be a defining result for both sides. While Leicester revelled in their show of defiance, with Boubakary Soumaré superb in midfield, an injury-hit Spurs floundered again. Postecoglou, who saw tired limbs and frazzled minds on the pitch, is in trouble. Spurs are eight points above the relegation zone after one win in 11 games and it would not be a surprise if this proves a defeat too far for the Australian.

    “However this is a decline that goes right to the top, which is why the venom directed at Levy felt significant. “Nothing will change until he leaves,” was one Spurs fan’s verdict on a chairman whose tenure has brought only one trophy in 24 years.”

    Parting ways with Postecoglou won’t come cheap, if that is to be Spurs’ decision in coming days/weeks.

    “Should Levy decide to sack Postecoglou though, it is sure to cost him a pretty penny,” Anthony Chapman wrote for The Sun.

    “Former Aston Villa CEO Keith Wyness told the Inside Track podcast that Big Ange is earning £5 million-a-year ($9.9 million) on a four-year deal.

    “And with Postecoglou only being 18 months through it, Levy would have to shell out £12m ($23.8 million) to get rid of him right now.”

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  • The real reason behind Man City’s stunning implosion and stars on chopping block — UK View

    The real reason behind Man City’s stunning implosion and stars on chopping block — UK View

    Having dominated English football under Pep Guardiola, Manchester City is suddenly winless since October and all but out of the Premier League title race after a 2-0 loss to arch rival Liverpool.

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    City trail the Reds by 11 points after just 13 games. So how — the loss of Ballon d’Or winner Rodri aside — did it come to this?

    Here is what the UK press is saying, amid widespread shock over the club’s downfall.

    Writing for The Times, Martin Samuel said that: “Shorn of their protector Rodri, Guardiola’s City have aged quicker than pears left adjacent to a bunch of bananas.”

    Yet he primarily blamed the ageing of the team, singling out Kyle Walker’s loss of pace, and criticised City’s failure to retain young talent. He said the team was clearly in downturn despite the mighty Premier League achievements that Guardiola referred to with his six-finger gesture at Anfield.

    “…The decline of certain individuals is obvious. As are some missteps by Guardiola himself. With age an increasing problem, the young talent that has been allowed to leave the club is regrettable. Cole Palmer is the most obvious loss, although Guardiola’s champions might argue no one was saying that the year he departed and City went on to win a fourth straight title,” Samuel wrote.

    “But, actually, they were. Palmer’s form on his immediate arrival at Chelsea always suggested he could have found a place at City and just because a team win the league doesn’t mean they cannot be improved. Equally, could City have fought harder to keep 24-year-old Julián Álvarez, who, while a club-record sale, was such an important part of the success last season? Even if Atletico Madrid’s £81.8million was too good to turn down, why also allow Liam Delap to join Ipswich Town? Guardiola’s preference for a small squad is well known, but the burden heaped on Erling Haaland looks increasingly unsustainable.”

    Pep Guardiola shows six fingers to Liverpool fans, counting his Premier League titles with Man City. Picture: Adrian Dennis/AFPSource: AFP

    Writing for talkSPORT, Henry Winter said that City had gone from “Invincibles to Invisibles … riddled with self-doubt”. He said that a squad clear-out was needed.

    “This is Guardiola’s greatest challenge: reviving City,” Winter wrote.

    “Time has caught up with some like Kyle Walker, Ilkay Gundogan and Bernardo Silva. A relentless workload has temporarily drained others like Phil Foden.

    “City need new blood, new energy. The winds of change may only be felt positively through an open transfer window and Guardiola’s coaching and man-management.

    “Too many of his players look stuck in quick-sand and he’s struggling to pull them out.

    “City weren’t beaten by moments of sublime skill. They were beaten in the application of the basics. Liverpool wanted the ball more. They wanted victory more. And that should embarrass City.

    “Yes, they’re missing Rodri, their most important player, but they have so much talent, so many serial title winners, but all underperforming, barring honourable exceptions like Nathan Ake, Ruben Dias and Rico Lewis.”

    Writing for the Daily Mail, Sami Mokbel said that Crystal Palace and England midfielder Adam Wharton was at the top of Man City’s shopping list for the January transfer window – but would be hard to get.

    “Crystal Palace have no intention of selling Adam Wharton in January amid growing interest in the England midfielder,” Mokbel wrote.

    “Manchester City are among the Premier League clubs monitoring Wharton’s situation closely ahead of the winter transfer window.

    “The 20-year-old’s season has been dogged by a groin injury that eventually required surgery which won’t see him return until Palace’s clash versus Brighton on December 15 at the earliest.”

    Manchester City defender Kyle Walker is under scrutiny in an ageing team. Picture: Adrian Dennis/AFPSource: AFP

    Speaking on the latest episode of his The Rest Is Football podcast, England great Gary Lineker and former Man City defender Micah Richards questioned whether all was well between Guardiola and superstar midfielder Kevin De Bruyne.

    “De Bruyne came on again with not long to go when the game was pretty much done. Yeah, he nearly got a goal because of [Virgil] van Dijk’s error, but is there something going on there, do you think? Because he’s been coming on for five or 10 minutes, what, for about a month now?” Lineker said.

    “You would imagine he’s getting fitter, even though I saw both of them – Pep Guardiola and De Bruyne – make interesting statements in the week, where it seems like all’s not well between those two? I don’t know. I’ve got no inside information whatsoever. The ambassador of Manchester City might, though… Micah?”

    Richards laughed off the segue but said: “I think you’re right. There’s got to be some context to it… this goes back [to] before the international break. De Bruyne got some minutes, but after the international break, he didn’t start and then hasn’t started again. But he’s one who can unlock a door.

    “We know with Kevin De Bruyne, you’ve got to wrap him in cotton wool … but a big game like this, I thought [Guardiola] was sort of saving him for this game. But even just the talks, [De Bruyne] potentially going to Saudi at the end of the year … it looks to me like there’s some sort of rift gong on between them.”

    Pep Guardiola gives instructions to Kevin De Bruyne during a recent 4-0 loss to Tottenham. Picture: Carl Recine/Getty ImagesSource: Getty Images

    Writing for The Telegraph, Oliver Brown said that Guardiola cut a Jose Mourinho-like figure with his six-finger salute to Reds fans.

    “Engulfed by strife, Pep Guardiola can do little but resort to the antics of a man who is his antithesis. The six-fingered salute Guardiola performed as a rebuke to Liverpool fans, denoting six titles in seven years to confound their taunts that he would be “sacked in the morning”, was taken straight from the Jose Mourinho playbook. For good measure, he did it again for the City supporters’ benefit, even as they stood reeling at the sudden fallibility of a figure whose wisdom they worship.

    “There could scarcely be a more striking illustration of the turmoil in Guardiola’s mind. As another limp, gaffe-riddled performance by his team ate away at his soul, he looked as if he had no idea how to arrest the slide. And so he channelled classic Mourinho, the preening rival he used to disdain as “el puto jefe, el puto amo” (“the f—— boss, the f—— master”). True, the six fingers were held up with a smile rather than a Jose-esque snarl. But the subtext was similar: first he showed that the Kop’s chanting was ruffling his feathers, then he urged even his own disciples to remember his body of work.”

    Pep taunts Reds crowd after loss | 00:19

    Writing for The Guardian, Jonathan Wilson delved into what it might take for the unthinkable to happen, while alluding to the looming outcome of 115 Premier League charges regarding alleged breaches of league financial rules.

    “Could Guardiola be sacked? It seems unthinkable. For most of the past 16 years he has been obviously the best coach in the world. Long before he got to City, the club was built to his vision. To break from that would be a seismic act for the club’s owners, far greater than, say, Leicester offloading Claudio Ranieri or Chelsea dismissing José Mourinho in the months after they won a title, especially as City fight the Premier League charges.

    “But equally, history shows that once the magic has gone in football, it is very hard to get it back (look at Inter in 1966-67, dominant and seemingly en route to a Treble only, abruptly to lose form, winning only two of their final 11 games of the season to end up with nothing; Helenio Herrera was given another season, in which they finished fifth).

    “In a month, City’s aura has vanished, but who realistically looks a better candidate than Guardiola to restore it? So long as he feels sufficiently energised, he will surely be afforded that opportunity. But what resources he has to do that will probably depend, like so much else, on the outcome of the Premier League charges against the club.”

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  • Ange’s frosty run-in with Spurs fan caught on camera as unrest grows over PL ‘madness’

    Ange’s frosty run-in with Spurs fan caught on camera as unrest grows over PL ‘madness’

    Things are always rosy in Ange Postecoglou’s second year in charge for a football team but Tottenham are proving to be the exception to the rule after a shocking 2-1 defeat at home to newly promoted, and already relegation-threatened, Ipswich Town.

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    Sunday’s Premier League encounter was billed as a reunion to warm the hearts of Australian football fans between the former Socceroos boss and Ipswich midfielder Massimo Luongo – who was nominated for the Ballon d’Or for his heroics in the 2015 Asian Cup triumph under Postecoglou – but things quickly turned sour.

    First half goals to Sammie Szmodics and Liam Delap left Spurs with too great of a mountain to climb and the home supporters expressed their fury as they arrived to the ground confident of a win that would put them into the top four, but watched in horror as their team slid down to 10th.

    Tottenham showed signs of life in the second half with a Dominic Solanke goal ruled out by VAR – replays showed the ball touched his wrist – before a Rodrigo Bentancur header in the 69th minute gave them hope of snatching a point.

    But Ipswich held firm as the home fans engulfed the stadium in the dying minutes – when Luongo was brought off the bench – and at the full-time whistle with boos.

    Already fuming because of his side’s poor showing, Postecoglou even showed his displeasure with one particular fan.

    As the Australian walked down the tunnel, he clearly took offence to something that was yelled out at him.

    He stopped, eye-balled the perpetrator and then continued walking.

    EPL Wrap: Ipswich sink Ange’s Spurs | 02:55

    It was the latest incident in what has been a testing relationship with the Spurs faithful.

    This time last year everyone had ‘I’m loving big Ange instead’ stuck in their heads, but now the relationship is out of its honeymoon period.

    Tensions had been simmering away since Postecoglou slammed the fan base for celebrating their 2-0 loss at home to Manchester City in the penultimate game of last Premier League season because it ensured rivals Arsenal could not win the title.

    The 59-year-old said at the time that the club’s “foundations are really fragile” and that flimsiness has been replicated on the pitch in a rollercoaster ride so far this season.

    Postecoglou’s hopes of keeping his streak of winning a trophy in his second season are still alive with Tottenham in the quarter-finals of the Carabao Cup and they have won three of their four Europa League games, while they are yet to play an FA Cup match.

    But their Premier League campaign has been underwhelming so far.

    As well as Ipswich, they also lost to relegation battlers Crystal Palace but they have teased their potential with a 3-0 thumping of Manchester United at Old Trafford and a 4-1 home demolition of Aston Villa.

    They have scored more goals than any than other team in the league but have won five matches, lost five and drawn one.

    When they win, they are heaped with praise for their attacking football but when they lose, fans and the UK press pack are quick to grow tired of the inconsistent results.

    Former Tottenham midfielder turned pundit Jamie O’Hara told Sky Sports that the tipping point in the relationship between Postecoglou and the Spurs supporter is drawing near as the loss mount up.

    “Spurs are all the place at the back. Defenders running all over the place, crossing over, not tracking runners, getting in behind,” O’Hara said.

    “You watch it and go, so easy, so easy. That can’t carry on. Eventually the fans will turn. Okay, we like exciting football, but we don’t want to come back from 2-0 down every week.”

    Liverpool extend lead on top of table | 00:34

    Sunday was the 13th time in 15 Premier League home matches this year that Tottenham have conceded the first goal of the game.

    It has created some thrilling comebacks but as Sunday showed, it is often too hard to always be chasing the game.

    Football writer for the UK Telegraph, Thom Gibbs, described the loss to Ipswich as a ‘mood-killing muddle’ after wins against Manchester City (in the Carabao Cup) and Aston Villa last week.

    Gibbs insisted however that the defeat ‘to an improving side was no disaster’ but that the warning signs are there.

    “Often (trailing) seems to spur Spurs into life, like a complacent student who needs more carrot than stick. Replace detentions with being booed off at half-time,” he wrote.

    “But you cannot rely on creating peril to rescue yourself forever. Great sides have that ability; the best do not routinely play themselves into trouble.”

    Brighton comeback sinks Man City | 00:50

    Spurs have conceded 13 goals in 11 games – the same amount as second place City and third place Chelsea but seven more than league leaders Liverpool.

    When they have been exposed at the back it has simply been more costly, and Postecoglou’s high line has come under fire as a result.

    Lightning fast centre back Micky Van de Ven is out injured, and Radu Dragusin – who is not blessed with the same speed – partnered Christian Romero in the heart of defence against Ipswich as a result.

    Football journalist Henry Winter blasted Postecoglou for not adjusting his tactics saying on TalkSport that “it’s madness to play that way when they haven’t got someone was as quick as him (Van de Ven) to get them out of trouble”.

    Spurs won’t take Ipswich town lightly | 00:41

    Perhaps it is stubbornness, but Postecoglou sticks to his ways because everywhere he has been, he has stayed true to his system.

    Australian football fans will recall the three-at-the-back saga which engulfed his World Cup qualifying campaign as Socceroos boss as a perfect example of how he will not relent to the doubters.

    He has an inherent belief in his attacking style of football.

    He will stay true to that when the Premier League returns in two weeks from an international break.

    He knows that the blame lies with him, so there will be slight tweaks within his system, but do not expect Spurs to start parking the bus.

    “That’s down to me. That’s my responsibility. The inconsistency we’re having this year, ultimately it comes down to me and my approach and something I need to try and fix and see if I can help the players in that area,” Postecoglou said post-match.

    He has put his neck on the line, which means he will be held accountable and this rollercoaster ride has many more twists, turns, and ups-and-downs left in it.

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  • 20-year feud reignites over ‘white-anting’ claim; $83m fall guy in Utd ‘shambles’ — UK View

    20-year feud reignites over ‘white-anting’ claim; $83m fall guy in Utd ‘shambles’ — UK View

    A 3-0 loss to Tottenham at Old Trafford has sparked a brutal, public shaming of Manchester United and manager Erik ten Hag, who is now “running out of time” to save his job according to UK experts.

    The British media hasn’t missed in lambasting the Premier League giants and their beleaguered boss, who was taunted with chants of “you’re getting sacked in the morning” throughout second half.

    Manchester United now sits 13th on the Premier League standings with two wins in six games.

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    The club’s new football leadership team handed ten Hag an extension to his contract less than three months ago, but the Dutchman is under extreme, and increasingly mounting, pressure to hold his position.

    “(Ten Hag) is only one bad defeat away from a crisis and unforgiving scrutiny,” BBC reporter Phil McNulty claimed. “The 54-year-old is running out of time after a United performance that was as shambolic, incompetent and indisciplined as any he has presided over in his tenure.

    “This is a manager who is looking increasingly out of his depth … this felt very much like the end – if not now, then very soon.”

    Erik ten Hag, Manager of Manchester United. Photo by Carl Recine/Getty ImagesSource: Getty Images

    But while a large portion of the blame has landed squarely at the feet of ten Hag, Arsenal legend Martin Keown floated a stunning theory that could rock the boat at Old Trafford.

    Keown, a long-time nemesis of Manchester United in the 1990s and early 2000s, singled out assistant Ruud van Nistelrooy, questioning whether he’s doing enough to support ten Hag.

    Keown, who famously sparred with van Nistelrooy in a bitter rivalry during their Premier League careers, said on TalkSport: “Is he giving everything to this manager? This manager looks very lonely on the sideline.

    “Is Van Nistelrooy waiting to take over? Because it looks as if there’s going to be change taking place there.

    “Is everyone adding to the group? I’m not seeing that from Van Nistelrooy. Ten Hag is just sitting there, nothing going on, no conversation. Pep [Guardiola] goes back and speaks to the gurus next to him. Is everybody looking in the mirror at themselves giving their best?

    “It doesn’t look like the players are committed, it doesn’t look like the staff are particularly committed. It’s a lone man in the dugout.”

    Meanwhile, Manchester United’s defence also came under heavy scrutiny following the loss to Tottenham.

    “United were a shambles – a rabble,” McNulty continued. “From the first whistle, Spurs were all over United like a rash.

    “There was no shape to United. They lacked direction and leadership … at times they looked out of control.”

    Sky Sports’ Peter Smith claimed the team’s defence was “as leaky as the roof at Old Trafford”, also criticising ten Hag’s off-season signings.

    “They have shelled out over £600m on signings for Erik ten Hag, and the head coach can’t escape the fact that Sunday’s squad was very much the team he had built,” Smith wrote.

    The Guardian’s Jonathan Wilson continued: “If the first-half performance against Tottenham on Sunday wasn’t the worst under Ten Hag, it’s only because there are so many other candidates.

    “They were shapeless, demotivated, petulant and apparently entirely devoid of confidence.”

    Manchester United’s Dutch manager Erik ten Hag. Photo by Paul ELLIS / AFPSource: AFP

    Chief among those to be called out for the defensive efforts has been Matthijs de Ligt, ten Hag’s countryman who was signed for £43m (A$83m).

    Liverpool legend Jamie Carragher grilled de Ligt, saying that he was “completely out of position all the time” against Spurs.

    “I’ve noticed this a little bit with De Ligt and a lot of centre-backs,” Carragher said in analysing the goals on Sky Sports.

    “I don’t understand why they don’t fill the space and come over – I see this so much.”

    Nonetheless, it’s ten Hag who has ultimately copped the majority of the heat in the UK press since Sunday’s loss.

    ESPN’s Mark Ogden lashed ten Hag’s tendency to cast the blame elsewhere whenever Manchester United suffers defeat.

    “Erik ten Hag is out of excuses,” Ogden penned.

    “Selective memory is becoming a theme of Ten Hag’s increasingly predictable defence of his record as United manager. He has blamed injuries for a lack of consistency and bad results – every team suffers from injuries – and pointed to the two trophies he has won in two seasons … but that overlooks guiding the club to their worst-ever Premier League finish in 2023/24 and overseeing an array of humiliating defeats.

    “There is now a real possibility that Ten Hag is entering the final days of his reign as United manager.”

    Manchester United will next face Aston Villa away on Sunday.

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  • ‘May well be doomed to failure’: Grim ‘echoes’ spark big Ange fear as ‘jarring’ home truth sinks in — UK View

    ‘May well be doomed to failure’: Grim ‘echoes’ spark big Ange fear as ‘jarring’ home truth sinks in — UK View

    When Ange Postecoglou was hired as the new Spurs coach, it marked the beginning of a new chapter at Tottenham and the end of an old one, which closed with an explosive parting press conference.

    In it, Antonio Conte described his players as “selfish” and declared the club could “change the manager but the situation cannot change”.

    Tottenham did exactly that, although it took some time, eventually appointing Postecoglou as its new head coach after a 72-day search for Conte’s replacement.

    Things were supposed to be different, and they still can be.

    But there are concerns out of the UK press in the wake of Tottenham’s loss to Manchester City on Wednesday that Postecoglou’s animated post-game press conference had, as The Times’ Tom Allnutt put it, “echoes of Conte”.

    ‘What do you think is going to happen?” | 02:59

    In case you missed it, Postecoglou was given an opportunity to praise his team after the 2-0 loss to City where they had made the likely champions work to earn the victory.

    But, when asked if Wednesday’s result could help set up the foundations for next season, Postecoglou’s press conference took an unexpected turn.

    “I think the last 48 hours have revealed the foundations are fairly fragile,” he said.

    Where exactly?

    “Outside the club, inside the club, everywhere.”

    Tensions had clearly reached boiling point at during the game when Postecoglou was captured on camera yelling at a fan, who one witness told The Athletic had asked Postecoglou “why he had not shown the same animation earlier in the season rather than just against City”.

    This, of course, happened in the backdrop of Postecoglou expressing his frustration earlier in the week with some Spurs fans who wanted Tottenham to lose just so arch-rivals Arsenal could not win the title.

    “I understand the rivalry, but I’ve never and will never understand if someone wants their own team to lose,” he said.

    “That’s not what sport is about. It’s not what I love about the game.”

    Ange Postecoglou delivered a home truth. (Photo by Alex Pantling/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    It wasn’t just the fans either. According to The Athletic, “most aggravating of all to Postecoglou was the sense that a few club staff — many of whom are Spurs fans — had been relaxed about losing because of the title context”.

    “While the majority of club staff had been focusing on their work as normal, the prospect of losing to City had been a theme of jokes among a minority of staff for the last week,” the report added.

    It also went on to claim that one member of support staff “joked” to Postecoglou that he should play a youth team against City, which made the Australian “furious”.

    It is a claim that Tottenham denies, according to the report.

    All of this is to say that, regardless of what played out on the field or how many chances Tottenham created, the simple reality was that they did not win and Postecoglou was not happy with that. Some people, however, were — and that rubbed him the wrong way.

    The question now is what happens next.

    Well, even if there were similarities to Conte’s outburst according to some UK journalists, don’t expect Postecoglou to be following him out the door anytime soon.

    “There were echoes of Antonio Conte’s rant in March last year, even if Conte slamming the players was designed as an end while Postecoglou sees this as the beginning,”

    Allnutt of The Times wrote.

    “Nobody expects Postecoglou to be fired nine days later like Conte — the board are ready to back him again this summer, with a transfer plan agreed months ago — but these laments are not without risk, a line being nudged if not yet crossed.

    “By refusing to elaborate or specify what he meant, Postecoglou damned everyone by speculation, from the supporters, to the players, to the board. He opened a wound that will fester, at least until his next press conference on Friday and, if he so chooses, beyond into the summer.”

    Bentancur LASHES OUT at early hooking | 00:36

    The summer will be a key period for Tottenham and Postecoglou, who is after a striker, midfielder and defender with a report from The Telegraph earlier in the month claiming Richarlison could be one of the biggest names moved on as part of a roster overhaul.

    Tottenham and sources close to Postecoglou told The Telegraph’s Matt Law that Postecoglou’s outburst was not a sign of deeper cracks between himself and the club but “simply aimed” at the debate earlier in the week on whether the fans would prefer to win or see Arsenal miss out on the title.

    They “stress his frustration at the build-up and the reaction of some fans who cheered City’s goals simply boiled over”.

    Jack Pitt-Brooke of The Athletic, however, wrote that the vague nature of Postecoglou’s comments, refusing to specify who exactly he was speaking about, instead left things open to interpretation.

    He wrote that it was “the most explosive press conference” by a Spurs manager since, you guessed it, Conte’s final one in charge.

    “Postecoglou was brought in two months later to be the anti-Conte, and while he was not quite as wilfully destructive as the Italian, you could almost hear the ghost of Conte in Postecoglou’s words,” he wrote.

    “It was the most surprising and jarring thing Postecoglou has said during his time in north London.”

    Ange Postecoglou didn’t hold back. (Photo by Darren Staples / AFP)Source: AFP

    So, what are the different ways Postecoglou’s comments could be interpreted?

    “The generous interpretation of Postecoglou’s comments is that this is all part of trying to ensure the football club — board, staff, players, fans — makes that mental leap into competitiveness and ambition,” Pitt-Brooke wrote.

    “But many people will read this and fear this is a repeat of ‘the history of Tottenham’. So many Spurs managers have started well and seen their tenures descend into acrimony and frustration, exasperated by their inability to steer this ship where they want it to go. “Postecoglou was meant to be different, replacing the friction of the Jose Mourinho and Conte eras with unity, togetherness and optimism.

    “But less than one year in, he is already making similar noises, criticising the mentality of those around him, as if he hopes to shame them into becoming more like him. It is a risky move and no one who has tried it before has come out on top.

    “The question is whether this is a new phase or just a brief moment after a strange few days at the end of a tiring first season.”

    Even if it is the latter, Law of The Telegraph wrote that Postecoglou’s scathing assessment was a reminder that either he needs to change or Tottenham does.

    “In many respects Ange Postecoglou and Tottenham Hotspur are a match made in heaven. But if the marriage is not to ultimately end in another messy divorce, then something will have to give,” he wrote.

    “Put simply, either Tottenham have to change or Postecoglou does because the last three months have demonstrated that stubbornness from both sides will grow into something much more damaging.

    “The Australian has claimed he is willing to live or die by his ‘Angeball’ principles and yet without Tottenham and chairman Daniel Levy changing course and giving Postecoglou exactly what he needs, then he may well be doomed to failure.”

    Ange has ‘no regrets’ at Spurs | 00:52

    It didn’t take even two months for Tottenham fans to warm to Postecoglou and his vision, winning them over with his fearless style of play and willingness to speak his mind.

    Fast-forward to Wednesday morning and even if it rubbed some of those same supporters the wrong way, Postecoglou only stuck true to those same values that appealed to them in the first place.

    And according to the BBC, there are still plenty of supporters who are still on board with Postecoglou’s plan.

    The BBC put a call-out to Spurs fans to see how they reacted to Postecoglou’s comments, with one supporter called Jonathan declaring the Australian was “wrong to question the fans”.

    “It was he who downplayed Champions League qualification all season,” Jonathan continued.

    “It was he who said set pieces weren’t important, it was he who refused to adapt tactically throughout the season, as it “isn’t who we are, mate”! Yet last night, he suddenly changes all of that and questions the ambition of the fans.”

    But Postecoglou also had his fair share of admirers, with Nick writing that his comments were “spot on”.

    “He’s managed Celtic and the Old Firm games… he understands rivalry but also what the fans have been asking for years, to win something,” Nick added.

    “This team is fragile, with some of them going to move on and Ange needs the finances and the support of the fans to make this a success.”

    “I have supported Spurs for over 50 years and as much as I would hate Arsenal to win the league, I would always want us to win games, especially if it means us getting a top-four spot,” agreed Linda.

    “Yes Ange is absolutely spot on, there are elements of our club that are flaky and I am hoping that he is the man to sort it all out – we need that winning mentality.”

    Raj, meanwhile, again pointed towards those comments by Conte, writing that while they weren’t “quite as bad”, it did “have a similar feel of a broken manager who is frustrated and angry”.

    “I just hope it doesn’t end up going down the same route. Ange has achieved something small but significant in his first season – give him the time, resources and freedom to continue.”

    The big question is whether Tottenham is willing to do that.

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  • Ange is on Liverpool’s ‘radar’… but this ‘tricky’ reality makes blockbuster PL move unlikely — UK View

    Ange is on Liverpool’s ‘radar’… but this ‘tricky’ reality makes blockbuster PL move unlikely — UK View

    English powerhouse Liverpool are on the hunt for their next manager following Jurgen Klopp’s decision to step down at the season’s end and several names have been floated.

    Bayern Leverkusen’s Xabi Alonso, Brighton’s Roberto De Zerbi and club legend Steve Gerrard are all contenders to take over the Reds’ top job.

    However, Tottenham’s Ange Postecoglou is “on the radar” for the Liverpool job according to The Athletic after an emphatic start to life in the Premier League.

    MORE KLOPP-LIVERPOOL EXIT NEWS

    KLOPP STUNNER: Inside Liverpool boss’ two-month ‘secret’… and ‘promise’ he made

    CONTENDERS: Here’s who could replace Klopp… including Ange?

    Ange swerves Klopp question in presser | 00:15

    The Australian coach took over at Tottenham ahead of the 23/24 season, losing the club’s talisman in Harry Kane in a hammer blow which many predicted would see the North London side slip out of European contention.

    But instead the former Celtic boss inspired a record-breaking start to Spurs’ campaign, recording the most points by any manager in their first nine games with 23.

    During his eight month stint he has also had to contend with several injuries, including long term sideline stints for two star recruits in James Maddison and Micky van de Ven.

    Now there are suggestions Liverpool could make a play for the Tottenham boss, who has previously admitted to being a fan of the Merseyside club.

    “Like any kid, I had the posters up on the wall. Liverpool was my team, but you grow up, things change,” Postecoglou previously said.

    So, what are the chances of Postecoglou actually landing the Liverpool gig and what is the UK press saying about the main factors to consider in a potential switch?

    Spurs cop controversial late winner | 00:43

    Well, Molly Hudson of The Times UK wrote that the “allure” of Liverpool, one of Europe’s most decorated clubs, could tempt Postecoglou to make the move.

    “The Tottenham Hotspur head coach has a similar magnetic charm to Klopp and has immediately shown an ability to connect with a fan base, while transforming Tottenham Hotspur’s playing style and mentality since arriving from Celtic last summer,” Hudson wrote.

    “Postecoglou, 58, may be unlikely to leave Tottenham so soon, but Liverpool’s status as one of the best teams in Europe could be alluring.

    “He has taken an unusual path to the Premier League, lifting trophies in Australia, Japan and Scotland, and has a distinct style of play — brave on the ball and exciting in attack.

    “He has managed to revamp Tottenham’s approach despite a raft of injuries and the departure of Harry Kane, the England captain, to Bayern.

    “Postecoglou is a Liverpool fan, and said he grew up watching the club in the 1970s as their games were among the few broadcast in Australia. He has also complimented the tempo and intensity with which Liverpool have played under Klopp.”

    Klopp drops shock resignation bombshell | 01:58

    Meanwhile, The Athletic’s Andy Jones wrote it would be “a tricky one”, highlighting the timing could be wrong for Liverpool to make a bold play to poach Postecoglou, having only been at Tottenham for eight months.

    Spurs have also made it clear they won’t allow the coach to depart the club and will do whatever it takes to retain his services.

    Jones also highlighted the gun coach’s ability to secure crucial competition points without key players, sticking to their distinct high press method.

    “The 58-year-old has breathed new life into a Tottenham side that looked well short of it last season,” Jones wrote.

    “His use of inverted full-backs to create overloads in central areas in his 4-3-3 system looks like an approach that could be replicated at Liverpool, and his possession-based style results in plenty of attacking flair.

    “One of the biggest compliments afforded to Postecoglou has been that despite the numerous injuries and suspensions he has had to deal with, the team’s style has not changed.

    “He is wedded to it and even when circumstances are against them — such as going down to nine men against Chelsea — they remain determined to play their way.

    “Had the Klopp departure come 12 months further on, a move for Postecoglou would certainly have been plausible as he has rarely stayed in a job for more than two or three years.”

    City take Cup win, but Chelsea struggle | 02:33

    Sam Brookes of the Daily Mail also echoed Jones’ opinion and claimed the Liverpool job may have come up too soon for Postecoglou to leave London.

    “Postecoglou has taken every challenge in his stride, refusing to moan when Harry Kane left on the eve of the new season, and his positivity has rubbed off on the fanbase,” Brookes wrote.

    “For the first time in years, Tottenham fans have reason to be optimistic about the future, and the main reason is the man in the dugout.

    “That could be taken away from them, though, if Liverpool make their move for the Australian.

    “Yet Postecoglou is just six months into his project at Spurs, and seems to want to see the job through, so the Liverpool vacancy may have come a little too soon for him to seriously consider it.”

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  • ‘Kick in the Bazballs’: UK media’s Ashes pain on full display

    ‘Kick in the Bazballs’: UK media’s Ashes pain on full display

    It was the epic defeat that left all of the UK shattered. But maybe none were flatter than Alastair Cook, with his reaction caught on live video. See the English media fallout here.

    How’s that for a kick in the “Bazballs”.

    That is the message out of the UK, where the English media has reacted to Australia’s epic first Test win at Edgbaston.

    Thanks to an incredible lower order stand between captain Pat Cummins and champion spinner Nathan Lyon, the Aussies pulled off a first test miracle to secure the two-wicket win.

    Australia’s hopes of victory looked all but done when Alex Carey was dismissed with the score at 8-227.

    However, that would be the last enjoyable moment England had, with star bowlers turned batting heroes Cummins and Lyon digging in to produce one of the best test wins in Australian history.

    And outside of Ben Stokes and his team, few people felt the loss harder than former England skipper Alastair Cook.

    Calling the game for the BBC, Cook had a camera locked on his face as Australia hit the winning runs.

    What followed was 52 seconds of pain, pain and more pain.

    Following the epic finish, it didn’t take long for the infamous UK press to have its say.

    Star Sport plastered a very frustrated Ben Stokes on the back page with the cheeky headline – “A real kick in the bazballs”.

    The Sun went with “First blood” – but the opening line of Dave Kidd’s report gave an insight into the vibes in the media box:

    “Ultimately, it was glorious defeat for the most thrilling losers in sport,” he wrote.

    The Daily Mail paired a headline of “Glory slips through England’s fingers” and a picture of Ben Stokes dropping Nathan Lyon during the final day.

    The Mirror got in on the Bazball act declaring:

    Bazball – 0

    OzBall – 1

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