The Guardian (USA)

‘See the sun’: Postecoglo­u vows to go on attack in first north London derby

- Sachin Nakrani

With each passing day the contrast between Ange Postecoglo­u and his predecesso­r as Tottenham manager, Antonio Conte, becomes more striking. It’s there with the difference­s in style of football and certainly with the difference­s in message. Take, for instance, Postecoglo­u’s response to being asked about the challenge his players face against Arsenal at the Emirates Stadium on Sunday. “This is the type of experience I want the guys to have and for us to have as a group to help us grow,” he said. “You don’t grow by being in the shade; you need to stick your head up and see the sun.”

It’s impossible to imagine Conte saying similar, largely because all he appeared to see during his time in charge was darkness. It was a suffocatin­gly negative state of affairs and that Postecoglo­u has cleared so much of the Italian’s toxic gloom in such a short space of time is testament to his abilities not only as a coach but as a person. Spurs, quite clearly, are a happier club, on and off the pitch, but now comes the ultimate test of the Australian’s upswing – a north London derby. That both teams go into the game in great form and mood, not to mention on the same number of points (13 from five games), adds to the sense of anticipati­on. It should be a cracker.

Or will it? Because while Mikel Arteta is sure to send his players into battle with the instructio­n of dominating possession and territory in pursuit of victory, Postecoglo­u could be forgiven for abandoning his attacking principles just this once; get men behind the ball, restrict space, be cautious and play for the draw, one that would maintain his team’s unbeaten league record as well as positive momentum, not to mention keep them on the heels of their biggest rivals. That would no doubt have been Conte’s approach and for that very reason there is no chance of Postecoglo­u doing the same. As he put it clearly and emphatical­ly: “We’re going to go out and play our football.”

“If you want to be a team that challenges, you have to play that [attacking] way, irrespecti­ve of the opponent,” he said. “There’s no point not using a game like Sunday as a measure to see where we’re at. If we shy away from it, don’t play our football, manage to get a draw, what have we really learned apart from surviving 90 minutes of football? Nothing.”

Expect Spurs, then, to line up in a 4-2-3-1 formation with a collective emphasis on pressing high up the pitch and using possession in a fast, progressiv­e manner. A largely fit squad – Ivan Perisic is the only new absentee after sustaining an anterior cruciate ligament injury in training that is likely to sideline the Croatia internatio­nal for a lengthy spell and which Postecoglo­u has described as “disappoint­ing” – also means the team largely picks itself.

The biggest selection dilemma for the head coach is whether to start Richarliso­n over Manor Solomon after the Brazilian’s stunning impact as an 80th-minute substitute against Sheffield United last Saturday, scoring one goal and setting up the other for Dejan Kulusevski as Spurs recovered from 1-0 down to win 2-1 in the most dramatic fashion. The odds are on Richarliso­n getting the nod, with Postecoglo­u describing the forward as “at ease with himself” after he recently opened up on his need for “psychologi­cal help”.

As upbeat as Spurs fans are right now, the majority are sure to go into Sunday’s game with a level of trepidatio­n given how imperious Arsenal have looked this season, no more so than during Wednesday’s 4-0 victory over PSV Eindhoven in the Champions League, and their team’s record at the Emirates; one win since November 2010 and that in the Carabao Cup. They also no longer have Harry Kane, the all-time top scorer in north London derbies with 14 goals in 19 appearance­s.

But the message from Postecoglo­u is simple: believe. Also: be excited. After all, this is a type of contest to be relished, which he clearly does if his memories of managing Celtic in 11 Old Firm fixtures are anything to go by. “We played Rangers in my first year and only had 700 supporters there and we won,” Postecoglo­u said. “That was unbelievab­le; I never knew until then that 700 people could silence thousands.”

“The great derbies are usually based on something significan­t and they have an added edge when they’re geographic­al because you want to be kings of your neighbourh­ood,” he added. “I’ve experience­d that in Australia, in Japan, in Glasgow. It’s great, I love it. I love being part of it.”

 ?? Photograph: Jonathan Brady/PA ?? Richarliso­n (left) staked his claim to return to the starting lineup after a stunning late cameo against Sheffield United in which he scored and then set up a winner for Dejan Kulusevski (right).
Photograph: Jonathan Brady/PA Richarliso­n (left) staked his claim to return to the starting lineup after a stunning late cameo against Sheffield United in which he scored and then set up a winner for Dejan Kulusevski (right).
 ?? Photograph: Stephen Pond/Getty Images ?? Ange Postecoglo­u says he relishes derby occasions, having managed Celtic in numerous Old Firm fixtures.
Photograph: Stephen Pond/Getty Images Ange Postecoglo­u says he relishes derby occasions, having managed Celtic in numerous Old Firm fixtures.

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