The Morning Call

New season of ‘Ted Lasso’ has lost some focus, comedic snap

- By Nina Metz

“Ted Lasso” began as a fish-out-of-water comedy about the eternally upbeat Ted running headlong into the British skepticism of anyone invested in the Premier League soccer team — sorry, football club — known as AFC Richmond. With his can-do spirit winning over the doubters, the second season took a different tack, revealing a more complicate­d man behind the mustache and a deep well of sadness beneath his sunny facade. With the third season, it’s too early to tell what the overall theme might be just yet; only four of the 12 episodes were provided to critics. But Ted has noticeably lost a spring in his step.

So has the series.

Some of that is due to the expanded episode length. The first season stuck pretty close to 30-minute episodes. That inched upward the following season. This time, episodes are in the 44-50 minute range, and it makes you wonder why they didn’t just slice things up differentl­y. As it is, the pacing meanders, and the show’s signature tonal assurednes­s feels off-balance.

I wonder if that matters, though, when we’re talking about a show filled with characters with whom you want to spend time. Creators Jason Sudeikis (who also stars as Ted),

Bill Lawrence, Brendan Hunt (who plays Coach Beard) and Joe Kelly have laid enough groundwork to ensure that you’re invested in these people — from team owner Rebecca (Hannah Waddingham) to PR maven Keeley (Juno Temple) to the perfectly grumpy Roy Kent (Brett Goldstein) — even if the

show itself has lost some of its comedic snap and focus.

There’s a melancholi­c cloud hanging over Ted this season. No longer burdened with hiding his panic attacks, he’s an aimless man simply going through the motions.

This year, the sports punditry have picked Richmond to finish last. Underdogs yet again! But a star player from Italy suddenly becomes available, and he might just improve its chances — as well as upset the team’s delicate balance.

Keeley’s unshakable brightness remains intact. She has her own PR company now but is struggling to run it the way that she wants. She and Roy are in splitsvill­e, a breakup from which they are both quietly reeling.

Rebecca has regressed to obsessing over her ex Rupert (Anthony Head), who owns rival team West Ham. Rupert has lured away Nate (Nick Mohammed), Richmond’s kit man-turned-coaching ace, and that’s one of the more meaningful wrinkles of the season.

Journalist Trent Crimm (James Lance) is writing a book about Richmond, and as a result, he has been invited into the

fold. And the players are as endearing and delightful­ly antic as ever, even if Sam Obisanya (Toheeb Jimoh) doesn’t have much to do.

“Ted Lasso” has gradually become more of a light drama than a comedy, but it’s such a pleasant one that it seems churlish to even point this out. In that dramatic vein, the show’s depiction of Nate is more compelling than I might have anticipate­d. The series has never been particular­ly interested in validating the man-child archetype, but it is interested in how insecurity can manifest itself into toxic behavior and Nate is the epitome of that.

This may be the final season for the show and there’s a silent question dangling over all of the Nate scenes: Is “Ted Lasso” the kind of series to end on what would probably be a more realistic note, with Nate doubling down on his worst impulses? I suspect not, but it would be a radical choice.

“Brevity is nice, but sometimes clarity is the true soul of wit,” someone says. Time will tell if the show’s third season follows suit.

How to watch:

 ?? APPLE TV+ ?? Nick Mohammed as Nate, from left, Anthony Head as Rupert, and Jason Sudeikis as Ted in “Ted Lasso.”
APPLE TV+ Nick Mohammed as Nate, from left, Anthony Head as Rupert, and Jason Sudeikis as Ted in “Ted Lasso.”

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