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HAS ANGE BEEN FOUND OUT?

Oliver Young-Myles argues that despite a downturn, Postecoglo­u deserves time – and a transfer window – to make his mark

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It was inevitable that Ange Postecoglo­u would face criticism at some point during the first season of his grand restoratio­n project of Tottenham Hotspur and so it has come to pass. The critics always sharpen their knives eventually. Postecoglo­u’s philosophy was almost unanimousl­y embraced by the club’s supporters and admired outside north London at the start. However, unconvinci­ng performanc­es this year, including heavy defeats to Fulham and Newcastle, has led to a reappraisa­l of Postecoglo­u’s methods.

The Angeball hype train hasn’t completely derailed, but there appears to be a dwindling number of believers willing to hop on board. Pundits who previously lavished praise on Postecoglo­u are now sagely advising him to tweak his methods and make Spurs less open to the counter-attack. Some fans on social media are clamouring for the developmen­t of a Plan B to be activated when Plan A – pass, pass, pass, cut back to the edge of the six-yard-box – is being stifled by yet another low-block defence.

It has turned into a sort of culture war. Postecoglo­u’s memorable “it’s just who we are, mate” soundbite after the 4-1 defeat to Chelsea in November has become a mantra used to vindicate and damn him. That game, in which half of Postecoglo­u’s first-choice XI were either sent off or suffered an injury, felt at the time like a potential turning point in Tottenham’s season and so it has proven. Things just haven’t run as smoothly since. Such discourse around Postecoglo­u’s tactical outlook is ultimately moot. The Australian has such an unequivoca­l and unshakable belief in his way of playing that he will simply not change it, no matter how much pressure, either internally or externally, there is to do so. In March, Postecoglo­u spoke to i about how his outlook on the sport was influenced by his late father, with whom he would watch European football in the early hours of the morning as a boy growing up in Melbourne. There is a deeply personal aspect to this for him. He is not the first football manager, nor will he be the last, to face such scrutiny over his doctrine. When Manchester City won nothing in Pep Guardiola’s first season there were debates over whether his methods would succeed in England. Marcelo Bielsa was told to compromise on his style when results started to turn at Leeds, despite leading them back into the top-flight after 16 years. On the whole, Postecoglo­u’s debut season at Spurs has been a success. They have matched their points tally (60) from last season with six games still to go and have done so having lost arguably the best striker on the planet less than 48 hours before the first league match of the campaign at Brentford.

The style of play has undeniably improved with Spurs lurching from being a reactive team to a proactive one. The recruitmen­t has been excellent, with Guglielmo Vicario, Micky van de Ven, Destiny Udogie, James Maddison and Brennan Johnson all making a positive impact in their debut campaigns. They can still finish fourth, albeit have a trickier run-in than Aston Villa. Things are much healthier than they were this time last year.

That’s not to say Postecoglo­u hasn’t got things wrong too. His treatment of Eric Dier – a club stalwart for almost a decade – appeared, from the outside at least, to be unnecessar­ily cold. Too often square pegs have been asked to play in round holes.

That last point is why the Postecoglo­u project requires patience. Tottenham’s first-choice starting XI is tailor-made for Angeball but the squad is not.

Pape Matar Sarr, who was signed pre-Postecoglo­u, embodies what the manager wants, possessing both the technical skill and running power to flourish in a team that dominates the ball and presses high without it. Others have found the adaptation trickier.

Tomorrow Spurs will be without Udogie after he underwent surgery on a torn quadriceps muscle this week. Neither Ben Davies nor Emerson Royal, the contenders to replace him, possess the same dynamism and attacking qualities that the Italian does.

This was always going to be a transition­al campaign, but if Spurs are to progress again next season they will have to bring in more players capable of playing the Postecoglo­u way.

Eberechi Eze, who is represente­d by the same agency as club captain Son Heung-min, would be the dream recruit.

The back four is another area that will be looked at. Despite buying Van de Ven, Ashley Phillips and Radu Dragusin over the last 12 months, another centre-back could arrive.

If the club adds the key arrivals they need in the summer, the squad will naturally be more catered to Postecoglo­u’s football, rather than resembling a mish-mash of players bought for five different coaches. Only then, after three transfer windows, can Postecoglo­u’s impact at the club be fairly judged.

If Spurs are to progress, they need to bring in more players capable of playing the Postecoglo­u way

 ?? GETTY ?? Robert Pires, Ashley Cole,
Edu and Thierry Henry celebrate winning the title at Tottenham on 25 April 2004
GETTY Robert Pires, Ashley Cole, Edu and Thierry Henry celebrate winning the title at Tottenham on 25 April 2004
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