Results may have waned, fans may have turned and the hamstrings of his centre backs may have been torn to tatters, but through it all, Ange Postecoglou has always had a brilliant turn of phrase.
This is the self-styled âold man shouting at cloudsâ whose criticism of VAR turned into existential questions about the character of human beings as a species en masse. âEvery time Iâve seen the light at the end of the tunnel, itâs usually been an oncoming train,â Postecoglou memorably lamented towards the end of his doomed tenure at Tottenham Hotspur.
Despite Europa League glory, Postecoglou couldnât find a way off the tracks. A year and a half on from his divisive sacking, the coach turned his rapier wit onto his former employers during a deliciously embittered appearance on The Overlap.
Thomas Frank Was Always Doomed
Any interview with Postecoglou is usually entertainingâfor everyone who isnât asking the questionsâbut Gary Neville and his cabal of cackling cohorts lucked out when the news of Thomas Frankâs sacking broke on the morning of recording.
Naturally, this was the first topic of conversation. Postecoglou admitted it was âtoughâ for Frank, who âcanât be the only issue at the club,â but effectively warned that his dismissal was in the post from the start of the season.
Long-serving Spurs chairman Daniel Levy, the driving force behind the club for the past two decades, left his position of direct influence a matter of weeks into the season. In the eyes of Postecoglou, Tottenham have not stopped reeling from this upheaval.
âItâs made a major pivot at the end of last year, not just with me, but with Daniel [Levy] leaving as well,â he reflected. âTheyâve had world class managers there. They havenât had success. And for what reason? What was the reason for such a major pivot? Thomas is walking but whatâs his objective? Whatâs the clubâs objective?â
Postecoglou dismissed Tottenhamâs public goal of competing on all fronts and questioned whether Frank demonstrated complicit naïvety when taking the job: âDid Thomas Frank know that he was walking into that? I donât know.â
What Frank was walking into, for Postecoglou, is a club dealing with an identity crisis.
Tottenham Are âNot a Big Clubâ
The main crux of Postecoglouâs interview was a topic that has tormented fans for years. Spurs have the infrastructure and revenue figures of a âbig club,â but they donât act like one.
âObviously, theyâve built an unbelievable stadium, unbelievable training facilities. But when you look at the expenditure, particularly in the wage structure, theyâre not a big club,â Postecoglou bluntly outlined.
According to the latest published accounts for the 2024â25 season, which Postecoglou oversaw, Spurs boast the fifth-largest revenue of any Premier League team, outstripping Chelsea. Yet, they tallied the seventh-highest wage bill in the division over the same time period.
Postecoglouâs argument was that these funds were not invested in the talents supposedly befitting a big club: âI saw that, because when we were trying to sign players, we werenât in the market for those players.â
Postecoglouâs Failed Transfer Targets
Tottenham were perennially accused of overt caution in the transfer market under Levyâa reputation which extends to the new-look regime if Cristian Romeroâs social media posts are anything to go by. Yet, during Postecoglouâs two seasons at the helm (2023â25), Tottenham recorded the largest net spend of any Premier League club. The issue for the outspoken Australian was the identity of these individuals, rather than the cost.
âAt the end of my first year, when we finished fifth, for me, O.K., how do you go from fifth to really challenging? Well, we had to sign Premier League-leading players,â Postecoglou argued.
âBut finishing fifth that year didnât get us Champions League, we didnât have the money. So we ended up signing Dom Solanke,â Postecoglou fretted when looking back on the clubâs record arrival. In fairness to the striker, Postecoglou was âreally keen on himâ and âreally liked himâ but had a lower opinion of the âthree teenagers.â
Spurs splashed around £135 million ($184.2 million) in the summer of 2024 alone, adding Archie Gray (then 18), Wilson Odobert (19) and Lucas Bergvall (18) as well as Solanke. Postecoglou had more experienced targetsâwho just so happened to go to be signed by and impress for elite Premier League clubs.
âI was looking at Pedro Neto, [Bryan] Mbeumo and [Antoine] Semenyo at the time, Marc Guéhi, because I said we need ... If weâre going to go from fifth to there, thatâs what the other big clubs would do in that moment,â Postecoglou declared, using the full breadth and width of the power of hindsight.
Postecoglouâs Missed Targets
âAnd those three teenagers are outstanding young players,â he added, unconvincingly. âBrilliant young players. I think theyâll be great players for Tottenham, but theyâre not going to get you from fifth to fourth but whatâs coming out from the club is, âWeâre a club that can compete on all fronts.ââ
â'I still felt Tottenham as a club were saying, âWeâre one of the big boysâ and the reality is I donât think they are in terms of my experience,â Postecoglou added, before turning to the direct comparison which no Spurs fan ever wants.
âWhen Arsenal need players theyâll spend £100 million on Declan Rice, I donât see Tottenham doing that,â he pointed out. âNot just my history, even predating me. A lot of that was, âO.K. weâre building a stadiumâ so obviously finances were a challenge.â
âWhen was the last time Tottenham really signed somebody who you go, wow?â was Postecoglouâs glaring takeaway.
Spursiness Is Real
Jamie Carragher, never one to miss the chance to twist the knife, drilled into the topic of âSpursiness,â that subconscious trait of lacking belief which has so often been levelled at the club over the past two decades. Postecoglou confirmed all the outside noise.
â100% there is, absolutely and that was the thing I was trying to break and my whole statement about winning things in the second year, I was doing that for the club because nobody internally would dare say that, they were just scared,â he insisted.
âThen you break that by winning something and what do you do? You tear it all up and you start again. Thatâs the curiosity, what are you trying to achieve?â
Postecoglou turned to one moment on the day of last yearâs Europa League final, which proved to be the setting for Tottenhamâs first trophy win since 2008. Daniel Levy came into the team hotel and let the weight of history seep out of him onto Postecoglou. âThe only thing he said to meâwhich was bizarre as a motivational pointâwas something like, âYou know what, Iâve been in seven finals or semi-finals and we havenât won one,ââ the former manager recalled in disbelief.
âI know why he said that, because of that [Spursiness], so thatâs what Iâm saying.â
The Real Cause of Tottenhamâs Downfall
As Postecoglou was at pains to point, Tottenhamâs neuroses existed long before his tumultuous two-year reign. Yet the club never sunk to the depths of the relegation battles they are currently fighting. Postecoglouâs diagnosis was simple: It all comes back to Harry Kane.
âPeople underestimate the role Harry played over the past 10 years,â Postecoglou pointed out when looking back on the clubâs all-time top scorer, who left Spurs for Bayern Munich in the same summer the 60-year-old was appointed. âHeâs unbelievable. I only worked with him for a couple of months, but he is the best player I have witnessed close up in my whole career.
âWe played the last friendly game and I was still hoping against hope he would stay and he scored four goals.
âWe played Shakhtar, the next week were playing Brentford and I know heâs not going to be there. And itâs not like he leaves and we go and sign Erling Haaland.â
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