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hyeok and Will Lankshear shine on loan as Pep Guardiola praises Donley and Keeley

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Tottenham have an even larger group of players out on loan now all trying to make their mark across the English game and in Europe.

Ange Postecoglou could have done with some of his players back during this spell with such a threadbare Spurs squad but some had no recall clauses and it was decided that others were better off continuing their development with regular football at their loan clubs this season.

A couple of further players headed out on loan before the winter transfer window closed while Dane Scarlett returned from his spell at Oxford United.

Here's how the club's 13 loan players, plus Luka Vuskovic who will join Tottenham in the summer, have got on over the past week.

Yang Min-hyeok (QPR)

Yang Min-hyeok made his second appearance in England on Tuesday night as he came on for the final 24 minutes of QPR's 2-1 win in the Championship at home against Blackburn. That followed up the 14 minutes he got three days before in the 2-1 defeat at Millwall.

The 18-year-old will be hoping for further minutes on Tuesday night when Rangers make their way to Coventry and he impressed in his latest game.

West London Sport handed Yang a six after his performance against Blackburn with the review: "Lively after coming on for his home debut."

Will Lankshear (West Bromwich Albion)

Will Lankshear also earned the plaudits after he made his debut in the Championship for West Bromwich Albion in their 2-1 victory at home against Sheffield Wednesday on Saturday.

The 19-year-old striker earned plenty of praise for his 23 minutes on the pitch from the Express and Star, who gave him a rating of seven with the glowing first review: "A really encouraging debut from the Tottenham loan teenager. Looks a proper physical unit and knows how to handle himself. Involved in opener."

Jamie Donley and Josh Keeley (Leyton Orient)

The Jamie Donley and Josh Keeley Show at Leyton Orient took to the FA Cup stage on Saturday against Manchester City.

Donley forced a remarkable own goal from Stefan Ortega when his 50-yard effort hit the crossbar and bounced in off the goalkeeper to give Pep Guardiola's team a big scare.

"What a goal!" said Guardiola of the 20-year-old's strike. "So assured. When you concede this goal, you can only congratulate the guy. He's an incredible left-footed player and scored a fantastic goal."

Goalkeeper Keeley, who scored a late equaliser earlier in the competition against Oldham Athletic, also played his part on the day and it was only in the second half when Abdukodir Khusanov and Kevin de Bruyne won it for the Premier League champions.

"We were lucky at the end because they had chances, but we created a lot, their keeper was really, really good and it was a tight game," said Guardiola of the Spurs stopper.

Orient boss Richie Wellens added: "Josh was class and he’s been brilliant. I think 75 per cent of his performances have been clean-sheets. He’s got good character for a young kid and he’ll only go on and develop potentially into a top-level Premier League goalkeeper if he keeps his feet on the ground."

Bryan Gil (Girona)

Bryan Gil got 67 minutes in Girona's 3-0 defeat at Athletic Bilbao on Sunday in La Liga.

It meant that the 23-year-old has got plenty of game time back home in Spain and has racked up 1.970 minutes to his name and scored four goals and registered three assists in his 28 matches in the Spanish top flight.

Next up Gil and Girona welcome Getafe on Friday night.

Manor Solomon (Leeds United)

Manor Solomon grabbed another assist as Leeds won 2-0 at Coventry in the Championship on Wednesday evening but was also involved from the bench as they exited the FA Cup at Elland Road against Millwall on Saturday.

He still got praise for his substitution performance with a seven in Leeds Live's player ratings with the review: "Was the liveliest of the initial trip that came on and cause Millwall to think more. In fact, was the most exciting winger all day for Leeds."

That means the 25-year-old has now registered six goal involvements in his past six matches with three goals and three assists. In all Solomon has managed six goals and seven assists across his 26 matches for the Elland Road club.

Alfie Devine and Luka Vuskovic (Westerlo)

Alfie Devine and Luka Vuskovic had mostly watching roles as Westerlo won 4-2 at home against Standard Liege.

Devine came on for the final 24 minutes of the victory and defender Vuskovic was unable to play after picking up a suspension through an accumulation of yellow cards.

It was the second suspension of the season for the 17-year-old after his ban for a red card against STVV for his angry reaction after the final whistle. Vuskovic was handed a one-match ban, two-match suspended sentence and a €2,000 (£1,690) fine following that dismissal.

Alejo Veliz (Espanyol)

Alejo Veliz is on a little run of getting game time at Espanyol and he was brought on at half-time during Sunday's 2-1 defeat at Real Sociedad.

The striker was unable to help his loan club take away a point but he is building up the minutes and the experience.

The 21-year-old now has 21 appearances to his name with four goals, including a Copa del Rey hat-trick, and he has got 1,114 minutes under his belt.

Alfie Dorrington (Aberdeen)

Alfie Dorrington made his full Aberdeen debut with a 90-minute display in their 2-0 defeat at Hibernian last weekend and followed that up with 22 minutes from the bench in the 3-0 Scottish FA Cup victory at home against Dunfermline on Sunday.

It's all senior experience for the 19-year-old centre-back, who made his Premier League debut this season for Spurs at Southampton. He now has four appearances under his belt for Aberdeen.

Ashley Phillips (Stoke City)

Ashley Phillips was left on the bench for Stoke's FA Cup tie at home against Cardiff on Saturday and could only watch on as his team lost 7-5 on penalties at the bet365 Stadium.

The 19-year-old has been a near ever-present at the back for Stoke and they missed him at the back during a goal-fest that ended 3-3 after normal time.

George Abbott (Notts County)

George Abbott continues to get 90 minutes aplenty under his belt as Notts County won 2-0 at home against Morecambe on Saturday.

The 19-year-old has four goals and four assists to his name in his 26 appearances for the Magpies this season and has been making a big impression on his first loan.

Matthew Craig (Mansfield Town)

After making his debut for Mansfield last month, Matthew Craig has not played since that day for his new loan club.

Nigel Clough explained this week that the 21-year-old has a back problem that "has not progressed as much as we'd like" and he's still getting pain despite a clear scan, with no return date yet set.

That means Craig will miss a reunion with Donley and Perry as Mansfield take on Orient in League One on Tuesday night.

Luca Gunter (Wealdstone)

Nineteen-year-old goalkeeper Luca Gunter has been taking his first steps into senior football and had to pick the ball out of the net four times as Wealdstone lost 4-0 at home to Gateshead on Saturday.

The teenager has made four National League appearances so far and will be looking for plenty more minutes in the remainder of his loan spell.

Listen to the latest episode of Gold & Guest Talk Tottenham by clicking here for in-depth Spurs chat on your preferred podcast platform.

Kendrick Lamar and SZA to play Tottenham Hotspur Stadium after Super Bowl LIX half-time performance

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Following their Super Bowl LIX half-time show performance, US artists Kendrick Lamar and SZA have announced UK summer dates for their 'Grand National Tour' with the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium on the list.

As part of Tottenham's £1bn project to build themselves a new stadium by 2019, they also opened avenues for new economies to enter the area. The most high-profile were NFL matches amongst other sports, but also six concerts are permitted to be held per year.

Global musicians Guns N' Roses, Beyonce and Lady Gaga have previously performed at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium. Now set to follow them are two more modern musical icons.

A press release states: "Fresh off a spectacular performance during the half-time show at Super Bowl LIX, hip-hop icon Kendrick Lamar and R&B star SZA have announced a one-off show at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium on Tuesday July 22, 2025, as part of their Grand National Tour.

"Known for his complex lyricism and socially conscious themes, Kendrick Lamar is considered one of the greatest rappers of all time. His track 'Not Like Us' recently became the most decorated song in Grammy Awards history by sweeping all five of its nominations at the 2025 Awards.

"SZA has been a globally renowned name in the R&B world since the success of her debut album Ctrl. She also picked up a Grammy this year after her track 'Saturn' was recognised in the 'Best R&B song' category."

Lamar was also the headline act of the Super Bowl on Sunday, won 40-22 by Philadelphia Eagles vs Kansas City Chiefs, at Caesars Superdome in New Orleans, Louisiana, in front of 103,000 live spectators and a further 120 million expected viewers on TV.

SZA was his guest to perform whilst actor Samuel Jackson and tennis icon Serena Williams made surprise appearances during their set.

Now Lamar and SZA are set to embark on their 'Grand National Tour' beginning in the US and Canada before coming to Europe. Before reaching the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium they will play at Glasgow's Hampden Park, Birmingham's Villa Park and Cardiff's Principality Stadium.

For the gig in the capital, Tottenham season ticket holders, members and local residents will be able to purchase tickets in a priority access sale on Wednesday, February 12 between 9am and 11:59pm.

General sale will then open to the wider public on Friday, February 14 at 9am.

The Tottenham warrior Ange Postecoglou needs most is about to return amid Son Heung

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The return of Tottenham's injured players cannot come soon enough for Ange Postecoglou. Knocked out of the FA Cup on Sunday evening at Aston Villa, the 59-year-old acknowledged his "respect and admiration" for his small group of players who have played every game without a break in the space of two-and-a-half months.

The players in question will have a break of sorts over the coming days as Tottenham have a rare week without a midweek fixture. Taking on Manchester United in the Premier League on Sunday evening, the hope will be that Postecoglou has some additional players to choose from with some nearing their return.

It's not only an injury boost the boss requires right now, though, as he also needs leaders on his pitch who can help guide Tottenham through a tricky patch to brighter days. There was a real lack of leadership in last week's cup defeats against Liverpool and Aston Villa, with Son Heung-min's role as captain questioned by many as a result.

Amid those questions over whether Son is the right man for the job or not, Spurs need their other senior players to step up and be counted at a time when they are fielding an extremely young XI. The upcoming returns of vice-captains Cristian Romero and James Maddison could possibly help matters on the pitch, but it may be Guglielmo Vicario's comeback from injury that proves key.

Spurs have had to do without the Italian since the end of November after injuring his ankle in the 4-0 win over Manchester City and he has been missed. As well as Antonin Kinsky has done in goal for Tottenham other than his early error at Aston Villa on Sunday evening, the leadership qualities that Vicario brings have been dearly lacking.

Joining from Empoli in the summer of 2023, the shot-stopper has made a real impression both on and off the pitch. Vicario is a warrior and his winning mentality is exactly what this Tottenham team miss right now.

Some may question the role of a leader in goal but Hugo Lloris' leadership qualities on the pitch all became clear during lockdown when games were played behind closed doors. The Frenchman could be heard bellowing at his teammates non-stop and it soon became evident why he was the man with the armband.

Vicario does likewise through Tottenham games, with the Italian's dressing down of teenager Lucas Bergvall a talking point in the final few minutes of the team's draw with Leicester City on the opening weekend of the season. He is clearly not afraid to speak his mind and let his teammates know if something is not right.

Back in December, the 28-year-old was all action on the touchline as Tottenham held on to beat Manchester United in the quarter-finals of the Carabao Cup. Speaking to the media the following day when previewing the Liverpool home fixture, Postecoglou opened up on Vicario and pointed to his leadership qualities.

"He's going well, typical of Vic, he's pushing every boundary," said the Australian. "Obviously, he's still a fair bit away, but whatever timeline that is, he will make sure he's back as quickly as possible.

"He's still very much around the group. We saw him last night, he's also training every day. He's so invested in what we're doing, helping the keepers, helping the whole group. He's one of the leaders and, yes, he's progressing well."

Earlier in the season, Postecoglou explained exactly why he had added Vicario to Tottenham's leadership group. He said: "Criticism is just part of the nature of football these days. We have had a few under the spotlight. I included him the leadership [group] this year I have just seen his growth. He is one of those guys who is really positive. He comes in everyday wanting to work, he comes in on his days off wanting to work.

"He is a great example for everyone and a great human being as well. I thought he could add something to our leadership group. It's great for him to get the armband last night [vs Qarabag] and I thought he rose to the occasion. He was big for us.

"He hasn't had to make too many big saves in the first few games for us but we needed him for a couple last night and he was great."

Kinsky has performed well in goal since his move from Slavia Prague but the return of Vicario could add something different to this Tottenham team. They certainly need it if they are going to arrest their current run of form and finish the season on a high.

Vicario's return could possibly come against Manchester United on Sunday evening if Postecoglou's injury update prior to the Brentford game is anything to go by. The Australian mentioned that it could be "around 10 days time" when players such as Vicario, Destiny Udogie, Wilson Odobert, Brennan Johnson and Timo Werner make their comeback, something Spurs really need right now after playing so much football with very few numbers of late.

As vital as it is that Tottenham receive a much-needed squad boost going on their form, they also need a leadership boost from their returning players. Vicario can help give them that.

Listen to the latest episode of Gold & Guest Talk Tottenham by clicking here forin-depth Spurs chat on your preferred podcast platform.

Arsenal braced for transfer battle as Tottenham send scouts to watch £43m striker

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Arsenal and Tottenham Hotspur are reportedly set to go head-to-head to sign one of the most in-form strikers across Europe.

The January transfer window saw quite different outcomes for both the Gunners and Spurs. Arsenal did not sign a single player before the deadline, while Tottenham completed four signings in what proved to be a busy window for Ange Postecoglou and Co.

Antonin Kinsky, Mathys Tel (loan), Kevin Danso and Yang Min-hyeok were all signed by Tottenham, with the latter going on to join Queens Park Rangers on loan. Now it seems that Spurs will battle their North London rivals for one of their next transfers - if reports are to be believed.

Italian news outlet Tuttosport has reported that Arsenal and Tottenham are showing an interest in signing Fiorentina striker Moise Kean. The forward is reported to have a €52million (£43.3million) release clause in his contract with the Serie A club, which has apparently alerted the Premier League duo.

It has been claimed that Tottenham will send scouts to watch Kean in action for Fiorentina against Inter Milan at the San Siro on Monday night in Serie A. Kean has 19 goals in 28 appearances this season for La Viola, which has seen the striker linked with a big-money move in the summer.

Fiorentina signed Kean from Juventus last summer in a deal reportedly worth €18million (£15million) including add-ons. The 24-year-old is now being linked with a return to the Premier League just 18 months after he completed a permanent exit from Everton.

The Toffees first signed Kean from Juventus in 2019, going on to score just four goals in 29 appearances across his five years at Goodison Park. After loan spells at Paris Saint-Germain and Juve, Keane returned to Turin on a permanent and is now with Fiorentina and second in the Serie A Golden Boot standings with 15 goals, behind only Atalanta star Mateo Retegui (20).

Tottenham sent new Ange Postecoglou sack verdict after Aston Villa FA Cup defeat

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Ange Postecoglou has come out swinging for his team after Tottenham were knocked out of the two domestic cups in one week, piling more misery on an ailing side. But nevertheless, some Spurs fans in the football.londoncomments section say that any possibility of relieving Postecoglou of his duties at this stage wouldn't do anyone any good.

Hope for a place in the Carabao Cup final in March were dashed in the midweek as Liverpool brutally overturned a first-leg defeat to go through. FA Cup progression was halted at the weekend by Aston Villa, leaving the Europa League as the club's last chance to bet everything on silverware this season.

The club have thrown their lot in with Ange Postecoglou, continuing to back him through the January transfer window amid morale-sapping results. The pressure on Postecoglou remains from some supporters and pundits, but fingers have pointed elsewhere too, such as at injuries, transfer activity, and club chairman Daniel Levy.

Some football.london readers say it is better to endure the rough times, with light on the horizon regarding those injuries. Reader Ragmopp says: "Anyone who thinks we're going to get someone better in that role right now, with Levy in charge, is the one who is completely deluded. With proper support and better luck around injuries, Spurs would be top half of the table, at least.

"Dump Levy and give him a season of full support. Sack him only after that happens. Ange is the best thing to happen to this club since Poch, but I'm sure the same sad sacks were calling for his head before Levy as well…"

Marlon1 writes: "I can literally hear the Ange Out brigade frothing at the mouth with vindication! I really hope this match didn’t convert anyone.

"The squad consisted of a front 3 with 2 teenagers and a captain who’s forgotten how to play football, a patched up defence and NOTHING off the bench. Low in confidence, low on energy, low on belief and away from home against a top side (who we actually destroyed with our full team. Twice!!)

"Look, do you really think a better situation is to let Ryan Mason take charge when all our players come back from injury and just have two competitions to focus on (Europa league is very winnable)? Of course it’s not! Nor would I want another manager to reap those rewards! That’s utterly ridiculous and also very unfair! I personally hope Ange can get the results in time, starting with Utd, to change peoples' perception of him, the chance to prove them wrong!"

Sonofason says: "What difference does it make, is a new manager going to un-injure a dozen senior players? Is he going to find a way to get Levy to change his ways? 2 starters today have been with the club less than a week, because Levy waited until February to address the injury crisis. Honey, missing out is good, the last thing this club needs is more games!"

Ric4ever writes: "Whilst sharing the hurt & frustration, this is not the time to panic. We need cool heads & strong nerves to save the day. If we are to avoid the boredom & doldrums of the previous 5 years then the only realistic way is Ange! When the troops are back we can still have a decent close to the season. The potential is still enormous - hopefully DL is with us & will shell out during the summer."

Commenter Harry Hotspur is less rosy on Ange's defence of his squad: "I certainly sympathise with the players. However, it will take at least a month before most of the injured brigade are back and match fit, in which time Kulusevski and co. will still have to carry on. Ange’s argument would carry a lot more weight if we hadn’t drawn at Leicester and lost at Palace and Brighton, for example, with virtually full strength sides. Methinks he doth protesteth too much, mate."

Petemunsey says: "Every club has injuries, Villa almost as many as us. And yet they make due. It’s tiresome that this is his one defence always. Never admits to getting it wrong tactically."

word message to Daniel Levy amid Tottenham sack talk

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The competitions are slowly ebbing away from Ange Postecoglou as he looks to come good on his promise of winning silverware in his second season at Tottenham Hotspur.

The Australian doubled down on his message that he "usually wins things" in his second season after the defeat to Arsenal in September by saying: "I'll correct myself - I don't usually win things, I always win things in my second year. Nothing's changed."

Spurs were knocked out of the Carabao Cup in meek circumstances on Thursday night, losing 4-0 on the night to Liverpool and 4-1 on aggregate. They followed that up with a 2-1 defeat in the FA Cup fourth round to Aston Villa on Sunday.

Now, all that is left, given the Lilywhites are 14th in the Premier League and 29 points off the top, is the Europa League, with Tottenham already qualified for the last 16. By the time that last 16 encounter comes along Spurs should be clear of their horrendous injury issues. That will be a time to really judge the players.

The players, and Postecoglou himself, are being judged now though. And the head coach delivered a passionate speech following defeat at Villa Park, defending his players to the hilt.

"People can judge me. They can say I've done a bad job, I'm not up to it or whatever. That's fine. What I'm saying is you can't be critical of players or players' performances at this time. Because if you do, then do that with everyone else. Be as critical of other clubs when they've got 9 or 10 or 11 players out. And none of them have, and have to play every week. And not for one game. I'm not just saying we had to do this today. We've been doing this since the middle of November and you can't judge performances of these players and critique them on what they've done.

"All they've done is given all they can and that's all you can ask for. Me, that's not of interest to me. My responsibility at this football club is this group of players and this team, to get them to play in the manner I want them to and bring us success. Whether people think I can do that or not, that's for others to judge. But there's got to be a better appreciation for what a very small group of players have been doing for the last two and a half months. It can't be that people think that's an excuse. That's just not anywhere near close to objective analysis. That's just agenda driven stuff. If it's to get rid of me that's fine, good on you, go for it a million times. But in terms of this group of players, what they've given over the past two and half months has been outstanding, it's a credit to them, I can't speak highly enough of them.

"I don't know how else to explain it. I don't know how else to explain it if you can't see that this team is just trying to play its hardest in the most extreme of circumstances. Two and a half months of asking 18-year-olds and 17-year-olds and senior players, with no rest, to play Thursday, Sunday, Thursday, Sunday, Thursday, Sunday, Thursday, Sunday.

"Do you think they can press like [we would]. If we hadn't played Thursday night and I hadn't rotated that team do you think we wouldn't have been pressing aggressively today?

"Of course they're not playing anywhere near the levels that we want or expect, but that's not because they're not trying. It's because they can't. I think this group of players once we get the rest of the group in, will be an outstanding team. I have no doubt about that."

There are two words in that final quote that are a clear message to chairman Daniel Levy. "They can't." The players Postecoglou currently has at his disposal simply cannot continue to give what they're giving week in and week out. That has been clear for months now.

The strength in depth was a problem last season, after Spurs went 10 games unbeaten at the start of the season and then saw things start to unravel when injuries started to occur.

This were supposed to improve this season with additions to the squad in the summer transfer window. But instead of giving Postecoglou first-team ready players, Levy handed the boss teenagers in the form of Wilson Odobert, Archie Gray and Lucas Bergvall - with Dominic Solanke the only senior signing (if you exclude Timo Werner extending his loan spell for another season).

Those teenagers have actually shone in the first team, getting more minutes than they would have expected, and in the case of Gray, in positions he is not accustomed to. The senior players have been the ones to let Spurs down more than anything, although many, like Pedro Porro, like Son Heung-min, like Dejan Kulusevski are being asked to play every single minute of every single game.

It is not sustainable and the injury problems are well-documented and an extenuating circumstance. But it feels like Spurs have been in transition for years and there has to come a point when the club step up and spend some money to back a manager. It feels like that time is now, whatever the situation.

Ange Postecoglou's Tottenham training plan laid out as rare opportunity arises ahead of Man Utd

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Ange Postecoglou and Tottenham have the luxury of a rare midweek without a game. Having to contend with a hectic schedule since September due to their European and domestic cup commitments, Spurs now have a free midweek slot for the first time since the turn of the year.

It is very much a rarity for the north London club this campaign and it is something they have to try and make full use of before the games start to pile up once again. Going so long without a free midweek slot, it is a case of London buses for Tottenham as two come around together as their top-eight Europa League finish means they also go without a midweek game next week.

Tottenham were on the losing side on Sunday evening as they were knocked out of the FA Cup by Aston Villa following a 2-1 defeat in the Midlands. Speaking after the game, Postecoglou was asked what he and his players will be doing with their free midweek.

"I'm just going to keep on working like I have," he admitted. "The ones who have been playing we've got to give them some time off. We've got the early part of the week and we'll give them some time off.

"The boys who are coming back, we'll get the opportunity to give them a whole week of training which is great. So come Tuesday we should have three or four who have been missing, we can give them a full week of training instead of a couple of sessions and then throwing them in.

"By the time we get to the back end of the week we should have something resembling a squad of players to prepare for a big game. That then folds into the following week when again we've got seven days and no midweek game to prepare for the next game.

"So that gives us a real good opportunity to get some work into the guys who have been out for quite a while and give some rest to the guys who have been going at it. So by the time we get back to being in Europe and having midweek games we'll be in a much better shape."

Tottenham's next fixture sees Manchester United make the trip to Tottenham Hotspur Stadium on Sunday evening. So what exactly will be on Postecoglou's to-do list this week? football.london takes a look below.

Reintegrate injured players

Postecoglou mentioned in his press conference on Friday morning that Spurs are hopeful they will have "at least two, maybe three" players back for the Manchester United game. Injuries have hit Tottenham hard over the course of the season and they are desperate for a boost on the injury front with their form so mixed.

As Tottenham remarkably have the luxury of two free midweeks without a game after such a packed calendar since September, those nearing their return will have the opportunity to build up their fitness before the whole squad comes together to prepare for the Manchester United match. It is something Postecoglou and his coaching team will be keeping a very close eye on over the coming days as a squad boost could make all the difference to their results on the pitch.

Rest days

As Postecoglou stated in his post-match press conference on Sunday evening, those who have been playing relentlessly over the past couple of months will be given some time off to recover. Tottenham's schedule has been unforgiving since September, with a real lack of depth due to injury causing them major issues.

Players have been pushed to the limit and the boss has been unable to give them a rest when they have required it. The free midweek slots over the next two weeks are exactly what the squad need before the midweek games return from the end of February onwards.

Devise Manchester United plan

Tottenham go into Sunday's game against Manchester United two points behind their opponents after 24 games of the Premier League season. They have the opportunity to leapfrog United in the standings and also record a treble over them this campaign.

Victorious at Old Trafford in September with a convincing 3-0 win, Spurs then beat Ruben Amorim's side 4-3 in December in the quarter finals of the FA Cup. Tottenham have had the upper hand over the Red Devils this campaign and they will be looking to keep it that way.

Postecoglou's previous plans against Manchester United have worked and it may be a case of more of the same as they attempt to back up their victory over Brentford last time out in the league. Spurs have sufficient time to finetune their plan and hopefully it results in another victory.

Danso and Tel opportunity

A rare week without a midweek game will give Postecoglou's squad the opportunity to rest and recuperate after such a busy schedule of late. These free midweeks don't come around very often for Spurs and they need to take full advantage of it because it won't be long until the calendar features fixtures every three of four days.

The week will allow new signings Kevin Danso and Mathys Tel sufficient time to get used to Postecoglou's philosophy and demands as time on the training ground was in short supply last week. Both players want to make a fast start to life in the capital and a decent amount of time on the training pitch over the next fortnight with Postecoglou and their new teammates can help them do just that.

Make midfield call

Amid the amount of injuries Spurs have to deal with at present, they do look rather strong in midfield numbers with the vast majority of the players available for selection. Although James Maddison has played no part for the team since the Europa League win over Hoffenheim, Postecoglou has had Rodrigo Bentancur, Pape Matar Sarr, Yves Bissouma and Lucas Bergvall available to him.

The trio of Bentancur, Bissouma and Sarr did not work at Anfield in midweek, with the boss opting for Bentancur, Bergvall and Dejan Kulusevski against Aston Villa on Sunday evening. However, that area of the pitch once again proved problematic as Villa cut through them time and time again with ease in the first half.

Midfield was Tottenham's strength in the first few months of Postecoglou's tenure but it would later turn into a weakness due to the amount of chopping and changing that had to take place due to a variety of different issues. The boss has to try and find his best midfield formula for the remainder of the season, ideally ahead of Sunday's Manchester United showdown.

Listen to the latest episode of Gold & Guest Talk Tottenham by clicking here for in-depth Spurs chat on your preferred podcast platform.

Daniel Levy's cruel Ange Postecoglou decision and Tottenham's big reset

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This was probably the most passionate Ange Postecoglou has been in a post-match press conference as he defended his Tottenham players and indirectly himself.

The Spurs boss had just watched his team exit the FA Cup, bringing an end to seven days on the road that began with a gritty win at Brentford, continued with a desperately disappointing display in Liverpool and then culminated in a tired and open performance at Villa Park.

Three days and two cup competitions exited. Postecoglou and Spurs finally have a group of injured players on the way back but despite initial hopes, none of them were available for this most crucial of weeks.

The remaining beleaguered Tottenham players were left alone to fight it out and again they spluttered to a defeat.

"That’s the timing of things. Just unfortunate for us that we couldn’t get a couple back, we were hoping to get a couple back for this last week and it didn’t happen," said the Australian.

"We could have risked a couple but with what’s ahead we went conservative on that. It is a bit of a reset. We'll get three, maybe four, players back this week, with the possibility of one or two others in the week or two after that.

"More importantly, this group that has been going gets a rest. They can go a whole week now without having to get up for another game. We got back from Liverpool at 2am on Friday, the early hours of the morning. So they can get some rest they desperately need physically and mentally."

When asked how damaging the two cup exits were for him, he did not hesitate in his response.

"It’s not damaging for me, it’s obviously disappointing for us in terms of our objectives, but for two-and-a-half months, this small group of players have given everything in multiple competitions," he said.

"I think they’ve been outstanding. We had 11 first-team players missing today. We started with four teenagers, a 21-year-old goalkeeper coming to one of the best teams in the country, away from home. After playing the best team in the country on Thursday night. After playing a Premier League game last Sunday, playing a Europa game [before that].

"The same group of players. No rotation, and they’ve been doing this since the middle of November. I think they’ve given everything they can and I've got so much respect and admiration for the players and how they’ve gone about that. We get a couple of midweeks off now, great for them to recover. We'll get some players back which is also great for this group that they’ll get some help. And we move on."

Postecoglou is not blameless and Sunday's defeat at Aston Villa showed that not only does his style of football struggle without the energy required to press, hassle and provide constant movement for attacking passing options, but it also requires far more discipline than his open team provided.

His team looked structureless in the first half especially. The midfield were anonymous, constantly caught out of position and failing to protect the defence, leaving a wide swathe of space through the centre of the pitch whenever they lost the ball. That's the kind of meandering display that hands Postecoglou's critics ammunition.

Then there was Pedro Porro. After playing a more successful, restrained game at Brentford behind 17-year-old Mikey Moore, this time either through fault or design, the right-back completely abandoned that solid base behind a youngster who is less likely to track back and put in a challenge.

The Spaniard instead flung himself forward and repeatedly exposed those behind him, leaving huge spaces like the one Villa's Jacob Ramsey ran into and scored just 57 seconds into the contest, albeit with plenty of help from Spurs goalkeeper Antonin Kinsky.

Postecoglou's point though is that any team would struggle if they take out so many of their key players, and he will feel his point was proved by Liverpool exiting the cup on Sunday at bottom of the Championship Plymouth, having also lost at PSV in the Champions League with a much-changed side.

The Spurs boss suggested trying that every three days for almost three months and seeing how the season goes.

"Take a back four of Vicario, Dragusin, Romero, Van de Ven, Udogie, Maddison, Johnson, Solanke, Odobert, Werner (and Richarlison)...take them out of any team... How did Liverpool go today? And they just did that for one game," he said.

"Do that for two-and-a-half months. Any team. Do that for two-and-a-half months in multiple competitions. I don't care about me. People will judge me. But you can't judge this group of players on what's happened. They've given everything, the performance.

"Like I said, two 18-year-olds, a 19-year-old, a 17-year-old, a 21-year-old goalkeeper starting against one of the best teams in the country at home. They've had a week off, they didn't play Thursday night against Liverpool. We did. Same group of players. Not a change. You can't measure this group of players on that and their performance where they're at.

"It's too easy for people to be critical of them. I just have huge admiration and respect for them. We kind of knew this game was going to be the finishing line because we knew what was coming ahead in terms of midweeks off and getting some players back. But they tried their hardest and that's all you can ask."

The problem for Postecoglou is whether chairman Daniel Levy's trigger finger, which gets itchy every 18 months or so on average, will twitch again and prevent him from getting the chance to finally work with the players he's been waiting weeks and in some cases months for.

Much depends on whether the long-serving chairman was reserving his judgement due to Spurs' progress in the cup competitions or because of the worst and prolonged injury crisis the north London club has gone through in recent memory.

There are also few options out there to come in right now and to turn to Ryan Mason for a third time would be an embarrassing admission of failure again for Levy.

There would also be a certain cruelty to denying the Australian the chance in the next couple of games at least to prove whether everything he's been saying is actually true. Giving someone else the chance to helm a bigger, fresher squad after his long wait and suffering is tantamount to football torture.

Postecoglou for his part played it cleverly in his passionate shots fired at pundits and the media in general, praising the players and saying they can't be judged, while indirectly suggesting through that that neither can he.

"I'm not talking about me. People can judge me. They can say I've done a bad job, I'm not up to it or whatever. That's fine," he said. "What I'm saying is you can't be critical of players or players' performances at this time, because if you do, then do that with everyone else.

"Be as critical of other clubs when they've got nine or 10 or 11 players out. And none of them have, and have to play every week. And not for one game. I'm not just saying we had to do this today. We've been doing this since the middle of November and you can't judge performances of these players and critique them on what they've done. All they've done is given all they can and that's all you can ask for."

He added: "Me [and my future], that's not of interest to me. My responsibility at this football club is this group of players and this team, to get them to play in the manner I want them to and bring us success.

"Whether people think I can do that or not, that's for others to judge, but there's got to be a better appreciation for what a very small group of players have been doing for the last two and a half months.

"It can't be that people think that's an excuse. That's just not anywhere near close to objective analysis. That's just agenda driven stuff. If it's to get rid of me that's fine. Good on ya. Go for it a million times. But in terms of this group of players, what they've given over the past two-and-a-half months has been outstanding, it's a credit to them, I can't speak highly enough of them."

It was the strongest attack he's made on the outside world, while protecting his players, keeping them onside and creating the kind of 'them and us' scenario that some of his Tottenham predecessors have used.

Postecoglou knows that not only are many casual observers tiring of him talking about injuries as much as he is, but a growing number of Spurs fans are so despondent at the results that they feel the 59-year-old is turning to those injuries to mask his own struggles.

Some of the frustrated travelling fans at Villa Park sang for Mauricio Pochettino, one of the many previous Levy fall guys who had come the closest to managing to achieve something with a club that nobody has been able to for decades.

More loudly sung was the chairman's name throughout the game, whether during the popular Kulusevski chant or the simple 'we want Levy out' one amid the gallows humour from the supporters about the quality of their own team.

When asked whether he was worried that his team are just not playing the football he wants them to, Postecoglou put his hands to his face and shook his head with an exasperated laugh.

"I don't know how else to explain it," he said before repeating. "I don't know how else to explain it if you can't see that this team is just trying to play its hardest in the most extreme of circumstances.

"Two and a half months of asking 18-year-olds and 17-year-olds and senior players, with no rest, to play Thursday, Sunday, Thursday, Sunday, Thursday, Sunday, Thursday, Sunday. I'll keep going for two-and-a-half months and if you think that is not at all a factor of how this team is performing then there's nothing else I can say. There's nothing else I can explain."

But should some strands of Postecoglou football still be visible?

"No, because they're tired mate. Do you think they can press like [we would]. If we hadn't played Thursday night and I hadn't rotated that team, do you think we wouldn't have been pressing aggressively today? Fair chance, unless you don't think they're human beings?" he asked.

"Unless you're super human and you think no, after playing Liverpool on Thursday night they should be flying tonight. It doesn't happen. They're human beings. Why do you think Liverpool and others rotate 11 players? Why? There's a reason and I wish I could do the same. So you can bring a freshness to the team.

"Of course they're not playing anywhere near the levels that we want or expect, but that's not because they're not trying. It's because they can't. I think this group of players once we get the rest of the group in, will be an outstanding team. I have no doubt about that. Whether other people can't see that, that's of no interest to me.

"If you want to measure anything on what they're doing at the moment, other than the extreme situation they're dealing with then I think your analysis is skewed and it's not objective. That's my opinion."

Postecoglou had battled through this ridiculous stage of the season and it would be a brutal decision from Levy to allow someone else to take the side for the home game against Manchester United next weekend when three or four players are finally set to return.

With what could end up being the biggest protest against the chairman and the powers-that-be planned for Sunday's game at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, some more cynical might suggest that a change in manager might be a strategy to deflect some of the attention away.

That is unlikely to succeed. There are only so many times you can change the doormat and paint the door without improving what actually lies inside the house.

Many have come and failed to change the philosophy and culture within Tottenham Hotspur, but how possible is that to actually do in the first place from a midway vantage point? Can middle managers really transform something so entrenched.

There were a couple of small positives from Sunday evening and it's no coincidence that they came from the fresher players, those not beaten down at this point.

Kevin Danso looks to be a good purchase with his aggression, strong personality and ability on the ball. Mathys Tel looked better through the middle later on than he did as a winger and was rewarded with a well taken goal on his full debut, touching home Dejan Kulusevski's curling cross.

However, Morgan Rogers' close range finish into the roof of the net after Porro fluffed a clearance in front of his own goal had already doomed Spurs to failure after a better second half on the whole, albeit still open to counter attacks.

Tel's added time strike continued the unexpected stat that only Liverpool have beaten Spurs by more than a single goal this season.

"Again, it’s been a situation where we’ve had to throw [the new signings] in, unfortunately," said Postecoglou. "It would have been nice to ease them in and get them used to it. I think Kevin’s been brilliant since he came in, great for Mathys to get his goal today.

"He hasn’t played a lot of football recently, so, for him to get 90 minutes at this level and score a goal will do him the world of good."

The other January signing Kinsky began the game with that handling error which immediately put Spurs on the back foot and his confidence was shot for the next 15 minutes or so. Credit to the young Czech though, he regathered and made a string of saves throughout the remaining minutes to at least keep Spurs in the contest.

Elsewhere, the midfield mostly spluttered, Djed Spence tried to provide energy but is yet to forge a connection with Tel.

Moore looked like a 17-year-old thrust into a bad situation, as he did at Brentford, and his physique will improve. In a normal situation, he would be being gently introduced into matches late on to increase his exposure in a gradual way.

The youngster's quality is clear and was shown in the moment when he teed up his captain Son Heung-min for a huge chance late in the first half. The South Korean did not take it, hitting the ball in the one area of the goal where Emiliano Martinez could comfortably get it.

Archie Gray was again asked to fill in for the absent centre-backs and made one great last-ditch tackle on Marcus Rashford that earned him an unpleasant looking kick to his leg, which hopefully did not result in anything more serious.

Rashford's arrival along with the pirouetting Marco Asensio summed up the tale of the two benches. Both sides have issues with Unai Emery only naming seven substitutes and ending the game without a recognised centre-back, but in the two new arrivals he had major attacking experience to change the game.

Spurs' sole attacking option on the bench - which featured two goalkeepers - was 19-year-old academy winger Damola Ajayi, who only has a handful of Europa League minutes and that debut goal to his name.

Tottenham's players now have the next couple of days off and they will return on Wednesday to find a number of their team-mates back in training alongside them. That naturally should increase the morale within the jaded camp.

Postecoglou's counterpart Unai Emery was sure that Spurs' fortunes would change as their squad does.

“Of course when they are going to recover players, they will perform again like they were doing," said the Villa boss.

For Postecoglou, he's going to keep on trying to improve the club's fortunes unless told otherwise.

"I'm just going to keep on working like I have. The ones who have been playing we've got to give them some time off. We've got the early part of the week and we'll give them some time off," he explained.

"The boys who are coming back, we'll get the opportunity to give them a whole week of training which is great. So come Tuesday we should have three or four who have been missing, we can give them a full week of training instead of a couple of sessions and then throwing them in.

"By the time we get to the back end of the week we should have something resembling a squad of players to prepare for a big game. That then folds into the following week when again we've got seven days and no midweek game to prepare for the next game.

"So that gives us a real good opportunity to get some work into the guys who have been out for quite a while and give some rest to the guys who have been going at it. So by the time we get back to being in Europe and having midweek games we'll be in a much better shape."

The question now is will Postecoglou be allowed to get the chance to see his own team in a better shape or will someone else get the opportunity to profit from the pain he and his players have gone through.

The Australian will feel that if he and the team can get through this week together then they will come out the other side. As always though, the choice lies with the beleaguered and under fire Levy.

Listen to the latest episode of Gold & Guest Talk Tottenham by clicking here for in-depth Spurs chat on your preferred podcast platform.

Unai Emery gives Ange Postecoglou sack verdict as Daniel Levy fired clear Tottenham message

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Unai Emery has backed Ange Postecoglou to turn things around at Tottenham Hotspur following a 2-1 defeat to Aston Villa in the fourth round of the FA Cup. The Villans cruised past the Lilywhites, who are now out of each of the domestic cup competitions.

Jacob Ramsey broke the deadlock inside the opening minute before Morgan Rogers doubled Aston Villa's lead in the second half. Then, in stoppage time, Mathys Tel pulled one back for Tottenham, marking his full debut with a goal.

Spurs couldn't find an equaliser in the final moments, denting any hope of winning a trophy this season. With the North Londoners out of the FA Cup and the Carabao Cup, the Europa League remains the only viable source of silverware.

Speaking to reporters after the Tottenham clash, Emery was quizzed on Postecoglou's future. The former Arsenal boss sympathised with his counterpart, attributing the poor results to the wave of injuries at Hotspur Way.

"I can analyse his work last year and the first six months of this season and I really appreciate a lot how Tottenham are playing with their style," said Emery. "Last year they performed fantastic. Of course, every team has their injured players - they have more than normal.

"The potential they can have with every player being available is a little bit lower without them. I think we played a very good match today to stop them. They played well but it was not enough to beat us in this match. When they are going to recover players, they will perform again like they were doing."

Meanwhile, Postecoglou was asked if he still hopes he'll be given time – by Daniel Levy – to turn things around. The Spurs boss said: "I'm not talking about me. People can judge me. They can say I've done a bad job, I'm not up to it or whatever. That's fine.

"What I'm saying is you can't be critical of players or players' performances at this time. Because if you do, then do that with everyone else. Be as critical of other clubs when they've got 9 or 10 or 11 players out. And none of them have, and have to play every week.

"And not for one game. I'm not just saying we had to do this today. We've been doing this since the middle of November and you can't judge performances of these players and critique them on what they've done."

Postecoglou added: "All they've done is given all they can and that's all you can ask for. Me, that's not of interest to me. My responsibility at this football club is this group of players and this team, to get them to play in the manner I want them to and bring us success.

"Whether people think I can do that or not, that's for others to judge. But there's got to be a better appreciation for what a very small group of players have been doing for the last two and a half months. It can't be that people think that's an excuse. That's just not anywhere near close to objective analysis.

"That's just agenda driven stuff. If it's to get rid of me that's fine. Good on ya. Go for it a million times. But in terms of this group of players, what they've given over the past two and half months has been outstanding, it's a credit to them, I can't speak highly enough of them."

Ange Postecoglou given Tottenham sack verdict after FA Cup misery

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Daniel Levy has been urged to make a decision on Ange Postecoglou's future following Tottenham Hotspur's 2-1 defeat to Aston Villa in the FA Cup. Unai Emery's side stormed past the Lilywhites at Villa Park on Sunday night, securing a place in the fifth round.

Jacob Ramsey fired the Villans ahead inside the opening minute before Morgan Rogers doubled the lead on the hour mark. Then, in the dying embers of the tie, Mathys Tel pulled one back for Spurs, marking his full debut with a goal.

Despite a late push, the North Londoners couldn't find an equaliser in the final moments. Having lost to Liverpool in the Carabao Cup semi-final a few days prior, Postecoglou's side have now crashed out of each of the domestic cup competitions.

So, with that being said, football.london has looked at how the national media reacted to Tottenham's disappointing defeat at Villa Park.

The Mirror

"Yes, the injury list is horrendous but the Tottenham boss has slumped into a losing habit," said Andy Dunn. "It is now eight losses in 14 matches, with only four wins in that period. Manchester United are the Premier League opponents in London on Sunday, with a trip to Ipswich after that. It goes without saying that Postecoglou needs a win.

"As for Emery, who is also dealing with some injury issues, this was an encouraging display from his team after their Premier League defeat at Molineux. With Rashford and Asensio on board, Emery can look forward to the final few months of the season. Ange probably can’t wait for it to end."

The Daily Mail

"One by one the safety nets protecting Ange Postecoglou from a catastrophic fall into footballing oblivion are falling away," said Ian Ladyman. "If Liverpool hacked at a cord in demolishing Postecoglou’s Tottenham in one domestic cup competition last Thursday, then Aston Villa methodically undid a knot or two in the other one at Villa Park.

"Now there is almost nothing left but a long drop down to the darkness for the Tottenham manager. Spurs remain in the Europa League but that’s where the good news begins and ends. The Premier League became an embarrassing and soulless slog long ago. Tottenham, weighed down by diminished confidence and a long injury list, sit in 14th position.

"Tottenham have gone from a ‘must watch’ team to a ‘can’t bear to watch’ team and it’s now up to chairman Daniel Levy in terms of what he wishes to do about it."

The Guardian

"Newsflash: the Tottenham diehards who travelled to Villa Park are rather keen for Daniel Levy to sell up and leave their club," said David Hynter. "The refrain against the chairman pounded throughout this FA Cup tie. What they would also like is something more from their team.

"Spurs can say that they created a few chances and they fought until the end. There was a goal for the new arrival Mathys Tel in stoppage time, which hinted at a ludicrous comeback, but it was just an illusion.

"Villa were far superior, more cohesive, pleasingly hard-running and they can look forward to an appearance in the fifth round for the first time since 2015 thanks to goals from Jacob Ramsey and the outstanding Morgan Rogers. The only issue for Unai Emery was the profligacy of his team. They could have won by a fistful."

The Telegraph

"Ange Postecoglou’s vow that he 'always' delivers silverware in his second season will now rest entirely on the Europa League, after another avenue to a trophy disappeared for Tottenham," said John Percy. "Postecoglou is coming under intense pressure after a week in which Tottenham have been knocked out of both domestic cup competitions.

"It was chairman Daniel Levy who was once again the target for criticism from Tottenham’s supporters, but you have to wonder just how much longer this will be allowed to continue for the club’s manager.

"His team are seriously depleted by injuries, yet they rarely threatened an Aston Villa defence that is also so short of centre-backs that two defensive midfielders were at the heart of the back-four."