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Tottenham: Postecoglou future is 'game to game' as Spurs star is singled out for needing 'to do more'

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Ange Postecoglou’s future at Tottenham is currently “game to game” after their poor start to the new Premier League season, according to one journalist.

Spurs have taken just four points from their opening four matches of the new Premier League season with one win, one draw and two losses from their first fixtures.

And it was looking like they would follow up their disappointing 1-0 defeat to arch-rivals Arsenal with another loss after Brandon Thomas-Asante fired Championship side Coventry City into the lead in the Carabao Cup on Wednesday night.

It would have put Postecoglou’s post-match comments last weekend about always winning silverware in his second season into sharp focus, but Djed Spence spared his blushes when he levelled with two minutes left.

Spot-kicks were still on the cards until Rodrigo Bentancur played through to Brennan Johnson, who chipped home in the 92nd minute to send Tottenham through with a 2-1 win and leave their travelling support singing about Wembley.

But it was another below-par display from Spurs and it didn’t ease the pressure on Postecoglou with Daily Mirror journalist John Cross insisting that defeat against Brentford in their upcoming fixture this weekend could really increase the unease at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium.

Cross said on the Sky Sports Back Pages podcast: “I do think that Spurs fans, who loved him last season, and loved the style of football, gave him a wonderful start. They tailed off badly.

“I do think it’s testing times, because the biggest thing about that was the positive energy that the fans had. They really appreciated Postecoglou. They loved singing the songs.

“At the moment, it just feels quite flat. They were three minutes away from going out at Coventry, which would have been a devastating result.

“I don’t think that he would have immediately been sacked or anything like that, but I tell you what, they’ve got Brentford at home on Saturday. If they’d had that upset, it feels like you are going game to game a little bit.”

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Dominic Solanke was Tottenham’s biggest purchase of the summer transfer market from Bournemouth with the one-cap England international failing to provide a goal or assist in his first three matches in all competitions.

Solanke played 62 minutes against Coventry as Tottenham struggled to create with the 27-year-old failing to register a shot during the match and O’Hara was unhappy that he didn’t do more.

O’Hara said on talkSPORT: “Solanke comes off after 60 minutes again, that’s got to be a talking point. It’s not happening. Come on, for £60 million. I know price tags mean nothing. Like, come on. You have to make something happen for yourself.

“If you are staying on a football pitch for 60 minutes and you don’t have a shot. Surely, you have to look at yourself and go ‘I have got to do more’. I would be demanding the ball anywhere and having a shot from somewhere. He’s a striker and you haven’t had a shot.”

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Spurs: 'I don’t make substitutions by poll, mate'

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Ange Postecoglou acknowledged Tottenham had to hang in there to avoid a Carabao Cup upset at Coventry, and riled at questions about the fans booing his substitutions.

Spurs were set to follow up Sunday’s painful derby defeat to Arsenal with another loss after Brandon Thomas-Asante fired the Sky Bet Championship club into a deserved lead after 63 minutes.

It would have put Postecoglou’s post-match comments last weekend about always winning silverware in his second season into sharp focus, but Djed Spence spared his blushes when he levelled with two minutes left.

Spot-kicks were still on the cards until Rodrigo Bentancur played through to Brennan Johnson, who chipped home in the 92nd minute to send Tottenham through and leave their travelling support singing about Wembley.

“We had to hang in there. We had to work really, really hard just to stay in the game and obviously going a goal behind makes it even more challenging,” Postecoglou said.

“At the end there, we showed some real spirit and character, which is probably what’s been missing in the first four games.

“We’ve had the performance, but we haven’t had that relentlessness to get a result. You sense that in the last 10 minutes, we got real belief out of that and hopefully that’s a good sign moving forward.”

It could end up being a pivotal victory for Postecoglou, but it was an overall poor night for a much-changed Spurs team.

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Coventry almost scored inside 60 seconds but Fraser Forster atoned for a misplaced pass with a fine save to deny Jack Rudoni.

Tottenham dominated possession but failed to create chances and Rudoni had another effort blocked by Destiny Udogie before Norman Bassette fired over.

After no first half shot and a smattering of boos at the break, Postecoglou sent on Spence and Johnson did have a shot deflected wide but Forster had to deny Bassette before Coventry called for a penalty.

Jake Bidwell collided with Forster and as play continued Ben Davies had to slide in to thwart Haji Wright’s goalbound effort.

Boos greeted Postecoglou’s decision to take off the lively Lucas Bergvall in the 62nd minute before seconds later Thomas-Asante slotted home from a sumptuous Bassette cross.

Further chances were fashioned for the hosts as Ephron Mason-Clark failed to get a sufficient touch at the back post.

The Sky Blues would pay the price for their profligacy as Dejan Kulusevski combined brilliantly with fellow substitute Spence, who prodded home with two minutes left.

It was Spurs who scented blood and Bentancur threaded a pass through to Johnson, who dinked past Wilson to spark wild away celebrations half an hour after they booed the decision to take off Bergvall.

Postecoglou added: “I don’t make substitutions by poll, mate.

“I’m sure the fans have got their own opinions, but yeah, Lucas, like I said that’s his first sort of significant game time for quite a while.”

Coventry boss Mark Robins said: “Life presents you with chances and we seem to not take them in this moment in time.

“I look back to the (2023) play-off final, the game against Manchester United and it was there. The game was there tonight and we just didn’t manage to take it.

“There is the disappointment, but there were so many positives.”

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Tottenham transfers: 29 Paratici era signings ranked with Richarlison 23rd, Solanke 16th, Romero 3rd

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Fabio Paratici’s ban is far from over but he’s working in the shadows as an advisor for Tottenham Hotspur, who have benefited from his transfer expertise.

Having joined Spurs to become their managing director in the summer of 2021, Paratici was forced to resign in April 2023 after being embroiled in the capital gains investigation that marred former club Juventus and Italian football in general.

Paratici is barred from taking on an official role at a football club until his 30-month worldwide ban ends, but this has not stopped him from reportedly “exchanging messages or calls” with Ange Postecoglou as Spurs tap into his knowhow for astute transfers.

And on the evidence of this list of additions, Paratici has been a great help. Don’t get me wrong, there have been a few duds along the way. But no one’s perfect and a significant portion of Tottenham Hotspur’s 29 signings (fees taken from transfermarkt) since the Italian’s arrival in 2021 have been successful. Below I have ranked them from worst to best…

Speaking of duds, Spence was signed during Antonio Conte’s reign after a single break-out year while on loan at Nottingham Forest during their promotion season in 2010/11. However, it quickly became obvious that the bullish Italian did not fancy the right-back.

Spence has been reintegrated into Tottenham’s squad after fruitless loan spells at Rennes, Leeds United and Genoa but is way down the pecking order under Postecoglou. Or at least he was until he scored the equaliser in a narrow Carabao Cup win over Coventry City.

READ: Moyes for Spurs, Tuchel to Villa, Potter returns: Predicting the next manager of each Premier League club

Like Spence, Gil’s career at Spurs is yet to get off the ground as the fifth Beatle has failed to win over several managers.

Loveable Aussie Postecoglou gifted Gil a fresh start last season but the 22-year-old did not make the most of this opportunity and he joined La Liga side Genoa on loan in the summer.

The Danjuma transfer saga of January 2023 was weirdly enjoyable as the former Bournemouth man looked set for Everton until those pesky Spurs pulled off a late hijack. Unfortunately, he wasn’t worth the effort as he made just one Premier League start during that miserable 2022/23 run-in.

Having impressed with Fulham, Solomon felt like a pretty astute addition last year. But he missed most of the 2023/24 campaign with a knee injury and is currently getting some games in the Championship with loan club Leeds United.

The one-time Italy international made just ten appearances (zero in the Premier League) during his 2021/22 loan season as deputy to the declining Hugo Lloris. Next…

The first #OneForTheFuture in this list, 21-year-old Veliz has made a bright start to his loan spell at Espanyol this season, but please get back to us on this one.

I foolishly backed Richarlison to be Tottenham’s Harry Kane solution during his purple patch last season, but – amid injury and personal problems – he’s reverted to type and Daniel Levy seemed keen to offload him to the Saudi Pro League in the summer.

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One of few notable signings of this year’s particularly dull winter transfer window, Werner has stuttered after making a bright start at Spurs. He’s been a handy squad player for Postecoglou, but he’s currently not doing enough to warrant a more prominent role in the Premier League.

The veteran goalkeeper replaced Gollini before the 2022/23 campaign and made 20 appearances that season as Lloris’ farewell year proved to be miserable. He’s now in the cushy pre-retirement back-up goalkeeper role behind Tottenham’s number one (more on him later).

Tottenham’s decision to spunk £47m on Johnson when they needed to replace Kane was a puzzling one and he has work to do if he’s going to eventually live up to his high price tag.

Not great, not terrible. Tottenham did not see enough from Lenglet during his 2022/23 loan spell to keep him long-term and given who they replaced him with last season, they were right not to make his deal permanent.

The 2023/24 campaign was comfortably Royal’s best in a Spurs shirt as his versatility proved useful. This enabled the Premier League club to get around £13m back on the defender, who joined AC Milan following an unusually prolonged saga in the summer.

READ: 16 Conclusions as wide-eyed Spurs throw themselves into Arsenal’s well-constructed but entirely obvious NLD trap

This signing had Conte’s paws all over it, but the 34-year-old was never going to be at the forefront of Postecoglou’s mind for his fresh-faced Spurs side. It would have been great if he joined the Premier League five years earlier but he was past his peak.

The jury is very much still out on Kane’s replacement. While he’s yet to find the net for Spurs, his general play has been impressive and his presence will eventually give a much-needed boost to his supporting cast.

Thank you Spurs, Dragusin and his agent. The dramatic transfer saga concerning the defender was a rare highlight in last season’s January window. Sadly, he has not followed up his noisy arrival with much of note on the pitch as he’s currently one of Postecoglou’s back-ups.

Another #OneForTheFuture. The 18-year-old has been shining for England at youth level and if he reaches his potential, he could prove to be a huge bargain.

The 28-year-old midfielder has fared much better under Postecoglou as he was like a new signing for Spurs last season. Angeball has afforded him the freedom to express himself without the Conte-enforced restraints.

Scott Parker was furious in the summer as his Burnley squad was torn apart and their most expensive sale saw them lose Odobert to Tottenham. The 19-year-old was one of their better performers last season and has made a decent start at Spurs.

Gray is regarded as one of the best young English talents around and was one of the stand-out players in the Championship last season. He’s on the periphery at Tottenham at the moment, but it would be a surprise if he’s not a fully-fledged starter and is higher on this list by the end of this campaign.

Another statement Spurs signing saw them fend off competition from elite European clubs to sign 18-year-old Bergvall. Like Gray, he’s only been used sparingly so far this season, but this is likely to change as this campaign progresses.

When Conte demanded signings ahead of the 2022 January transfer window, Spurs came up trumps when they landed Bentancur and another player from Juventus. The classy midfielder has been dogged by injuries in recent years but has still been a great buy for the Premier League club.

Kulusevski’s attacking output has gradually declined during his time at Spurs, but him and Bentancur can be considered snips after the club profited from Juventus’ charitable nature. It’s only a matter of time before he starts assisting Solanke with his devilish left foot.

The talented Italy international swiftly elbowed Ben Davies out of the way to become Spurs’ first-choice left-back last season. He is one of six disappointments this season, struggling in both boxes, and has been outshone by his teammate on the right, but his potential is still enormous.

The all-action midfielder was a surprise package in the Premier League last season as he – a la Micah Richards – broke onto the scene. A perfect fit for Postecoglou’s system, Sarr should be vital to Spurs for many years.

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Arsenal exposed Vicario’s flaws in last weekend’s North London derby defeat, but he has still proven to be an excellent signing as the superb shot-stopper is ranked among the best goalkeepers in the Premier League.

Much of Paratici’s work over the past couple of years has centred around rebuilding Tottenham’s defence and he’s done a bloody good job of it. Spurs secured a major coup as they leapfrogged Liverpool in the race to sign left-sided centre-back Van de Ven, who is already the real deal.

Van de Ven’s transition into life as a Premier League player has been made easier by playing alongside World Cup winner Romero. The defensive sh*thouse is excellent at everything he does and he’s also emerged as an important leader of this new-look Spurs. They will be desperate to keep him amid interest from Real Madrid.

Porro is fast becoming a complete wing-back and has earned a place in the Premier League team of the season so far.

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Postecoglou blushes saved by Spence and Johnson as Tottenham strike late to beat Coventry

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Late goals by Djed Spence and Brennan Johnson helped Tottenham avoid an almighty upset at Coventry in the Carabao Cup.

Spurs were set to follow up Sunday’s painful derby defeat to Arsenal with a 1-0 loss in the third round after Brandon Thomas-Asante fired the Championship side into a deserved lead after 63 minutes.

Moments earlier, Ange Postecoglou’s decision to substitute Lucas Bergvall had been met with boos from the away end.

However, with time running out and Postecoglou’s bold prediction last weekend of always winning silverware in his second season being set to come back to bite him, Djed Spence found an equaliser with three minutes left.

Spot-kicks were still on the cards until Rodrigo Bentancur played through Brennan Johnson, who chipped home in the 92nd minute to earn Tottenham a precious 2-1 win and leave their travelling support singing about Wembley.

This was the first meeting between the clubs in 11 years, but it was a fixture synonymous with the 1987 FA Cup final when Coventry triumphed 3-2 to clinch the only major trophy of their history.

Postecoglou was eager to deliver silverware for Spurs, but made eight changes from Sunday’s north London derby loss.

Fraser Forster was recalled for his first start in more than 12 months and almost gave away a goal inside 60 seconds, but atoned for a poor pass out from the back with a fine save to deny Jack Rudoni from 20 yards.

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When Tottenham did eventually settle, they were forced into a 17th-minute substitution when Wilson Odobert went down after a strong challenge from Jake Bidwell.

Johnson was sent on and while the visitors continued to dominate possession, they could not fashion any chances and almost conceded again during an end-to-end 38th minute.

Firstly, Rudoni’s shot from Bidwell’s cross was blocked by Destiny Udogie and Johnson led the Spurs counter-attack but his cutback failed to pick out a team-mate, which resulted in Norman Bassette being sent away only to fire over.

After no first-half shots and a smattering of boos from the away crowd, Postecoglou sent on full-back Spence and two minutes later they did register an effort of note.

Dominic Solanke carried the ball and found Johnson, but his low effort was blocked by ex-Tottenham youngster Luis Binks.

It was not a sign of things to come as after Timo Werner was again dispossessed, Bassette tested Forster with a low strike.

The 24,606-strong crowd could smell blood and wanted a penalty after 56 minutes when Bidwell raced onto Ben Wilson’s pass and collided with Forster, but play continued and Spurs’ stand-in captain Ben Davies slid in to deny Haji Wright’s goalbound effort.

Thomas-Asante lifted over shortly afterwards before Postecoglou’s night went from bad to worse as his decision to bring off the lively Bergvall sparked boos.

Seconds later and the home faithful were on their feet in celebration after Bassette produced a superb cross for Thomas-Asante to slot past Forster.

No immediate reaction was evident as Ellis Simms headed wide soon after for Coventry.

James Maddison did go close in the 77th minute when he controlled Radu Dragusin’s long-range pass but curled wide from range before Ephron Mason-Clark failed to sufficiently connect with Simms’ deflected shot.

As Postecoglou was facing up to a second consecutive early exit in this competition, his blushes were spared when Dejan Kulusevski linked up with Spence, who prodded home for his first Spurs goal.

With three minutes left, Tottenham sensed their moment and in the second minute of stoppage time Bentancur played in Johnson, who rolled the ball past Wilson to ensure the full-time whistle was greeted with chants of ‘Wembley’ from Tottenham’s travelling support.

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Arsenal turn to Fabregas, Liverpool to Alonso, Spurs to Moyes in manager predictions

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We’re already four games into the season so it’s surely fast approaching the time when at least one Premier League club panics and sacks its clearly irredeemably flawed manager.

There is, happily, no shortage of candidates this season and we’d be amazed not to see at least one or two clubs make a desperate move in and around the November international break.

But who will those moves see come in? It will definitely be these guys. Yes, we can exclusively reveal the next manager for all 20 Premier League clubs. Make a note, because all of this are absolute certainties with almost no chance of looking very stupid quite soon (or in some cases, already).

Arsenal: Cesc Fabregas

It seems unlikely it will be Arsenal’s decision as to when Mikel Arteta needs replacing, so brilliant is the job he’s currently doing. When it does come time for Arteta and Arsenal to part, it’s likely he’s either given in and decided to go to Man City on the basis that if you can’t beat them, re-join them, or been spirited away by Barcelona, who remain a) keen observers of Arteta’s progress and b) enormously fond of a managerial change.

Or he may simply decide a la Klopp that he’s had enough of prowling Premier League touchlines half a Richard Keys-baiting yard outside his technical area. He might just walk away.

But if it is indeed any of those or other similar scenarios, Arsenal will be seeking continuity. Evolution not revolution. So who better than a cerebral Spanish midfielder who already knows the club? Fabregas is the perfect choice for a club that is already as we speak proving itself capable of upending the truism that making former players managers generally goes tits up.

Of course, Fabregas’ chances of success will rest on being able to retain the services of Arsenal’s current set-piece coach. If he can’t do that? It’s so Jover.

READ: 16 Conclusions on Tottenham 0-1 Arsenal

Aston Villa: Thomas Tuchel

Doesn’t feel like a thing anyone needs to worry about all that much for a good while, with the match of club and manager here feeling like it’s absolutely perfect. Unai Emery appears to be that absolute sweet-spot of a manager for a club like Villa: plenty good enough to elevate them into the elite without being too susceptible to having his head turned and being whisked away by one of the super-clubs.

He’s a very good manager, but not a particularly sexy one. And that’s great for Villa, but makes life very hard for us. It’s impossible to even make a sensible prediction about when this might happen, but it does seem reasonable to assume we’re talking about an Aston Villa that offers far greater appeal to a far wider range of managers than the Gerrard-schooled relegation scrabblers Emery himself inherited.

We’re pretty sure Thomas Tuchel is going to end up back in England at some point, but aren’t quite convinced the very biggest clubs will touch him. Just too spiky and awkward. But he would nevertheless represent a big-name coup for a team just outside that gilded elite. It does appear inevitable that he will one day manage Tottenham, but that might just be because he’s previously managed Chelsea and that does seem to make it mandatory. An upwardly mobile Villa might be a better fit.

Bournemouth: Inigo Perez

All things happen for a reason. Was supposed to join Andoni Iraola at Bournemouth as assistant manager but couldn’t because of work-permit issues. Six months later, found himself instead back at their former club Rayo Vallecano and this time in charge of proceedings himself.

Iraola has done the business for Bournemouth, and it’s far more likely at this point that Iraola is pinched than sacked. It stands to reason, therefore, that Bournemouth’s next appointment should therefore be of the ‘if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it’ variety and ‘young Spanish Rayo Vallecano coach’ is obviously unimprovably similar to Iraola even if he hadn’t already worked with him.

Brentford: Graham Potter

Genuinely unpleasant to even think about a Brentford team in the Premier League without Thomas Frank and his hair running things from the sidelines. It’s just not something that any of us are really prepared for. He’s part of the furniture and a huge factor in Brentford even being here in Our League at all, never mind as an absolute fixture like they are now.

We often find ourselves pondering precisely how and where Graham Potter makes his return to top-flight management, and it strikes us now that this might be a decent fit. Potter would perhaps consider it beneath him, but the more time that passes the more willing he may have to become to swallow his pride, and a well-run club beginning with the letter B in the south of England that got itself promoted playing The Right Way before establishing itself as a solid Premier League side would at least have the benefit of familiarity. They even play in stripes. It’s basically perfect, if you think about it.

Brighton: Kosta Runjaic

Overachieving coaches punching above their weight in Europe are the order of the post-Potter day for Brighton.

Runjaci currently has Udinese top of Serie A, albeit we’re only four games into his reign there and the season itself. But if ‘Kaiserslautern, 1860 Munich, Pogon Szczecin, Legia Warsaw, Udinese’ isn’t a managerial run that simply screams ‘Brighton’ as its next stop then we don’t want to know what is.

Chelsea: Ruben Amorim

Mourinho’s heir, isn’t he? Far more so than Andre Villas-Boas ever was. No need to complicate matters here because Chelsea is already plenty complicated enough. Take the low-hanging fruit and the most obvious of all possibilities. Apart from Frank Lampard.

Still, it has long seemed inevitable that Amorim will follow the well-worn path from Portugal’s Primeira Liga to the Barclays, and Chelsea does appear by far the likeliest destination.

We’re as confident as we can be that Amorim will be next through the Chelsea revolving door, but nevertheless remain extremely excited to find out which of the currently warring owners actually gets to make the appointment.

Crystal Palace: Roy Hodgson

Because neither he nor they can frankly help themselves.

Everton: Sam Allardyce

Because if you’ve already got Sean Dyche as manager and have to press the big red managerial firefighter emergency button because you keep losing games after going 2-0 up, then there really is only one further step to be taken down the road of despair you have paved for yourself.

Go and get Big Sam. It’s not all bad news, because it’s also an appointment that offers everyone a shot at redemption. It feels deeply quaint now to imagine a world where a manager steps in before Christmas to rescue a relegation-haunted Everton side and steer them to eighth (eighth!) in the table only to be binned off because fans aren’t happy with the style of play, but that was Allardyce’s fate in his previous spell at Goodison and it was somehow only six years ago.

The other good thing about taking this circular approach is that appointing Allardyce again would logically mean they’re only two years away from having Carlo Ancelotti back, and that would be nice wouldn’t it?

READ: The Premier League sack race has Dyche way out in front

Fulham: Rob Edwards

Feels like Marco Silva has been there a lot longer than three years, and that’s a compliment. He’s established Fulham as a mid-table Premier League side after a fair bout of yo-yo-ing between the top two divisions, and that’s no mean trick.

Tricky to know exactly where Fulham might go next after Silva, but there is a hint in their list of past managers. It’s not a perfect pattern, but in general the Fulham approach is to alternate between ‘Very British’ and ‘Exotically Foreign’. This is a club that within the last 25 years has been managed by Jean Tigana, Martin Jol, Rene Meulensteen, Felix Magath, Slavisa Jokanovic, Claudio Ranieri and Silva but also by Chris Coleman, Roy Hodgson, Mark Hughes, Kit Symons and Scott Parker.

On the basis that it’s ‘Very British’ due up next, we’ll go with Rob Edwards based on little more than a hunch. It’s not always very scientific, this.

Ipswich: Mick McCarthy

If they’re replacing Kieran McKenna they’re probably done for anyway, so might as well do it with their c*cks all the way out and bring back Big Mick for one last Premier League hurrah at a club where he once branded fans ‘numbskulls’ for criticising his style of play.

On-field results will likely be abysmal, sure, but think of the press conferences and post-match interviews. The Barclays needs and deserves this. And with a McKenna-less Ipswich likely doomed anyway, nobody actually loses out at all when you think about it. It’s win-win. Kinda.

Leicester: Gary O’Neil

Another club with a fantastically varied set of managerial appointments over the last 15 years, with names like Paolo Sousa and Sven-Goran Eriksson and Claudio Ranieri and Claude Puel sitting right there alongside your Nigel Pearsons and Craig Shakespeares, your Dean Smiths and the Ian Holloways of this world. And that’s without even mentioning dear old Brendan.

Enzo Maresca was a pretty left-field punt as well that worked out pretty well, while Steve Cooper strikes us a solidly sensible pragmatic piece of business ahead of what was always likely to be a wildly difficult return to the Premier League.

Which all makes predicting where Leicester go next near impossible. They love a big sexy foreign name but are equally at home with a Proper Football Man. Brendan Rodgers seems obvious now, when you look at the full list of names they’ve gone for in the past.

Does feel like we should now be approaching the point where Leicester appoint a member of the 2015/16 Fairytale squad as manager, but there’s no real contender there.

We’re going quite prosaic here, then, with Leicester deciding former Bournemouth and Wolves boss O’Neil (Wolves sack him in November, by the way) is the man to lead them back into the Premier League after relegation is confirmed on the final day of the season and Steve Cooper walks.

Liverpool: Xabi Alonso

But it will be a pure disaster that lasts less than a season, Alonso’s handsomely bearded reputation having already lost some of its lustre with his miserable failure to do any more unbeaten seasons with Leverkusen. All will agree that the perfect moment was right there in 2024 and everyone missed it.

Manchester City: Vincent Kompany

Still not quite sure how he ended up being Bayern Munich manager, but it matters not. He has, and with it the very ideal stepping stone back to Manchester City where the chance to prove whether he’s an Arteta or a Solskjaer or a Lampard feels increasingly like something that is absolutely sure to happen at some point over the next couple of years.

The timing will come down to many things. Really would not be a surprise if Pep Guardiola got bored and decide to Klopp his way off on a six-month farewell tour this season. Then there is the spectre of what happens with the 115 charges.

That, though, is just another feather in Kompany’s cap to help make him the perfect candidate. He’s already if anything over-qualified for the Club DNA and Knowing Our League criteria of any managerial appointment, but now Bayern have provided him with relevant Big Club managerial experience while he’s also a man who knows his way out of the Championship. A perfect all-round skillset, then, to cover any and all the eventualities that could exist in City’s uncertain future.

Manchester United: Ruud van Nistelrooy

He’s already in position, isn’t he? Ready and waiting to take the reins on a temporary basis if/when the Erik Ten Hag experiment finally comes to its grimly inevitable conclusion. And the good news for United fans is that handing a beloved former striker with limited top-level managerial experience the permanent gig after an eye-catching mood-lifting spell in caretaker charge has absolutely never gone wrong before and there’s no reason to think it could possibly do so now.

Obviously, there is one manager out there United have always wanted and he remains the dream. But you can’t just expect to appoint a manager like Gareth Southgate out of the blue. If they want to land that sort of coup they’ll have to be patient, and that gives Van Nistelrooy the chance to at least state his case.

Newcastle: Max Allegri

The next managerial appointment at Newcastle really does feel like it needs to be a statement one. We’re not remotely sure it will be a good one, but it will be an appointment designed to declare and re-affirm their new-found stature despite those pesky rules that have thus far stopped them just buying all the players they want to as they should, by rights, be free to do.

We’re pretty sure Newcastle would be in a much worse state without Eddie Howe, but there’s also a very real chance that relationship does reach breaking point quite soon – especially if on-field results don’t continue on their current excellent if shakily-foundationed path.

That will leave Newcastle on the hunt for a big-name manager not averse to spending a lot of money in an attempt to buy his way to success. And for an added bonus he will need no time acclimatising to a team in black-and-white stripes. These are the sort of marginal gains that can make all the difference, you see.

Nottingham Forest: Bruno Lage

Because if you’re a Premier League club replacing Nuno Espirito Santo as manager, history tells us your choices are either Bruno Lage or Antonio Conte. And Bruno Lage feels much more likely here. To the extent that what began as purely a banter answer now has us thinking it might actually be a good idea.

Lage didn’t have a great time at Wolves, sure, but is now back at Benfica and boasting a 100% win rate in his second spell at the club. Can’t argue with that, as long as absolutely none of you go and check how many games he has managed in that second spell. Please don’t do that.

Southampton: Matt Le Tissier

With Rickie Lambert as his assistant. Premier League managers have dabbled in conspiracy theories about refereeing vendettas and fixture computers being out to get them, but we’d love to see one go full tinfoil hat and blame a tight offside decision on the shadow government or claim vaccines causes handballs.

Tottenham: David Moyes

Most managerial appointments are, by definition, a response to the failure of the previous regime and thus have a tendency to offer a wild change in philosophy and approach. At few clubs is this ‘appoint the opposite of the previous clown’ strategy more transparent than at Tottenham.

ENIC and Daniel Levy have been running the show at Spurs for 25 years now, and their list of permanent managerial appointments amounts in man ways to a quarter-century cry for help.

ENIC inherited George Graham as manager, a man still widely despised in this part of north London despite being the second most recent Spurs manager to win a trophy. They made the populist decision to replace him with club legend Glenn Hoddle.

Since then, they’ve gone for: Jacques Santini, Martin Jol, Juande Ramos, Harry Redknapp, Andre Villas-Boas, Tim Sherwood, Mauricio Pochettino, Jose Mourinho, Nuno Espirito Sante, Antonio Conte, Ange Postecoglou. It’s a wonder the very club itself doesn’t have whiplash given the number and extent of those lurches in opposite directions.

But it does give us a huge clue about where they go next after Angeball’s increasingly inevitable demise. Spurs are fun to watch and easy to beat. They need a manager who can make them excruciating to watch but hard to beat. They need David Moyes.

As an added bonus, he also knows his way around ending an embarrassingly long trophy drought at a London club that isn’t as big as it thinks it is. He’s perfect.

Then after 18 months of that, Spurs will bring Roberto De Zerbi back to Blighty after three wildly successful years with Marseille. He will bring Pierre-Emile Hojbjerg back with him as assistant coach, and another 18 months or two years down the line Hojbjerg will step up to the big chair himself thus fulfilling Mourinho’s prophecy once and for all, bringing a dark and endless winter across the land. None of those managers will win any trophies. There is no point fighting any of this. It is all as inevitable as night following day.

And after that it’ll probably be Thomas Tuchel, on the basis Spurs will be long overdue a former Chelsea boss by the time that lot have all been tried and discarded in about four years’ time.

West Ham: Michael Carrick

A tale to warm the heart as both club and manager get back to their footballing roots. Carrick has been and managed back in the north-east where he was born, so it’s only logical that his next step up the managerial ladder is a return to the club that nurtured and developed him.

Might need things to pick up a bit at Middlesbrough to really put himself back on the radar of any Premier League chairmen with itchy trigger fingers, but has got plenty of time to get West Ham’s attention now. They’ve only just appointed a new manager and, as we know, managers at West Ham always last absolutely ages. No rush at all here.

Wolves: Rui Vitoria

Honestly, we’ve no idea here beyond a sneaking suspicion we might all be about to find out the answer quite soon. So we’ve made a few assumptions, and these are they:

We think Wolves will need a new manager soon, so let’s look at available managers.

We think Wolves will want experience as a response to Gary O’Neil’s rookie stature, so let’s look at experienced managers.

We think Wolves will want a Portuguese manager because frankly it’s been a while.

Sergio Conceicao fits the bill but is surely far too ambitious a catch for their current state. Rui Vitoria, sacked by Egypt after a disappointing AFCON, and still available seven months later, ticks every box.

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Tottenham: Ange Postecoglou deserves ‘three out of 10’ for derby defeat to Arsenal

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The Tottenham Hotspur soap opera continues after Ange Postecoglou’s poor set-piece record haunts him again in defeat against Arsenal.

Spurs have won just one of their four Premier League games so far, losing their previous game toothlessly to North London rivals Arsenal in quite a stale 1-0 loss.

Having finished fifth in their first season in charge under new boss Ange Postecoglou, the Lillywhites have got off to a poor start with questions already being asked of the Australian.

Former Spurs midfielder, Jamie O’Hara, who isn’t shy on voicing his opinion on social media, as well as talkSPORT said: “I’m not sure what to think of his (Postecoglou) tactics at the moment because Tottenham look so soft and are conceding goals for fun,”

Tottenham have also come under fire for their set-piece defending, with goalkeeper Guglielmo Vicario often looking suspect on corners.

On that matter, O’Hara said: “The set-pieces are a disgrace both in attack and defence; he needs to work on that. I’d give Ange Postecoglou a 3/10 for the way he managed the game against Arsenal.”

Since then, Postecoglou has addressed the talk regarding the set-pieces.

Speaking post-match, he said: “I know for some, people think I don’t care about set-pieces, and it’s a narrative that you can keep going on for ages and ages. I understand that. Like I said, we work on them all the time, like we do with every other team.”

MORE TOTTENHAM COVERAGE ON F365…

👉 Hoddle claims Spurs lack ‘X-factor’ star for key Postecoglou tactic underscored by ‘abysmal’ facet

👉 Cristian Romero slams Tottenham in deleted post after losing NLD derby to Arsenal

👉 Tottenham star emerges as top alternative for Real Madrid if Arsenal deal proves ‘difficult’

Since Postecoglou’s arrival, Spurs have conceded 18 times from set-pieces, with 13 of them coming from January onwards.

O’Hara, who played 93 times for Spurs in the Premier League, continued his damning assessment of Spurs.

He said: “Cristian Romero is another I’d give a 3/10 to, he got beaten by Gabriel for the goal and he seems to gift the opposition a goal every week. Brennan Johnson was the worst player, he is woeful. He was nowhere near good enough and he was hiding, but he never produces when he does get the ball. I’d give him a 2/10 as well. I look at it and think, have we brought in top players? Dominic Solanke, one good season at Bournemouth and we signed him for £60million.”

Solanke is yet to get off the mark for Spurs since his arrival in the summer, still nursing an ankle injury, having missed games against Everton and Newcastle.

The 27-year-old seemed to be gifted a golden opportunity early in the first half of the North London derby, though he failed to pulled the trigger, looking like a player shy of confidence in front of goal.

Last season, the former Liverpool man scored 19 league goals, and Postecoglou and Spurs will be hoping he hits similar numbers this season to allow them to improve on their fifth placed finish last season.

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One Liverpool player 'utterly infuriating' as Milan pretend to be Spurs

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Liverpool won in Milan but the Italians made it easy, though not easy enough for Darwin Nunez to stay onside.

Send your views on all subjects to theeditor@football365.com

Nunez = thick?

I saw a statistic recently highlighting how rarely Haaland is caught offside.

Watching Milan-LFC, I’m reminded that it’s not the crap finishing of Nuñez that drives me the most insane, but rather the utterly unnecessary offsides that seem to happen every other counter-attack. Utterly infuriating, and to me surely a very telling sign of how intelligent and disciplined a striker is.

It’s one thing if you’re fat and immobile, but if you’re already faster than the vast majority of players, what bloody excuse do you have?!

Henry, LFC

Were Liverpool playing Spurs or Milan?

Not aiming to be overly bantery with this… but when we scored two quick goals to overturn an early deficit tonight I might’ve fleetingly thought we were facing Tottenham at the San Siro.

A fullback assisting the center half for an easy, towering header from a dead ball, ok. A second fullback assisting a second center half for an easy, towering header from another dead ball, alright then. A willowy opposing goalkeeper with noticeably limited core strength (in this case possibly due to injury) flapping at crosses and set piece deliveries, it’s starting to get uncanny now.

All we missed was a gruff Aussie with hard, perma-sulk expression on the touchline and we’d have completed the full set.

Slight remorse for any bewildered Spurs supporter catching strays on a night their side don’t even lace them up, but this is genuinely what I thought in real time as the pictures come through. Maybe in his presser now Fonseca will say he doesn’t care about set pieces, then we’ll really have something won’t we.

Eric, Los Angeles CA (Tsimikas will never, ever be the Glen Johnson-type fullback capable of cutting in weak foot to opportunistically score. Absolutely atrocious strike on the player but rather inexplicably, left, right or center he does just keep trying doesn’t he.)

READ: Liverpool complete greatest ever comeback against Milan in massive dig at White, Jover and Arsenal

What’s the referee’s role again?

My mind is blown here. Clattenberg literally said the ref needs to give Milan some small fouls to “calm the crowd down because Milan are getting upset”. Is this really the referees role here? To manage the crowd? Not to play the game that is in front of them? And we wonder why fans get so irate with refs! How can we expect impartiality when we have an ex pro ref admitting he makes decisions to control the narrative of the game. Madness.

Matt J Morgan

Champions League apathy

Does anyone else have absolutely zero interest in this Champions League group stage? Game week 1 last night and I didn’t even bother turning on the TV as an avid football fan who literally spends the week reading about football and listening to podcasts.

Jeopardy and novelty is what makes sports exiting, how have the dimwits who run FIFA and UEAFA not realised this? I couldn’t give a shit about Inter playing Man City or Arsenal playing PSG in a money spinning exercise where after a load of pointless games the worst that will happen is that you have to play an extra play off game. As opposed to for example, if Arsenal were to play Real Madrid or AC Milan in a knock out tie with real jeopardy and novelty (as they don’t play each other every year) I would be all over that like a rash.

The same reason why the Super League will never work and the MLS is a load of rubbish. No jeopardy.

Chippy

Some reasons for Man Utd cheer

Just finished watching the highlights of the United game and while it was fun to watch, United dominating for a change, don’t see any of those goals being scored against better opposition. Barnsley really did not do themselves proud.

Nevertheless, there were some positives from United. The chemistry between the front three was excellent and there was some excellent decision making in the final third, which has been lacking even against weak sides. Rashford seems to have his mojo back and both of those were proper striker’s goals.

Eriksen struck two beautiful goals but he was moving like a retired footballer and it’s concerning that United will have to rely on him against stronger opposition where he can easily be a liability.

Adeel

Why Arsenal don’t need a striker, thank you

OK, go on then, I’ll bite to Andy H, Swansea.

Regarding our bench, you’re right, it did look a little different to what we would usually have but that’s going to happen when you’re missing Odegaard, Rice, Calafiori, Zinchenko, Merino and Tomiyasu. Want to tell me what City’s first eleven and bench looks like without Rodri, De Bruyne, Ake, Lewis, Bernardo Silva and Akanji?

You play the game in front of you with the players you have available. Arsenal were confident Tottenham couldn’t hurt them (proven correct) and they could get a goal on the break or at a set piece (proven correct). They may well play the same against City on Sunday – pretty sure City didn’t score against Arsenal last season. So, would Andy say City aren’t a good team either then?

On his point about top-notch striker…we seemed to do alright when Havertz got comfortable in that role and not only scored a load of goals but brought others into the game. I don’t think the way we play suits an out and out goalscorer as that could restrict the impact of others and that’s clearly what Arteta wants – everyone involved and everyone a danger.

We missed out on the title by two points last season and those were given up in silly results before Christmas, not when we started playing as a well-defined team and system.

Finally, from the weekend – what choice did the ref have when Szoboszlai booted the ball away after giving away a free kick whilst being on a booking? Not seen it discussed much so I was hoping someone could tell me as I want to be really clear on all the rules this season.

Stew

Are Spurs in trouble?

There’s been a lot said about big Ange (mate), apparently he’s lost 7 out of the last 11 league games. A quick check online seems to support that statistic. Their only wins during this sequence? Against Burnley (relegated with a whimper), Sheffield United (relegated without a whimper) and Everton (definitely candidates for the same unless there’s a drastic change).

That’s relegation form…at best. So, when their only win so far this season is against an Everton team that cant hold their own water, it begs a question, when do the media put him under the same scrutiny as ETH? Surely, he’s got be in the sack race now.

If he is, where do Spurs go from here? Tried hiring known winners in Conte and Mourinho, tried the up and coming in Big Ange, mate. So what’s next?

Just a thought.

MadX

P.S I like him, he seems down to earth, but almost resigned to the fact that this is Spurs being Spurs.

READ: Angeball among many Premier League things now on borrowed time

League table not important says man who supports team in fourth

Can people please stop referencing league positions 4 f**king games in as if they’re a barometer of anything? 3 points separate 2nd and 8th place for f***’s sake meaning that any alternative iteration of those positions could be reality next weekend (caveats apply).

Grow up. And don’t look at the table until at least 8 games in (unless doing so to compile a needlessly moody email).

James Outram, (tired and grumpy) Wirral

Can the blind lead us on commentary?

I was going to write in to reply about commentary for the blind and partially sighted but I’m neither so I’m not qualified to talk about their experiences. It would be good to hear from a visually impaired person or maybe for F365 to do an article on the subject. I’d imagine given the number of audio descriptive services “tech bros” at clubs are starting to provide shows that radio is not the ideal solution. Is ADC much more detailed than radio? I don’t know, it would be interesting to hear from someone who does.

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Tottenham to sack Postecoglou? Ornstein predicts stance on 'shocking decision' with Arsenal comparison

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The Athletic’s David Ornstein has commented on whether Tottenham Hotspur could sack Ange Postecoglou following their 1-0 loss against arch-rivals Arsenal.

Postecoglou was lauded at the start of last season as he successfully overhauled Tottenham‘s style of play, making his side one of the most entertaining sides to watch in the Premier League.

Spurs ended the season poorly but still finished fifth in the Premier League and two points adrift of fourth-placed Aston Villa.

Before this season, Tottenham’s target for the new campaign would have likely been to qualify for the Champions League and/or win a trophy.

However, Spurs have endured a difficult start to the new season. They have one win in four Premier League games and last time out, they were beaten 1-0 at home against North London rivals Arsenal.

Following this result, Postecoglou is the eight-favourite to be the next Premier League manager sacked. Earlier this week, Fabrizio Romano provided his verdict on whether Spurs could make a “shocking decision”.

READ: Top 10 Premier League players, managers, clubs and even abstract ideas living on borrowed time

Romano said: “It’s absolutely everything under control at Tottenham – a slow start, of course, a disappointing North London derby, but at the same time, they are not considering any shocking decision for the manager.

“This project is completely, completely involved in the ideas, the plan… the whole project is around Ange Postecoglou. Even in the summer transfer window, they were blending transfers together with him: [Dominic] Solanke, and also the others.

“This is something they are building with the manager – not just for the manager, but with the manager, so they are not going to change anything now. It was again a poor start to the season where they were also unlucky, if you remember the Leicester game. So it’s probably a difficult moment in general for Tottenham, but they absolutely trust in the manager and trust Postecoglou.

“So at the moment there is nothing negative ongoing at the club, no bad feelings, just the moment to change things, and they will do that on the pitch I’m sure.”

MORE TOTTENHAM COVERAGE ON F365…

👉 Hoddle claims Spurs lack ‘X-factor’ star for key Postecoglou tactic underscored by ‘abysmal’ facet

👉 Cristian Romero slams Tottenham in deleted post after losing NLD derby to Arsenal

👉 Tottenham star emerges as top alternative for Real Madrid if Arsenal deal proves ‘difficult’

A further update has since been revealed by Ornstein. He suspects Postecoglou will still have the backing of Tottenham’s board.

“So this noise and understandable reaction from a lot of the public, and Spurs fans post the north London derby defeat, I suspect will not be replicated inside the club and in the hierarchy,” Ornstein told The Athletic FC podcast.

“If they are fully behind Ange Postecoglou in the way that Arsenal were when Mikel Arteta was facing external pressure, then you’d like to think that in time, things will improve.

“Whether it’s in the way that Arsenal have, or better, or worse, we will have to wait and see.”

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Tottenham: Postecoglou ‘confused’ as he denies ‘boasting’ about success – ‘am I supposed to lie?’

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Tottenham head coach Ange Postecoglou has defended his belief of “always winning things” in a second year at a club after his side’s loss to Arsenal.

Following the 1-0 home loss by Arsenal in Sunday’s north London derby, the former Celtic boss was asked about his pre-season comments about achieving success during a second season after doing so with the Scottish champions.

The 59-year-old said “nothing’s changed” regarding that mindset as he attempts to build on last season as he guided Spurs to fifth place in the Premier League.

Former Australia boss Postecoglou – who also won silverware at South Melbourne and Brisbane Roar as well as in Japan with Yokohama F Marinos – takes his Spurs side to Coventry in the third round of the Carabao Cup on Wednesday night.

Spurs’ last trophy came when they lifted the League Cup in 2008, and Postecoglou was again pressed on his comments over targeting silverware this season.

“It is amazing, isn’t it? I just stated a fact and it seems like am I supposed to just lie or just say it never happened?” Postecoglou said at a press conference.

READ: Top 10 Premier League players, managers, clubs and even abstract ideas living on borrowed time

“It is confusing to me that people are making a big deal out of something – surely I am supposed to answer something that is true?

“Like if I don’t win in the second year this year, and I come out next year and say, ‘well I always win in it’… well no, actually it is not true.

“But I have just said something that is true and it seems like it has upset a lot of people for some reason.”

Postecoglou added: “Do you really think it’s me sort of boasting?

“How am I supposed to answer something that is true? Is it to say, ‘well, actually, it wasn’t that important. They were easy competitions, and they don’t mean anything’?

“If you have achieved something, aren’t you supposed to say, ‘yes I have and that’s what I hope to do again’?

“I am not really sure why people misconstrue it as me trying to boast about something. I have answered a question which is true.

“That’s always happened and my plan is for it to happen again this year – and if it doesn’t happen, then I can’t answer that question the same way next year, I can say ‘mostly’, and not ‘always’.”

READ: F365 Live: Recap Tickers talking north London derby and Postecoglou sack prospects…

Postecoglou is likely to utilise his squad against Coventry, who reached the semi-finals of last season’s FA Cup where the Sky Bet Championship side were beaten on penalties by Manchester United after fighting back from 3-0 down.

Youngsters Archie Gray, Lucas Bergvall and Mikey Moore could all be involved, while Ben Davies, Radu Dragusin, Djed Spence and Timo Werner should also feature.

Midfielder Yves Bissouma missed the north London derby after picking up a groin problem while on international duty, and will not be rushed back into action.

“No. He is not where we want him to be (in his recovery),” Postecoglou said.

“But hopefully there is still a chance (he will be available) for the weekend (against Brentford).”

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Postecoglou sack? Romano reveals blunt update on Tottenham boss in ‘shocking decision’ claim

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Tottenham will not be sacking Ange Postecoglou any time soon with their “whole project” built around him, according to transfer expert Fabrizio Romano.

Spurs have not got off to the best of starts this season under the Australian coach with their recent narrow 1-0 loss to arch-rivals Arsenal in the North London Derby leaving them 13th in the Premier League table.

Postecoglou’s side got four points from their opening two fixtures against Leicester City and Everton before succumbing to back-to-back defeats to Newcastle United and Arsenal.

And that has piled pressure on Tottenham boss Postecoglou with their poor run of form going back to last season and now only Wolves (11) and Everton (9) have had more Premier League defeats from ever-present side since the start of March 2023.

Speaking on his Daily Briefing podcast on his Substack, Romano revealed that there was no chance that Tottenham will sack Postecoglou any time soon.

When asked if Postecoglou was in danger, Romano replied: “Not at all, zero percent. No, no, no and no.

“It’s absolutely everything under control at Tottenham – a slow start, of course, a disappointing North London derby, but at the same time, they are not considering any shocking decision for the manager.

“This project is completely, completely involved in the ideas, the plan… the whole project is around Ange Postecoglou. Even in the summer transfer window, they were blending transfers together with him: [Dominic] Solanke, and also the others.

“This is something they are building with the manager – not just for the manager, but with the manager, so they are not going to change anything now. It was again a poor start to the season where they were also unlucky, if you remember the Leicester game. So it’s probably a difficult moment in general for Tottenham, but they absolutely trust in the manager and trust Postecoglou.

“So at the moment there is nothing negative ongoing at the club, no bad feelings, just the moment to change things, and they will do that on the pitch I’m sure.”

MORE TOTTENHAM COVERAGE FROM F365…

👉 Tottenham star emerges as top alternative for Real Madrid is Arsenal deal proves ‘difficult’

👉 Arsenal rubbish but Arteta brilliant in pre-ordained NLD that raises Postecoglou doubts

👉 Spurs top scorers against the Big Six: Son slowly closing the gap on the most obvious of leaders

Journalist Charles Watts – who has covered Arsenal for years – thought Tottenham were “really poor” in their loss to the Gunners at the weekend.

Watts said in his Caught Offside column: “I thought Spurs were really poor on Sunday to be honest.

“I expected them to really take the game to Arsenal giving the players that Mikel Arteta’s side were missing.

“But after a bright opening 15 minutes they barely laid a glove on them. It just looked like they had no idea how they were going to break Arsenal down.

“I do like Ange Postecoglou and he does like to play football in the right way. But even the Celtic fans who adored him north of the border warned that he doesn’t really have a Plan B.

“That always seemed to cost Celtic when they played teams who were superior to them in the Champions League and right now it looks like it is costing Spurs.

“Given who Arsenal were missing on Sunday I turned up at the ground expecting to see a Tottenham side who believed they could get one over their neighbours.

“But instead I saw a team who looked like they had no real belief that they could get through such a good defence. There was no real quality or guile.

“If I was a Spurs fan I would have been really disappointed with that performance and would be a bit concerned about what was to come this season.”

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