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What Cristian Romero is really like in Tottenham dressing room as Kevin Danso reveals all

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What Cristian Romero is really like in Tottenham dressing room as Kevin Danso reveals all - Football London
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Kevin Danso has given an insight into what Cristian Romero is really like in the Tottenham dressing room and admits that he's always motivated to play football matches after Ange Postecoglou speaks to the team.

Danso arrived at the north London club just four months ago but has quickly become a popular character within the Spurs squad and has already made 12 appearances across all competitions around a muscle injury. Now he faces the prospect of the first final of his senior career with the Europa League showpiece event coming up fast on May 21 against Manchester United.

In reality Danso's hopes of starting in the final would likely require the absence of Romero but there is only huge respect for his Spurs vice-captain and World Cup winner, who recently passed 100 Premier League appearances for the club. The Austria international also offered up an unexpected side in the dressing room to the aggressive tackler the public gets to see on the pitch.

"He's definitely world class. From the outside looking in, you'd think he's very aggressive but he's one of the calmest guys in the changing room," said Danso. "Everybody at the club and anybody who watches football knows he's a brilliant passer and a great defender. I feel like a defender needs that [aggressive] side to him to give the strikers a bit of fear, [thinking] 'oh he could come in at any time'. He's a great talent, a great player. So is Micky [van de Ven]. So is everybody at this club, or they wouldn't be here."

Those expecting the confident Romero to be a shouting captain would also be sorely mistaken.

"No, no he's not the most vocal. That's why I said he's one of the calmest guys. There's different kinds of leadership and he leads by example by the way he plays," said the 26-year-old. "Some are more vocal and some just lead by example and that's exactly what he does. He's a world class player, he's won trophies, he brings that experience and he knows what to do in finals. In big games, he's always there."

So are there certain aspects that Danso would like to take from Romero's game?

"100%. His calmness, his passing range. There's players all over in my position I look to emulate and take things from their game and add to my game. I want to be as complete as possible," he said before listing some of those other players.

"Micky obviously with the way he reads the ball and defending the challenges with his pace. Players like Sergio Ramos, [Virgil] van Dijk...the list is endless. You watch defenders at the highest level and try to add what they do to your game."

So which Tottenham players have looked after Danso since he arrived at the north London club?

"Everybody really. The changing room is amazing. I speak a bit of French because I was in France for the last three years so I speak with the French boys, and obviously growing up here [in England]...Dom [Solanke], Djed [Spence]...so I find it easy to fit in wherever I am because I've been doing it all my life," he explained.

Another man who has left his mark on Danso is his head coach Postecoglou. The Australian's pre-match team talks are famous for their inspirational qualities and the Austrian centre-back could only endorse that.

"Amazing. Honestly. Before every game I've never not felt motivated ahead of the match," he said before explaining how he has been adapting to the 59-year-old's style of football.

"It's normal. In football you always have to adapt. My whole life I've been adapting and it's just about doing that to the best of my ability, getting used to the new players I'm playing with and the new style, and take it on as a challenge. Obviously I'm a professional footballer so I take it on and use it the best I can.

"[At Spurs it's] the high line that we play. That's the only thing I'd say that's a bit different but generally everybody in the modern day tries to play a higher line. Spurs' [line] is really aggressive and I like that because it plays to my strength.

"I feel like we're always ready, we're well prepared, we have all the solutions for every game and it's just about us trying to relay them on the pitch."

With all the noise about Postecoglou's future, how do the players put that to one side with such a huge game in Spain on the horizon?

"Generally just by focusing on what's happening today. We can't affect what happens tomorrow, the only thing we can affect is the here and now. The manager always says that and I feel like the manager's been amazing," he said. "We're in a final, it doesn't happen often and I'm loving every minute of it."

Danso also paid tribute to Postecoglou's senior assistant coach Matt Wells for his work with him and the other defenders and how the young coach has helped him on the training pitches at Hotspur Way.

"[He's helped] in the way we want to defend in and around the box. It's very interesting. I love playing, learning and adding to my game and he's certainly added to my game since I've been here," said the centre-back.

So did Postecoglou sell Danso the prospect of playing in a Europa League final when he was trying to bring him across from Lens in the January transfer window and was that an important thing for him?

"Personally, yes of course but Tottenham speaks for itself. Europa League or no Europa League, it's a big club and somewhere everybody would like to be. That was my reasoning in choosing Tottenham. It was a very easy decision," he said.

Danso has already beaten Manchester United in the Premier League since arriving at Tottenham, with the 1-0 win on his home debut for the club in February. That went some way to scrubbing out a previous experience of playing for Southampton against United when he got sent off through two yellow cards.

"I was having a really good game! But I was young at the time, about 20, got an assist then just made a silly tackle, I was over eager to win the ball and got sent off. At Tottenham, it was my third game, my first game at home at the stadium anyway. It was a good feeling. I feel like in a final a lot more is at stake, it will be a different game obviously but we know what's at stake and we'll go out trying to win.

"[Even being two English teams] I think it will still feel like a final, a winner takes all game. Everybody knows what's on the line. We've done well in the Premier League against them, even in the Carabao Cup. So we just need to go into the game with a confidence but obviously be careful because we know what's at stake."

He added: "I'm very ready. You don't know how many opportunities you're going to get to play in a final and here I am, four months here and there's already a final. So whatever happens, I'm ready. Whatever my role is, I'll just be supporting the team 100% and doing my best in whatever that role is.

min explains the real reason why he stayed at Tottenham despite transfer interest

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Son Heung-min explains the real reason why he stayed at Tottenham despite transfer interest - Football London
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Son Heung-min has said that the biggest reason he remained at Tottenham was to achieve what others couldn't and win a trophy.

The 32-year-old signed for Tottenham back in 2015 from Bayer Leverkusen and has since made 452 appearances for the north London outfit, scoring 173 goals and providing 101 assists. However, silverware has eluded the Premier League Golden Boot winner at club level, with second and third place finishes after two title challenges under Mauricio Pochettino as well as runners-up medals in the Champions League and Carabao Cup.

Now, back from a foot injury that has kept him out of the past seven matches, Son will try once again as the captain of Ange Postecoglou's side when Spurs take on Manchester United in the Europa League final in Bilbao on May 21. There has been plenty of transfer interest in Son over the years but the South Korean star has always remained loyal to Tottenham with the club having no interest in selling him and he explained why he was never seeking to leave.

"We’ve been talking about this for years. The biggest reason I stayed at Tottenham was because I wanted to do something others couldn’t achieve. That’s probably why I’m where I am now. You need all the pieces to complete a puzzle," he told the Korean media at Hotspur Way on Monday.

"I think I’ve gathered all the other pieces to make that puzzle complete. It feels like I’ve been missing that one most important final piece, and I’ve been trying to find it for the past ten years. I really hope I can finally complete the puzzle this time."

On those previous final appearances he added: "I believe I definitely learned something from those failures. Even though the players have changed a lot since we played in the finals, it’s important for me and the more experienced players to share those experiences with the current squad.

"It feels different this time. I really want to win - more than anyone else, I think. So many people are supporting us with the same desperate passion I feel. If we prepare well, I believe we can achieve it.

"For me, every game is special and every game is meaningful, but this game feels like an opportunity that may not come back. I feel it's right to fully focus on this game for that reason. We are all so focused for this final. I am working to return to full match fitness in time for this game and I don't want to have any regrets.

"For the fans back home who want this even more than I do, I really want to bring them a great gift when I return to Korea after the season ends. A gift that will make our Korean fans, Tottenham fans and me very happy."

There is a trend of Tottenham players leaving the club and quickly claiming silverware and it has happened again with Harry Kane and Eric Dier winning the Bundesliga title this week with Bayern Munich. Son has already been in contact with his former strike partner and Spurs' record goalscorer.

"I actually texted Harry Kane and he called me back on a video call! I was really happy to see him happy. He is one of my best friends and to see a former teammate achieve so much, I was delighted for him like he's my family," he said. "With that positive energy I hope he can support Spurs in the game as well so we can achieve a good result like his."

Unfortunate Brennan Johnson training accident sparks Man United joke and who waved at Spurs window

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Unfortunate Brennan Johnson training accident sparks Man United joke and who waved at Spurs window - Football London
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The Tottenham players were put through their paces in front of journalists as part of the Europa League final media day at Hotspur Way.

Even though it is still nine days until the final in Bilbao where Spurs will take on Manchester United, there was a full day of events at the club's Enfield training complex ahead of it. First the media were able to watch a full training session for more than an hour and a half before interviewing a string of Tottenham players before and after Ange Postecoglou's latest press conference - his fifth in six days.

Tottenham had secured their place in the showpiece event in Spain with a 5-1 aggregate victory over Bodo/Glimt in the semi-finals before a much-changed side lost 2-0 against Crystal Palace in the Premier League on Sunday at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium. That meant the training session had two very distinct sides to it.

Here's everything we spotted going on during the session at Hotspur Way.

What they did

The training session was split into two very distinct groups with those who started or played a decent chunk of the match against Palace going through recovery work while those who didn't play in the game were put through their paces in a normal training session.

They started off with the usual warm-ups, stretches and ball drills before that latter group moved across to another pitch to do some passing work in teams, both defensively and attacking, with two sides, one in Europa League bibs and the other without.

What was on display was also the coaching method under Postecoglou where he gives his staff 15 minute sessions each in order to keep training fresh and the players constantly engaged and moving from one thing to the next as each coach looks to make their session all the more interesting and fruitful.

The whole thing is signed off by Postecoglou and the coaches go through a briefing meeting afterwards to discuss what worked and what didn't and which players impressed and which ones, if any, weren't at the levels required.

Who was missing

There was one key absentee from the training session and that was Dejan Kulusevski, with the Swede having gone off just 15 minutes into the match against Palace.

football.london asked Postecoglou in his press conference how the 25-year-old was doing just nine days before the final in Spain.

"We'll see. He was a bit sore this morning with his knee. It looks like a knock at this stage but we're going to let it settle for 24 hours then assess it. But the initial thing was it's more of a knock than anything more significant," said the Spurs boss.

Also missing from the session were the other injured players James Maddison, Lucas Bergvall and Radu Dragusin as well as Dane Scarlett, who has undergone surgery on his groin.

There were various U21 youngsters involved to make up the numbers with the non-starters from the Palace game.

Spotting injured players

While Kulusevski could not be seen around the training ground, other players could be seen at times during the media day.

James Maddison gave reporters a little wave from the gym window as he continues his rehabilitation following a knee injury that will keep him out until later in pre-season this summer, a better prognosis than some inside Spurs feared in the days after the midfielder suffered the injury in the first leg of the semi-finals against Bodo/Glimt.

Lucas Bergvall suffered an ankle injury in training the day before that match and could be seen at one point to be walking around the training ground in the sunshine beside Radu Dragusin, who is back running on his way back from an anterior cruciate ligament injury suffered in February, and goalkeeper Antonin Kinksy. Dane Scarlett could also be seen walking into the academy area during the day, with Yves Bissouma also making a trip into the academy gym at one point.

An unfortunate slip

There was one moment during the section of the training session being taken by Ryan Mason that brought a scare for Postecoglou and Spurs.

Cristian Romero slid to slip a pass through to Brennan Johnson down the right during a keep ball exercise, and his team-mate during the drill, Sergio Reguilon, rushed towards him only to slip on the grass right in front of Johnson and wipe out the Wales international.

In real time at the training ground, it looked to the media from their position a little way off that the Spaniard had slide tackled his team-mate and it was only on re-watching it up close on video that you could see Reguilon lose his footing.

It was a painful one for Johnson though who remained down for a while holding his left foot and even when he got back up he limped for a while before eventually being able to take part again in the exercise. Romero teased Reguilon about it while someone shouted 'red card Reggy' on the pitch.

Postecoglou joked about it in his press conference, saying: "We’ve got enough injuries! I’ll put them in cotton wool for the next ten days. Seriously, with the way things have gone this year, any extra curricular activities are going to be at a minimum. I don’t know if you saw training today but we had Reggy tackle Brennan and they are on the same team. That goes to show how we’re going!"

He told football.london: "It seems to be how our season has gone. You want to protect the integrity of training and you have to train at a certain level. There are the quirks of things that happen. Thankfully nothing too serious. You’ve just got to hope and pray that the football gods have run out of challenges to throw to us this year."

The accidental moment certainly sparked plenty of jokes on social media from Manchester United fans with Reguilon having played on loan there last season and many of their supporters joking that he was "Agent Reguilon" on a mission to help them win the final by injuring Spurs players.

A chat in the sunshine

Postecoglou also enjoyed a nice moment in the warm weather about 20 minutes into the session when he spotted Rodrigo Bentancur and Pedro Porro and went over to sit between the two Spanish-speakers for quite a long time.

It was put to the Australian in his press conference that seeing him out there chatting for so long seemed a world away from the kind of image that's built of him not enjoying small talk and not getting close to his players. So has he got closer to this squad than any other?

"No, I think as you get older, I mean a lot of that stuff references when I was a younger manager, but you know as you get older you mellow a bit and you understand also that the world's changing and people need connections these days, it's important," he said.

"So it was a nice day. It's not often you can sit out in the grass out there, mate, and have a chat with the boys. It was just a general chat and they're both great guys, not just good footballers, but great guys and it's always good to get some feedback from them as well. They obviously played a bit yesterday and could see where the group's at. So yeah it's a fairly common occurrence, mate."

Every word Ange Postecoglou said on freak Brennan Johnson accident and his Bentancur and Porro chat

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Tottenham head coach Ange Postecoglou has been speaking at a special Europa League final media day ahead of the big event in Bilbao.

The Spurs boss has been out on the training pitches at Hotspur Way putting his players through their paces on Monday morning and then spoke to the media ahead of the showpiece final on May 21 in Bilbao against Manchester United. Tottenham secured their place in the game in Spain with a 5-1 aggregate win over Bodo/Glimt in the semi-finals.

Postecoglou spoke on Monday about a freak training ground moment between Brennan Johnson and Sergio Reguilon, the latest on Dejan Kulusevski's injury, Son's return and a chat he had with Rodrigo Bentancur and Pedro Porro, among plenty of other topics.

Our Tottenham correspondent Alasdair Gold was among those putting the questions to Postecoglou. Here's the full transcript from the press conference.

You've had a busy schedule since Thursday night, have you had any time to reflect on reaching the final and are your two boys happy about getting a couple of days off for the final?

Yeah, happy about getting a couple of days off school. It's been pretty busy but there's also some planning that needs to happen and some sort of some practicalities around it. A lot of it is just logistics and making sure that particularly with the players we give them the best preparation possible, so you've got to do a few things pretty early on around logistics and making sure that everyone's organised, so, that takes your mind to that final, but obviously like you said, we had a game in between, so it's more been around the practicalities of it than anything else.

That speech in the dressing room, which we don't get to see, it gave us a sense of what you've all been through to get here, will that make it even more special when you get to Bilbao?

No, I think, you know, I've said before, I think whenever you, irrespective of the circumstances, when you get to such a significant moment, I think there's always understanding of both on a personal level, but more importantly as a group, what we've had to overcome to get there and I think every team's got their own story and in those kind of moments, it's the emotion of it and how you've overcome the odds to get to where you are. Really important to recognise for the group and I guess for myself individually, so I was really proud of the fact that against the backdrop of some real difficulties and massive challenges that the group still found a way to get to the final and give us an opportunity of something pretty special.

Will you follow in the previous footsteps before the 2019 final of Spurs players walking over hot coals and breaking arrows?

We’ve got enough injuries! I’ll put them in cotton wool for the next ten days. Seriously, with the way things have gone this year, any extra curricular activities are going to be at a minimum. I don’t know if you saw training today but we had Reggie tackle Brennan and they are on the same team. That goes to show how we’re going!

Can we check on Sonny and how he's going as well as the emotional factor of him not winning anything in his time here?

Firstly, from a physical standpoint he's good. It's important he got some minutes yesterday, he needed them. More for himself psychologically more than anything else. He had a good session today. He was never going to do the whole session because he played yesterday. He feels good so we've still got eight or nine games to go and a game on Friday where we can build him up. It's great to have him available. He's been a big catalyst this year and a driver of... he understands better than most what a trophy would do for this football club and for him personally because he's had an unbelievable career here in which he's done just about everything. But the key bit, that silverware which every player craves, he knows how significant it would be for the club and him personally. So the fact that he's back available is good.

We were there just in front of Reggy and Brennan when it happened, do you watch training at the moment half wincing?

It seems to be how our season has gone. You want to protect the integrity of training and you have to train at a certain level. There are the quirks of things that happen. Thankfully nothing too serious. You’ve just got to hope and pray that the football gods have run out of challenges to throw to us this year.

Any update on Dejan Kulusevski?

We'll see. He was a bit sore this morning with his knee. It looks like a knock at this stage but we're going to let it settle for 24 hours then assess it. But the initial thing was it's more of a knock than anything more significant.

How big a player does Kulusevski feel in the absence of Maddison and Bergvall?

We've obviously lost Madders and Bergvall in the last two weeks, so yesterday I only had three players back up and they were all going to play 45 minutes and you know, Sod's law, it's one of those that gets injured and look he is important, but you know, where we are right now they're all important. The thing with Deki was that he obviously missed a fair bit of football, but I could just sense he was getting back into the groove of things. I thought there's some real promising signs.

At Bodo he had to do a really disciplined job for us in terms of defensively, but he started to show some of that attacking creativity and I thought he started the game really well yesterday. I thought our first 10 minutes were actually okay, and then he gets injured, so yeah, he's pretty important to us in the context of where the squad is at the moment, so fingers crossed he's OK.

You've talked about the twin realities and there does seem to be a kind of different approach in Europe, particularly for these away games than you're taking in the Premier League. Can you talk about that and why the approach has felt so different in Bodo and Frankfurt to how it felt against Palace yesterday?

Some of it's just personnel and when you're putting teams together, it's a sum of all the parts that make it effective and when you make so many changes, it invariably becomes disjointed and you're not able to play with the same sort of fluency and rhythm. If you look at our back four in Europe, along with Vic, the reason I think that it works so well is that they all complement each other, they all sort of fit the pieces. We've got speed, we've got the power, we've got technical ability, we've got the calmness we need, so it kind of all fits together and that's why I think we look so effective.

Same sort of with our front three and and midfield, so you're kind of always looking, whereas when you're just putting 11 players on the park we're all very good and and capable but there are elements of that that go missing where they don't sort of complement each other when they're out there, so it doesn't allow you to play in the same manner and doesn't allow you to look as fluent, but again that's the situation we've been in .

Yesterday we didn't really reach the levels in any of our football, whether it was our press or with the ball and I think it was the effect of, The changes we made. I also think It was a big emotional night for the whole group on Thursday night, and we got back obviously late Friday morning. We didn't train Friday, which we usually do. So the preparation was limited and all those kind of things, they're not excuses but they're reasons why maybe the lads didn't perform at the levels we wanted them to.

A lot of your style and system is based around the players really believing in the process and the tactics, how easy or hard has it been to keep everyone believing the way that they played through the season?

I think I've said all along, as a manager, I guess that's the key to everything you do, just how much belief the people, not just the players and the staff have around you. Now, when things are going well, all that kind of takes care of itself, you know, but fair to say we haven't had smooth waters this year where there was the opportunity for players to question and maybe lose a bit of faith or belief in what I was doing and what I wanted us to do.

But I just never sensed that, I really felt the players even in the most difficult of times still embrace the fact that if we continue down this road, we could still achieve something and so easy in the respect of there was never any point where I felt, jeez, I've got to sort of address this at any point. But also testament to the group of players and the staff because they're just as important, that at no time when there was an easy option to waver on what we're doing did I sense that that was, and we wouldn't have got to the final if that was the case, I don't think,

Even during Europe we had some real challenges with players missing and they still found a way to overcome those things and I think when we got to the knockout stages from probably the Alkmaar away game wasn't great, but from Alkmaar home those last five games, they've really sort of said, OK, well, everything we'll work for has been for this purpose and been really clear on what we need to do.

You spoke about trophies earlier this season, it got taken out of context, but how important is winning this trophy for you?

For me personally, well you know great, it’s another trophy I can reminisce in my old age about, but more importantly what it means for the club. I’ve always said it’s the significance of what it does to people that really impacts you. A lot of the success I’ve had has been stuff that’s pretty significant. It’s been at clubs where Yokohama hadn’t won a Championship for 14 years, Australia had never won a continental championship, Brisbane had never won one, South Melbourne - my first job – hadn’t won in seven years, Celtic had been one year but trust me that’s a long time in Scotland.

They had to wrestle back the dominance they had for so long, so it’s the significance of them all because you know what it does to the club and to the people. When you look at the historical backdrop of this club and what it’s been through on the last 20-odd years, I feel like it could be a turning point in terms of the way the club is perceived but also more how it perceives itself which I think is the biggest thing. Until you do that, irrespective of what else you accomplish, people will still say you haven’t won anything and in our game, in life in general, that’s the things that matter most when people assess where you’re at.

You've got plenty of history with finals, is there a different energy around the final and do you draw on previous triumphs?

Yeah, I do, and they are different, they're kind of standalone events, there's nothing like them, every experience I've had, you walk into it knowing that it's going to be different to any other game you're going to play. Every game's important but the significance of what's at stake, you're never too far from the eye line of the trophy that you're going to get.

It takes a lot out of you emotionally, physically on the day, I know the players obviously need to try and prepare as they always would, but you can't ignore the fact, I mean, we're 10 days out and today already you've got to start talking about it. So there's a different feeling and I guess I've had a lot of experience in it, so I kind of know, I try and navigate that sort of fine line between trying to keep it as normal as possible, but also understanding the players that, you know what, it is a special opportunity that we need to take and, It takes sometimes something more than just the normal to get you there.

How do you prepare those players for something that maybe some of them haven't experienced?

Yeah, you can, I think you can, I think it's just about just tapping into... I mean they've all got different personalities, but you get to know them pretty well and I think that there's always for me, a greater purpose than what's before you is always the key. Can you create a narrative where OK, yes, it is a final, yes there is a trophy at stake, but that's the same for the opposition as well. Is there something greater that can drive you beyond that, just winning a trophy, and that's something you build into long before you get to this point, but if it's been consistent and it's resonated with the group, I think it can be powerful on the day.

There's been a lot of narrative about Man United, how they win these finals and Tottenham tend to lose them, how do you prevent that from filtering through to the players? Do you use it as fuel or do you try and block it out?

I mean sometimes. There's no doubt that the comments of the Bodo players had an impact on the group, and they were quite keen to make sure that those questions got answered, but I guess that's the hurdle this club has to overcome because it'll always be there, you know, until you actually do it, then you're fair game for people to say 'well you've always kind of fluffed it on the big stage'.

So irrespective of what the opposition say or what anyone else says, what you’ve got to try and do is break that cycle. Whatever motivation you need to do that, you tap into. So there may be things we do tap into but to really do something as significant as what you want to do, there has got to be a higher purpose than shutting people’s mouths up. I think it is more about ‘can you make an impact?’

I often say to the players that at the end of your careers, what you want to be able to do is go back to the clubs you served and know you’ve made an impact. The photos I see up on the walls at the stadium are all of Bill Nicholson, the 1984 winning team. Fair to say a lot of them are in black and white. Can we get this group up on that wall?

With the Son decision for the final, is it very much black and white over whether if he's fit enough, he's ready or is there an emotional pull there as well, what he represents to the club, his service over the year, what he means to the team?

No it comes down to getting him ready to play and then making a decision. It's nothing more than that. One thing I do know about finals is there are always moments and players who can change it. But it's going to take a collective effort, it's what we do as a team that will be much more important than individuals on the day.

You mentioned the 84 team, they had loads of injuries, struggled in the league and they missed Glenn Hoddle for the semis and final, there are so many parallels, have you spoken to the squad about that team and did you know of that history?

I think from when I arrived, I've spoken a lot about the history of the club and what the challenge was for for this group of players as it has been for every group of players since the club's had the success it did. There's been some fantastic players, world class players who've played here and world-class coaches, managers who have been here and you need to understand the history and the magnitude of the task at hand to understand how difficult it will be, but also how significant it can be.

Talk about narratives, I mean that's been one of the constants from the time I arrived is how do we as a group make the impact that others haven't been able to. We know it's not just about ability, because like I said it's world-class players, world class managers and sometimes it's just a bit of luck that you need to go your way, but to get that luck you've got to put yourself in the position to have that success, so I've kind of made sure the players are well aware of the significance of what they're trying to achieve.

We saw you out at training, talking to Rodrigo and Pedro for a long, long time, that kind of image seems a world away from the kind of image that's built of you not doing small talk and not getting close to your players, have you got closer to this squad than any other squad?

No, I think as you get older, I mean a lot of that stuff references when I was a younger manager and just the way, but you know as you get older you mellow a bit and you understand also that the world's changing and people need connections these days, it's important. So it was a nice day. It's not often you can sit out in the grass out there, mate, and have a chat with the boys. It was just a general chat and they're both great guys, not just good footballers, but great guys and it's always good to get some feedback from them as well. They obviously played a bit yesterday and could see where the group's at. So yeah it's a fairly common occurrence, mate.

Son thanked for the medical staff for getting him back back so quickly, how is his injury and will he be 100% match fit and were you surprised he's back so soon?

In terms of his fitness, he's progressing well. He played 25-30 minutes yesterday, we should get him some game time against Villa on Friday. if he trains right through he should be in a good condition. He's worked hard to get back with the medical team. It was a funny injury. There was no kind of pre prescribed length of time, it was just how he felt and progressed. But he worked hard with the medical team. It was important he gets some game-time so hopefully he kicks on now.

Sonny and Ben Davies played in the 2019 Champions League final defeat, will that heartbreak inspire them?

Ben and Sonny have been here a while and understand that the opportunities don't come along too often. It's not like you get in a final every year. the last one was six years ago. So when they do come along, you want to take that opportunity. You can't assume it will come next year or the year after. Both of them are good reference points for the other boys.

You mentioned Spurs needing to break the cycle and and when you talk about how you've broken that cycle at the clubs in the past, is Tottenham the toughest version of that situation that you faced in your career?

It is hard to say. I guess the challenges of this year have made it feel like its harder for sure. Stuff that’s happened this year has never happened before in my career, around events that are out of your control. And I think obviously the attention that the league gets, the attention the club gets make it feel like its more of a push to get it to where you want to, Maybe at some of the other clubs, the circumstances, there was less barriers to overcome. It seems like here there are a lot. You just have to look at where the club has been for the last 20-odd years. It is not because of a lack of quality players or managers that have all been through here. You realise that, But I realised that when I took the role. I knew it was going to be a massive challenge but we’ve given ourselves an opportunity. The other key bit is to try and take that opportunity.

Has it been more psychological?

Some of it, not all of it because you can’t dismiss the fact that I’ve also had to change pretty much everything at the club in terms of playing style, in terms of the squad. It’s not like I took over a team that finished third and is constantly in that echelon. The year before I took over, we were eighth. We weren’t even in Europe. So it’s not just been ‘OK, this is the final bit’. We’ve had to do a whole lot of other things. We’ve done a lot of heavy lifting in the last two years. We’ve signed a lot of young players with the right kind of thinking for the future.

That’s costing us now because we don’t have a squad that can cope with what’s going through now. It is not just psychological, it is about trying to change a whole range of things but also have that piece. My view was that’s what I’ll get judged on. I could have been sitting here fifth last year, fifth this year – maybe people wouldn’t be waiting for the white smoke to see if it’s my last one – but they’d still be saying ‘You know Ange, that’s great but its all been done before. Until this club wins something, you haven’t made an impact.,’ I kind of knew throughout my tenure last year, that’s what I was going to be judged on so now we have an opportunity to do that.

UEFA confirm controversial Tottenham vs Man Utd Europa League referee decision after Arsenal drama

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UEFA confirm controversial Tottenham vs Man Utd Europa League referee decision after Arsenal drama - Football London
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Felix Zwayer has been confirmed as the referee for the Europa League final between Tottenham and Manchester United. The German official will take charge of the match in Bilbao, Spain, on Wednesday, May 21.

The UEFA referee was named for the second leg of Arsenal's Champions League semi-final against Paris Saint-Germain last week. Zwayer has been involved in almost 700 games but has also been caught up in a match-fixing scandal.

Zwayer was the man who awarded PSG's second half penalty in France only for it to be saved by David Raya. After being sent to VAR he gave a handball for an incident following a close-range PSG shot which hit Myles Lewis-Skelly.

The 43-year-old had already been someone to watch after being banned for six months back in 2005. He was assistant to referee Robert Hoyzer and allegedly accepted a bribe of over £200 after coming forward to make the German football association aware of what had happened.

Zwayer was picked as the referee for England's Euro 2024 semi-final against the Netherlands last year. That was already a controversial selection by UEFA after Jude Bellingham had called Zwayer out during his time at Borussia Dortmund.

"You give a referee that has match-fixed before the biggest game in Germany - what do you expect?" the midfielder said in 2021 after Bayern Munich beat his side 3-2 and had a penalty given.

"For me, it wasn't [a penalty]. He [Mats Hummels] is not even looking at the ball and he's fighting to get it and it hits him. You can look at a lot of the decisions in the game." Bellingham was fined almost £35,000 for the outburst.

In his 37 matches across all competitions (including Bundesliga, Champions League, Saudi Pro League, and international Nations League fixtures) Zwayer has issued a staggering 198 yellow cards and seven red cards (four straight sending offs). He has also given 12 penalties.

Zwayer has been in charge of just one Europa League game so far. That was Bodo/Glimt's 2-1 last-16 loss to Olympiacos in the first leg. He gave six yellow cards, one red card, and a penalty.

This will be Zwayer's first European club final. He was in charge of the 2023 Nations League final between Croatia and Spain and has also been appointed for the German Cup and Super Cup.

At the 2018 World Cup he was used as one of those on VAR duty. Zwayer has previously refereed two games involving Tottenham. The last time was in the 2018/19 Champions League 4-2 group stage defeat to Barcelona at Wembley Stadium. He gave six yellow cards out that night, four of them to Spurs players.

Zwayer's first game involving Tottenham was in the 2015/16 Europa League away draw to Fiorentina where five yellow cards were issued, four for Spurs. He has refereed four matches for United and they are unbeaten.

The last time he oversaw a game was in the 2022/23 Europa League quarter-final home draw to Sevilla. He had overseen two Champions League wins (in 2021/22 and 2017/18) against Villarreal and Benfica) before that. His first game with United was a 2016/17 Europa League game at FC Rostov.

A look behind the scenes & Postecoglou's big decision against Aston Villa. Click here to listen to the latest episode of Gold & Guest Talk Tottenham!

Ange Postecoglou delivers brutally honest verdict on Tottenham transfer policy

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Ange Postecoglou has admitted that his Tottenham squad "can't cope" ahead of the big Europa League final meeting with Manchester United in Bilbao next week.

Tottenham take on Manchester United in San Mames next Wednesday, with both finalists having suffered a desperately poor season domestically. The two teams will meet in the final currently sitting 16th and 17th in the Premier League table, just above the relegation zone.

Speaking after a 20th defeat of the season at home to Crystal Palace on Sunday, Postecoglou said: "There is no doubt that if we weren't in Europe, if we got knocked out pre-January and we didn't have the Carabao Cup run we did, even with our injuries, it's fair to say our league position would be better than what it is today.

"I'm not saying we would be in the top four, but we would certainly be in a better position."

The Australian doubled down on that view in a special Europa League final media day at Hotspur Way on Monday and even made reference to the club's transfer activity.

He said: "I've had to change pretty much everything at the club in terms of playing style, in terms of the squad. It's not like I took over a team who finished third and was constantly in that echelon.

"The year before I took over we were eighth and weren't even in Europe. It's not just been 'this is the final bit', I've had to do a whole lot of other thing, a lot of heavy lifting in this last two years.,

"We signed a lot of young players with the right thinking of the future, but it's costing us now because we don't have a squad that can cope with what it's going through."

Spurs brought in teenagers Lucas Bergvall, Archie Gray and Wilson Odobert in the summer and added further teenage stars in Mathys Tel, initially on loan, and Yang Min-hyeok in the January transfer window.

Dominic Solanke and Kevin Danso - in January - were the only senior player brought into the club during the two transfer windows this season and given the number of injuries the club has suffered this season, Postecoglou's admission is fair comment.

Daniel Levy handed £150m Tottenham boost amid investment stance and takeover talk

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The valuation of Tottenham Hotspur has increased year-on-year despite a miserable season for the club on the pitch.

Spurs, who could yet reach the Champions League next season if they win the Europa League despite potentially finishing the campaign one place above the relegation zone, have transformed in value in recent years since they moved into their £1.2 billion Tottenham Hotspur Stadium home in 2019.

Club revenue has jumped £67 million since 2019, a rise of 15 per cent, while commercial revenue growth, largely attributable to the new opportunities the stadium provides, including hosting NFL regular season games and multiple concerts and major sporting events away from football, has jumped by £120m, a rise of 89 per cent. The COVID-impacted 2020/21 season, that impacted matchday revenue and broadcast compared to a previous year of reaching the Champions League final, meant that it was commercial that was the key to retaining overall revenue growth.

A build in a densely populated area of North London where real estate is expensive, as well as existing transport solutions already in place, meant that the move to a new stadium was always going to improve Spurs as a business and that has panned out. What it has yet to do is improve the team competitively.

US sports business website Sportico last week published its annual ‘Most Valuable Soccer Clubs’ list for 2025. The top 50 teams saw a jump in overall value from $80bn (£60.8bn) to $86bn (£66.1bn) over the last 12 months.

Spurs were part of that valuation growth, despite the struggles that have existed on the pitch. The valuation of Spurs for 2025 came in at $3.68bn (£2.8bn), a figure that sees them jump in value by £150m $3.49bn (£2.65bn), placing them ninth on the global list, with only Arsenal, Manchester City, Liverpool and Manchester United above them, with Chelsea sitting a place behind in tenth.

Spurs chairman Daniel Levy has been the target of much ire from supporters who have become disillusioned with the lack of success at the club despite the huge valuations and money that has come into it. This summer they may continue to feel aggrieved with the large amount of transfer debt the club has, where the payables far outweigh the receivables, likely resulting in something of a sell-to-buy approach in order to not put undue pressure on cashflow.

If Ange Postecoglou’s side were to triumph in the Europa League final against Manchester United, then that would aid spend in the summer due to major additional revenue that the club could bank on for next season and it would likely also have a positive impact on the the club’s valuation into 2026.

Sportico's valuation methodology takes into account various factors including historical sales, market size and interest, brand strength, on-field performance, lease terms, debt burden, additional obligations, and future economic expectations. The gains seen across the 2025 list were aided considerably by the strength of the British pound (up 6 per cent) and the Euro (5 per cent) against last year’s valuations.

But a rise in valuation for the club is unlikely to be something trumpeted as a success by the fans. For Levy and majority shareholders ENIC, it is undoubtedly a good thing, especially with one eye on attracting inward investment in the club through giving away equity, although a full sale appears unlikely any time soon, and Levy’s valuation will, if the temperature check from the rumoured interest from MSP Sports Capital in 2023 is anything to go by, be higher than what has been placed upon it by analysts as Sportico.

"To capitalise on our long-term potential, to continue to invest in the teams and undertake future capital projects, the club requires a significant increase in its equity base," Levy said last year.

"The board and its advisors, Rothschild & Co, are in discussions with prospective investors. Any recommended investment proposal would require the support of the club’s shareholders."

Sportico's report stated: “Revenue totals were subject to a team-specific multiplier, which remains the standard metric for valuing sports teams in transactions.

“Earnings can have dramatic fluctuations from year to year, based on player spending and special expenses. In addition, most of the top 50 soccer clubs have lost money in recent years.

“We conducted interviews with those knowledgeable of team finances, including sports bankers and attorneys who actively work on soccer transactions, as well as 10 individuals at firms investing in global soccer franchises. We traded candor for anonymity. This information was vetted by multiple teams and industry experts.

“The team-specific multipliers were based on multiple factors, including historical sales, market (size, saturation and interest by prospective owners), strength of brand, on-field performance (historical and recent), terms of facility lease, debt burden and additional obligations, as well as expected future team and league economics."

Watch as Brennan Johnson wiped out by forgotten Tottenham man in Europa League final open training

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It is a busy day at Hotspur Way on Monday as Tottenham opened their doors to the media for the day to preview the UEFA Europa League final.

It is media day in Enfield as the Spurs players and Ange Postecoglou face the press with ten days to go until their meeting with Premier League rivals Manchester United in the Europa League final in Bilbao, Spain.

As well as collating interviews with the head coach and a selection of his players, football.london and other media outlets have been allowed to view open training at the club's home.

There were immediate concerns with Dejan Kulusevski not taking part in the training session ahead of the final, having hobbled off just 18 minutes in to Spurs' 2-0 home defeat to Crystal Palace on Sunday afternoon.

Spurs supporters will be hoping the Swede makes a full recovery in time for next Wednesday's massive clash, given they are already missing fellow midfielders James Maddison and Lucas Bergvall for the showdown.

Postecoglou said after the game on Sunday "Should be OK, just talking to him after. Medical team are not too concerned with him, more of a knock than anything else. So we're hoping he should be OK."

And there would have been a few more hearts in mouths during open training at Hotspur Way on Monday morning.

During a drill aimed at keeping possession of the ball in tight areas in defence, with a group tasked with pressing high up the pitch, the ball was worked out to the right hand side and Brennan Johnson.

The forward took a touch and then was set upon by forgotten Spurs man Sergio Reguilon. As Johnson looked to move forward with the ball, Reguilon came in behind him and slipped on the surface, wiping out Johnson as he tumbled to the ground into the Welshman.

Johnson was down for a good 15 seconds before being helped to his feet before then clutching his left foot and limping around for a few seconds before getting back involved in the drill, appearing to run off the issue.

The crazy thing about the moment was that Johnson and Reguilon were actually on the same team in that drill!

Tottenham boss on Dejan Kulusevski update and Man Utd

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Tottenham boss Ange Postecoglou is holding his fifth press conference in six days with a special Europa League final media day ahead of the big event in Bilbao.

The Spurs head coach has been out on the training pitches at Hotspur Way with the players on Monday morning and now will be speaking to the media ahead of the showpiece final on May 21 in Bilbao against Manchester United. Tottenham secured their place in the final with a 5-1 aggregate victory over Bodo/Glimt in the semi-finals with a professional display and a clean sheet in Norway on Thursday night.

A much-changed Spurs side then lost 2-0 to Crystal Palace on Sunday in the Premier League with eight players coming into the starting line-up and the result meant a record 20 losses in the league this season. The game also brought an injury that forced Dejan Kulusevski off just 15 minutes into the encounter.

Tottenham handed fresh Dejan Kulusevski injury fear ahead of Man Utd Europa League final

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Tottenham Hotspur are holding their media day for the Europa League final on Monday and football.london are in attendance for open training, an Ange Postecoglou press conference and interviews with the players.

All eyes are on training, with question marks over a number of players ahead of the big final in Bilbao next Wednesday. The most pressing new question surrounds the fitness of Dejan Kulusevski, who went off injured during Spurs' 2-0 defeat to Crystal Palace on Sunday.

And football.london can reveal that the Swede was missing from Spurs training on Monday morning, leading to fears over his availability for the final against Manchester United.

Kulusevski only lasted 18 minutes of the match at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, with Mikey Moore coming on to replace the injured star.

Spurs will already be without midfielders Lucas Bergvall and James Maddison for the final in Bilbao and another injury could be catastrophic for their hopes of lifting their first piece of silverware since 2008.

Fears were allayed by head coach Ange Postecoglou after the game against the Eagles, with the Spurs boss saying: "Should be OK, just talking to him after. Medical team are not too concerned with him, more of a knock than anything else. So we're hoping he should be OK."

Missing training the day after the game may well be seen as just a precaution to let the knock settle down. After all there are another nine days before the two English sides go head-to-head in San Mames. But Spurs staff and the suppoters will be sweating for the rest of those days on the fitness of the Swedish international.