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Richarlison delivers emotional Tottenham message and reveals Brazil trip changed his season

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Richarlison has delivered a long and heartfelt statement about his season and the highs and lows that culminated in him lifting a trophy with Tottenham Hotspur.

The 28-year-old has endured a tough time in north London since his £60million move from Everton in 2022 with injuries aplenty fragmenting the Brazilian's time on the pitch for Spurs. This season Richarlison only appeared in 24 of Tottenham's 60 matches across all competitions due to hamstring and calf injuries but he returned just in time to play a key role for Ange Postecoglou's side in their knockout games in the Europa League, including a pivotal performance in Bilbao in the final.

In the early hours of Monday morning, Richarlison posted his thoughts on his past year on and off the pitch as well as a key trip back home to Brazil in February.

"When this season started, all I wanted was to be healthy to help my team have a better year. I knew it would be important to me mentally and also to finally repay somehow the love I've received these past few years from Spurs fans and all those who cheer me on," he wrote.

"Nobody said it would be easy, but they also didn't imagine it would be this hard. There were days and nights of much anxiety, treatments, pain and a martyr that seemed to have no end. But there was! And it was when I returned to Brazil, for a week, in February, after another injury, that things started to change.

"Being around mine in those days changed a lot for me. Had me feeling like old 'Charlin, the kid who just wanted to play ball. Being in the field has always been therapeutic for me, even before I discovered the power of therapy. It's my best medicine and the one that cures almost all my problems.

What Ange Postecoglou is set to do on Monday as Daniel Levy decides his Tottenham future

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It was almost 10pm on Sunday night at Northumberland Park and Tottenham Hale stations and the Spurs fans were still singing songs from that final in Bilbao.

It was the same at pubs on different sides of the stadium, like The Bill Nicholson or the Antwerp Arms, with supporters in full voice. 'Johnson again', ' Micky van de Ven, Van de Ven' and the special Bilbao adaptation of Shakira's 'Waka, Waka' were the main songs of choice and they will forever be linked to that historic night.

That's what Ange Postecoglou and his Tottenham team have given a fanbase that has endured so much frustration and mocking from their rivals over the previous 17 years. The memories of where they were on May 21, 2025 will be something they'll never forget and neither will they forget the names of those involved in writing that chapter of their lives.

That's why the fans were singing so loudly ahead of kick-off at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium on Sunday and it's why just three minutes in they sang Postecoglou's name, first booming from the big south stand and then it began to roll around the stadium.

That's why they sang for the Australian twice more during the game, including while the hosts were behind, and after the match as well as he walked around with his wife Georgia and their two sons.

That's why even as Brighton scored a fourth goal against a bleary-eyed Spurs side that had celebrated wildly for three days straight after their night in Spain and run out of gas on Sunday, so the 61,449 Tottenham supporters began to sing in unison 'When the Spurs go marching in' so loudly you could hear it it for miles around.

Those fans knew that this week was all about a different match to that one and it was one of those moments when the Spurs fanbase showed just how special they can be. Postecoglou admitted he's been blown away by the reaction to landing the club's first trophy in 17 years and its first European one in 41. He is only the third manager in Spurs' history to win continental silverware.

"I think, especially the parade, it's just been overwhelming, but I understand it, because when you think about 17 years without any sort of silverware, that means, you work it out, what's that? Fifty games a year that these supporters have supported their football club with everything in their heart, and they haven't been able to enjoy a day like they have, for those whatever, 900 games," he said.

"And not only that, they've seen other clubs do it, which doubles the pain, and they've had no experience where they can reflect on it for themselves, for everything they've been through.

"So I understand it. I knew that. There were the legends out there [forming a guard of honour], and they're still remembered because of that and there's been a lot of footballers that have come through these doors since then, world class footballers, but they haven't made the impact that this group has and I think they'll be remembered for that.

"I love how it's made people feel, it's filled a massive hole that they've had for so long, that they now can proudly say their club is a trophy winner. It's a champion of a competition. There is no more this slight of 'you're a great club, but you've never won anything', that's done and I'm super proud of that."

This week has been one of great pride for all of the people who work inside the north London club. Not only the players and the coaching and support staff around the first team, but also those who work in various departments across the training ground and stadium.

They all feel part of something bigger and they've experienced emotions in recent days like never before while employees there, not least during Friday's huge parade which showed everyone how much love Tottenham Hotspur actually engenders when it truly does something right.

For Tottenham now feels like a different animal under Postecoglou because of what he led everyone to on Wednesday night. A huge 'Europa League winners' sign sits above the curved entrance of the stadium's west stand, catching the eye of everyone who passes by on the High Road and that's exactly what the club now are - winners. There's no mocking to be done right now unless Tottenham were to do something that reverses all of the current good feeling.

All of which brings Postecoglou and Spurs to a sliding doors moment.

The Australian has now written his name in the history of the north London club and that's why he got so much love inside that stadium on Sunday, with not only those repeated chants but banners, flags and homemade placards proclaiming messages such as 'We're loving Big Ange instead', 'Ange In' and 'Thank you Ange'.

Whereas chairman Daniel Levy, when his image briefly flickered on to the big screen during the post-match squad, coaches and family walkaround, found himself booed loudly by a portion of the supporters before the camera swiftly cut to someone else.

Postecoglou knows the league form has been dreadful and that horrendous tally of 22 defeats is awful, even with his contextualisation of it as he prioritised the Europa League and saw his mostly young, makeshift second XI was not good enough to perform in the Premier League as a unit.

It was putting all of his eggs into one basket to an extreme degree, but it worked. Postecoglou went as far as telling his players midway through the season that they could put everything into the Premier League and finish second but he was certain they could win the Europa League if they put all else to one side. It could have been a spectacular failure but instead Postecoglou's side spectacularly made history and succeeded where so many before them have failed.

The league position cannot be ignored, but few people remember that Spurs finished 11th when they won both of their previous two trophies or 10th when they lifted their last FA Cup. They were eighth when they last claimed a European trophy 41 years ago.

It's only the silverware that people remember and Postecoglou knew that. He also knew that if his gamble paid off then he would deliver everything asked of him across two seasons - a fifth place improvement after a Harry Kane-less rebuild followed by a trophy and Champions League football the next season.

Walking into a job appraisal, it would be tough for any employer to argue that the 59-year-old hasn't met the targets set for him, even if the route to them was a different one.

There's also a UEFA Super Cup to look forward to. Spurs could potentially win two trophies within three matches. You wait for an open-topped bus to come along in Tottenham and two might come along at once.

Postecoglou told the BBC after the game that if he had asked anyone inside the club at the start of the season if they would have taken a trophy and Champions League qualification that there wouldn't be a person in the house that wouldn't and he's absolutely right.

The Greek-born coach recently said that he felt he had failed in unifying everyone at the club as he had hoped to when he picked up the fragmented mess left after the exit of the bulldozing Antonio Conte, who looks to be about to depart Napoli after winning Serie A with them.

However, in winning Spurs a long-yearned for trophy so Postecoglou has indeed managed to unite the club and the fans, hence the singing in the streets, stations and pubs and the 220,000 people there in Tottenham on Friday night desperate to be a part of the parade.

"I think it's fair to say the last few days have shown how the club can be when it is united. It's a massive club. It's got such a massive reach. People are very passionate about it, you've seen the outpouring of emotion over the last two or three days, what it means to people," said Postecoglou.

"That's something we need to build on, we need to tap into. Moving forward, when we're all together like that, it shows the force of the club. That's what a trophy does. That's what doing something like we've done in the last couple of days does. It just means people feel that extra connection and want more of it."

Sunday's final game was not one there was too much to be taken from in isolation. Some of the players looked like they had been enjoying themselves a lot in recent days, including Micky van de Ven who looked a shadow of the player that made that spectacular goal-line clearance in Bilbao that has become the stuff of legend.

There was always a sense that energy levels were only going to last so long and many of the home players in the first half were fuelled by the crowd and incredible party atmosphere as they took a 1-0 lead into the break, through Dominic Solanke's composed penalty, won after Mathys Tel was brought down in the box.

Tel had a great chance to double Spurs' lead before the break only to be denied by Bart Verbruggen and then after the break the Frenchman teed up Brennan Johnson for the kind of goal he's put away all season only for the Wales international to scuff wide.

The loss of the energetic and constantly pressing Pape Matar Sarr at half-time was a blow. The young midfielder's religious beliefs mean he does not drink alcohol so he was one of the fitter, fresher players on the pitch.

Wilson Odobert came on for Sarr to confirm that he's nowhere near physical enough at this point to play a central role on the pitch.

The second half simply saw Spurs splutter on the kerbside, out of gas. A large portion of these players have enjoyed the three-day celebrations since that night in Bilbao with a few drinks, and then a few more and then a few more after that.

They absolutely deserved those celebrations but it did mean that this final game was always going to be a struggle for some. The pace of the Premier League is too high to forgive anyone, let alone many.

The second period was too easy for a Brighton side with a fresher disposition, Jack Hinshelwood scoring twice after corners fell at his feet, then Matt O'Riley slotting home a spot kick after Yves Bissouma tripped Diego Gomez while trying to cover for the injured Destiny Udogie.

The Seagulls' display was rounded off by a terrific curling effort from distance by Gomez that left Guglielmo Vicario with no chance and that's when the Tottenham fans could be heard rather than the Brighton ones.

"Obviously the players were allowed to celebrate but irrespective of that the emotions of the last three days meant it was always going to be a tricky one for us," Postecoglou told football.london.

"First half we competed well. We could've had a second goal which would've made it easier for us. Even second half Brennan's got a good opportunity but you could tell in the last 35 minutes we ran out of legs and that's kind of understandable for the players."

There were few positives from the game other than perhaps Archie Gray looking better in midfield with a couple of crunching challenges and moments of skill giving a glimpse of the 19-year-old's future.

Kevin Danso made some great challenges, including one goal-saving one, but also showcased his ability to run head down into trouble when he goes on a dribble in his own half.

Danso was replacing the injured Cristian Romero, who had really, really, really enjoyed the celebrations in the week, and the Argentine was not present at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium on Sunday due to a toe injury according to Postecoglou.

His head coach made it clear that Spurs need to keep Romero next season and beyond and potentially the two men's futures could be intertwined because the Argentine has huge respect for the Australian.

"I think Romero is absolutely important to keep at this football club. You just saw the way he’s been in the last [weeks] and he hasn’t been fully fit to be fair with his toe, but you’ve seen he’s a World Cup winner," said the head coach.

"He is a winner. You saw that in all the big games we’ve had and the lads certainly respect him very highly. He makes them walk a bit taller, so yeah from my perspective it is a no-brainer that making sure players like him (stay), because if he goes, who do you replace him with?

"There are not too many out there like him. It will be very important for the club to try and retain him, and retain him for the longer-term I think."

While this one game on Sunday was difficult to judge in isolation because of the different preparations of both teams coming into it, it's the wider view of the league season that is the issue.

There are doubts over whether, like Conte has constantly been criticised for in his career, Postecoglou can deal with a strong league season as well as winning a cup. The Australian was asked directly why people should believe that Spurs will be better next season in the Premier League?

"From my perspective, I made decisions that I felt were giving us the best chance of achieving the goal we needed to achieve this year and that has affected our league form. If people don’t want to take that into account, then there is nothing I can say to explain it any better than that," he said.

"I came to the club and we had finished eighth. I didn’t take over a club that had finished second. They had no European football to speak of, lost the one player who probably guarantees you European football. That was my starting point.

"At the end of two years, I’ve got the club a trophy it has been crying out for, Champions League football, we finished fifth last year. Either people are saying ‘last year it was a huge anomaly for us to finish fifth or this is what we deliver right.’

"I have got no doubt next year we will be in a much stronger position, challenging for the top places. I have got no doubt we will tackle the Champions League with the same determination that we tackled the Europa League. I have no doubts about that. If people are seeking any more evidence about me, then there is nothing I’m going to say that’s going to convince them if they haven’t seen it in the last two years."

He added that Tottenham need to add to the experience of their squad if they are to compete in the Champions League next season.

"If we do some good business in the transfer market, obviously bring some experience in, I'm not talking about age, I'm talking about players who have played at this level and can help the team, then I've got no doubt we can make the impact we want," he said.

"I think not just us but any club that gets into the Champions League, I think understands that [you need experience]. It's the most elite competition in Europe and it's a great demand.

"So yeah, I think every club that gets into the Champions League sees it as an opportunity to strengthen with - experience is the right word - but players who have played at that level, who are going to be comfortable at that level, not players who are stepping up to that level. That's the difference."

Postecoglou looked drained in his press conference after the game. Exhausted from a 61-game campaign, which plus the pre-season schedule meant, in all, he's been at the helm of 66 matches during this season across 10 different countries.

He was not tetchy nor argumentative, but tired and as much so from a situation that has brought the usual painful silence from within the club when communication is most required.

There is hope and a desperate need that incoming CEO Vinai Venkatesham will bring a voice to a mute club when he joins this summer as he was a great communicator down the road at their north London rivals.

Levy's annual address to the fans arrived on Sunday in the club's matchday programme and was one of the shortest ever seen, which seemed bizarre after the club had finally achieved something it had failed to do in the rest of his near quarter-century tenure and win a major trophy. You would think it would be an opportunity to relish it all and what it meant for so many inside and outside the club's walls.

There was no mention of the future for Postecoglou and, unlike other years, no mention of the academy and the success had by Stuart Lewis' U18s nor any mention of the women's side after their difficult season.

It felt like a rushed, generic holding statement had somehow made it all the way to the page to replace something else much longer that had to be thrown away after Wednesday night's final.

Postecoglou appeared bewildered by the talk over his future outside the club and the absence of positive affirmation about it within the walls at Tottenham.

"I will be honest, I have been finding it really weird talking about my future when we have done something unprecedented," he said. "I have had to answer the questions because no one else at the club is in the position to do so I guess, but I can’t answer that question about me and my future. Part of me is thinking ‘why am I even being asked that question?’ But it is what it is.

"I have got no doubt though that this could be a real defining moment for this club because wherever I have been, I have made an impact where I have brought success to a club that hasn’t had it for a while. You just have to look at those clubs' trajectory even after I left, they are still competing for things. I really think this is a moment in time where this club could push on and be a real contender for honours on a yearly basis."

That matched one line in Levy's brief statement, which said: "This is one trophy - our clear ambition as a club has always been long-term, sustained success, competing for top honours every year. We have now tasted success and we are determined to use this as a springboard for more."

There was a certain irony in minimising it as 'one trophy' when that's been the missing thing during Levy's long tenure and a stick to beat him with, other than the League Cup win in 2008. Spurs had to get through six games to lift that trophy. They had to get past 15 matches this season to win the Europa League. It was some feat.

All eyes will be on what comes next for Postecoglou, who said on Saturday that he will depart on holiday on Monday.

Those boos from the crowd on Sunday amid the cheers for Postecoglou and the players will have reminded Levy, if he needed it, that some Spurs fans believe this trophy was won in spite of him rather than because of him. Some supporters who noticed him sitting behind the stage at Friday's parade shouted their anger from afar at him even on the happiest of days, when clearly he would never hear it at that distance.

To sack Postecoglou when he has finally delivered the silverware the club and the fans have waited almost two decades for, along with the Champions League spot also craved by the hierarchy, would invite ridicule from outside the club and would be a PR disaster for Levy among the majority of the fanbase.

Speaking to countless supporters around the stadium on Sunday, and even online polls this week, shows that most believe Postecoglou has earned the right to at least lead Spurs into next season. That was evidenced by the chanting for him before, during and after the game on Sunday, despite his adapted Robbie Williams' Angels song not being played among those for the players.

It was also in evidence with the wild reaction from the near quarter of a million people gathered for Sunday's parade when he threw out his mic drop final line: "I’ll leave you with this: all the best television series, season three is better than season two."

Sacking Postecoglou would show Levy doesn't really know what he wants, for he has sacked numerous managers for finishing higher up the league but not giving him the trophy he desired and now he would be sacking one for managing to do exactly that.

Yet Spurs have never been particularly concerned about looking brutal to the outside world. Martin Jol found out during a match against Getafe from the fans' reaction that he was being sacked afterwards, despite laying the foundations for a far better club than had existed in the years before his arrival.

Mauricio Pochettino was dismissed just months after leading Spurs to their first ever Champions League final appearance, having poured everything in his being into five-and-a-half years at the club. Jose Mourinho was sacked just days ahead of a cup final so Levy will not dwell on the emotion of any season or the feelings of others.

The main problem with any change for Levy, aside from what Postecoglou has done for the fanbase while writing his name into the club's history, is that there is no available managerial option to wow supporters.

There's no trophy-laden Mourinho type to excite the fans beyond the initial sadness, as happened with the departure of Pochettino, even if the Portuguese never got near at Spurs what his predecessor managed.

All of the current options in the Premier League have finished in mid-table and those outside England are untested. Even Pochettino himself will not be available until next summer after the 2026 World Cup.

It would likely end up being another PR mess for Tottenham, something they've had far too many of over the years, and would come when they've finally achieved some tangible football success for the beleaguered fans after recent years when the supporters have seen more news about sackings, Beyoncé concerts, property development and the Skywalk than any reported sightings of silverware.

That finally changed this week and Postecoglou's departure would mean a 14th manager in 24 years for Levy on the biennial Tottenham wheel of change. The Australian was the first head coach to last one full season in half a decade, let alone two.

If Levy were to ditch the club's first European trophy-winning manager in 41 years immediately after he achieved that feat and then it failed, with simply a top six finish - as it did when Mourinho replaced Pochettino - then it's likely this season's protests will become something impossible to ignore next time around.

Postecoglou was asked what his gut feeling was about what comes next for him and he looked exasperated even if he understood why the questions were being asked.

"My gut feeling is I feel right now that I’ve done something that no one believed I could, and I shouldn’t be sitting here talking about [my future]. That’s my feeling, but it is what it is. Probably I am talking now because I’m tired, mate. I have to [talk] about another game and I just want to go on a break and enjoy my family and reflect on being part of something unbelievably special," he said.

"I’ve been fortunate to be in this position a number of times, but seeing those scenes on Friday and people have reached out and talked to me about how it has affected them, what has happened over the last couple of days.

"It’s a beautiful thing and I just want to enjoy that. To be honest the rest of it? You know I don’t even want to be talking about it. I just think it is unnecessary."

He added: "You’re right to ask the question but you’re asking the person who can’t give you that answer. And I guess, even for you guys, you wouldn’t be asking it if there wasn’t a doubt, right? But I can’t answer it.

"There is nothing I can say that will answer that question. Other people can, so from my perspective, it doesn’t diminish the achievement. Like I said, I am so confident about what we can build at this football club and I want to push on and take it to the next level. We’ll see whether that happens."

All eyes are now once again on Levy. It's a position Tottenham Hotspur fans have been in many times over the past 24 years, and this would likely be the most divisive decision of them all if he sacks the manager who finally gave him and the supporters everything they dreamed of.

The truth about Ange Postecoglou and Daniel Levy meeting as Tottenham job still under threat

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Ange Postecoglou has been under pressure for weeks, possibly months.

Tottenham have suffered their worst-ever Premier League campaign, finishing 17th in the table just one place above the relegation zone with an astonishing 22 defeats in 38 matches.

But Postecoglou delivered the one thing that the supporters have been craving for years and that is a piece of silverware. And with it, he delivered the other thing chairman Daniel Levy has coveted for some time too - a place back at Europe's top table in the Champions League.

The Australian has had to field persistent questions about his future, with a number of other managers linked with the job in N17 should he depart.

But the feeling from the supporters has been clear to see this week, with his standing with them changing with the winning of the Europa League trophy.

Everything we have seen suggests they want him to stay. But it is not up to them.

Levy will make the final decision and he has been ruthless with managers in the past. Jose Mourinho was sacked six days before Spurs played in the Carabao Cup final. Martin Jol was sacked at half-time during a game.

He does not suffer fools gladly, but Postecoglou is no fool.

And the Australian pointed out that "nobody else is in a position" to answer questions about his future so he was being forced to do so.

Levy is a notoriously quiet chairman, which grates on supporters. His end of season address in the programme for the final game os the season was short. Very short.

Postecoglou is clear that he wants to stay and believes he should stay.

Speaking after the defeat to Brighton he said: "I'll be honest, I've been finding it really weird talking about my future when we've done something unprecedented.

"I've got to answer the questions because nobody else is in a position to do so. Part of me is thinking 'why am I even being asked the question?' I've got no doubt though that this could be a really defining moment for this club.

"Wherever I've been I've made an impact for a club after they haven't tasted it for a while and they push on, even after I've gone."

Postecoglou is now heading off on holiday.The head coach told football.london last week that come Bank Holiday Monday - the day after the season ended - he was going on holiday. So as of this morning, he is on annual leave.

If anyone was looking for clarity over his future as Spurs boss, it's not going to come yet, unless Levy makes the decision without having a meeting with his current head coach. And such a situation is unlikely to yield a positive outcome for the Australian. Or if they had a meeting on Sunday night, as was mooted by some people on social media.

Things have changed so dramatically for Postecoglou over the season.

There was initially unwavering support, whilst protests against Levy and the club ownership were rife. But as results continued to decline, that support for him became ever more fragile.

Bit by bit supporters started to turn against him, with reports even going as far as to say that no matter what happened in the Europa League final he would be gone.

Emotions are funny things though and winning a trophy for the first time in 17 years does the power of good.

Much like at the beginning of this season, when things started to go south, Postecoglou had goodwill in the bank with fans.

As that goodwill gradually diminished, a Europa League triumph suddenly puts it all back in the bank and the fans are onside once more.

For Levy to sack him now, despite the 17th place Premier League finish which would normally be enough to see off any manager, is a big call.

And the Spurs chairman may well find himself in the centre of another fan backlash should he choose to do so.

A trophy has shaken off that awful Spursy tag. Sacking Postecoglou would surely only bring it back again.

Every word Postecoglou said on his Tottenham future, keeping Romero and next season being different

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Ange Postecoglou had plenty to say in his final press conference of the Premier League season after Tottenham's 4-1 loss against Brighton on Sunday.

In a buzzing atmosphere following the Europa League final triumph and parade, Spurs opened the scoring with Dominic Solanke's composed 17th minute penalty after Mathys Tel was tripped in the Brighton box. Tel then had a great chance to double the score late in the first half only for Bart Verbruggen to save well from his low shot.

The hosts visibly tired greatly in the second half and Brighton grabbed an equaliser early on as a ball hit Solanke from a corner and bounced to Jack Hinshelwood to smash into the roof of the net. Hinshelwood netted again after the hour with a clever backheel from another corner.

Then Matt O'Riley scored from the spot, firing the ball inside the right-hand post after Yves Bissouma brought down Diego Gomez with a late challenge. Brighton's fourth came when Gomez curled in a shot from distance only for the Tottenham fans to respond with the entire stadium singing 'Oh when the Spurs go marching in' as they waved their flags, knowing this week was not really about this match.

After the game, Postecoglou and his players were given a guard of honour from various Tottenham legends as injured skipper Son Heung-min and the team paraded the Europa League trophy.

After that our Spurs correspondent Alasdair Gold was among those putting the questions to Postecoglou. Here's the full transcript from the press conference at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium.

Did the team just run out of steam after the past few days?

Yeah. The emotion of the last three days, aside from the game itself. Obviously the players were allowed to celebrate that but irrespective of that the emotions of the last three days meant it was always going to be a tricky one for us. First half we competed well. We could've had a second goal which would've made it easier for us. Even second half Brennan's got a good opportunity but you could tell last 35 minutes we ran out of legs and kind of understandable for the players.

What did you make of that reaction from the fans to the fourth goal?

They've been outstanding with us this year. They've obviously given us some difficult moments for sure and like any supporter they want their team to do well. They don't like losing games like we have been. The backdrop of that was we've given them a night and a couple of subsequent days that will live with them forever. That was always the main driver and I'm super pleased for all we've been through this year as a club and our supporters have been through. I think the overriding emotion this year will be how they've felt in the last three days.

You said previously you hadn't succeeded in unifying the club. Where are you at with that now after seeing the scenes in recent days?

Yeah look I think it's fair to say the last few days have shown how the club can be when it is united. It's a massive club. It's got such a massive reach. People are very passionate about it, you've seen the outpouring of emotion over the last two or three days, what it means to people. That's something we need to build on, we need to tap into. Moving forward, when we're all together like that, it shows the force of the club. That's what a trophy does. That's what doing something like we've done in the last couple of days does. It just means people feel that extra connection and want more of it.

Would sacking you jeopardise the unity between club and fans we have seen over the last few days?

I will be honest I have been finding it really weird talking about my future when we have done something unprecedented. I have had to answer the questions because no one else at the club is in the position to do so I guess. But I can’t answer that question about me and my future. Like I said, part of me is thinking ‘why am I even being asked that question?’ But it is what it is.

I have got no doubt though that this could be a real defining moment for this club because wherever I have been I have made an impact where I have brought success to a club that hasn’t had it for a while. You just have to look at those clubs' trajectory even after I left, they are still competing for things. I really think this is a moment in time where this club could push on and be a real contender for honours on a yearly basis.

Why will next season be better in the league?

From my perspective, I made decisions that I felt were giving us the best chance of achieving the goal we needed to achieve this year and that has affected our league form. If people don’t want to take that into account, then there is nothing I can say to explain it any better than that.

I came to the club and we had finished eighth. I didn’t take over a club that had finished second. They had no European football to speak of. Lost the one player who probably guarantees you European football. That was my starting point. At the end of two years, I’ve got the club a trophy it has been crying out for, Champions League football, we finished fifth last year. Either people are saying ‘last year it was a huge anomaly for us to finish fifth or this is what we deliver right.’

I have got no doubt next year we will be in a much stronger position, challenging for the top places. I have got no doubt we will tackle the Champions League with the same determination that we tackled the Europa League. I have no doubts about that. If people are seeking any more evidence about me, then there is nothing I’m going to say that’s going to convince them if they haven’t seen it in the last two years.

The injuries have been a key part of this season, is that an area that needs to change?

I've already said that's part of it, but also, as I said, we signed three teenagers at the start of the year. Like we signed two 18 year olds and a 19 year old. We went in that direction. If you think about who left last year, players with experience. So whenever you do that, there's always going to be a little bit of a gap in the development. So that cascading into our injury situation at the start of the year, obviously had a massive effect on what we could do in the league..

And again, it was our success in the Carabao Cup and our success in the Europa League that added to that as well. So you either assess it all in its totality or you just separate and say, well, you know what, it's just not good enough, or it's unbelievable. So you either fall into those categories.

But at the start of next year, we will be in a much better position from the point of view of even the three young boys we signed, even though Lucas is not a young boy anymore, he's going to be a massive contributor at the start of the year. You know, that wasn't the case, Archie and Wilson's hardly played this year.

And if we do some good business in the transfer market, obviously brings some experience in, I'm not talking about age, I'm talking about players who have played at this level and can help the team, then I've got no doubt we can make the impact we want.

How important are those experienced players with the Champions League to come?

Yeah, I think not just us but any club that gets into the Champions League, I think understands that. It's the most elite competition in Europe and it's a great demand. So yeah, I think every club that gets into the Champions League sees it as an opportunity to strengthen with experience is the right word, but players who have played at that level, who are going to be comfortable at that level, not players who are stepping up to that level. That's the difference.

There are other futures to sort, Cuti Romero has been heavily linked with a move. How key is it to keep him and do you feel you can be the man to convince him to stay?

Yeah, look I think Romero is absolutely important to keep at this football club. You just saw the way he’s been in the last (weeks) and he hasn’t been fully fit to be fair with his toe, but you’ve seen he’s a World Cup winner. He is a winner. You saw that in all the big games we’ve had and the lads certainly respect him very highly. He makes them walk a bit taller, so yeah from my perspective it is a no-brainer that making sure players like him (stay), because if he goes, who do you replace him with? There is not too many out there like him. It will be very important for the club to try and retain him, and retain him for the longer-term I think.

What is your gut feeling?

You know my gut feeling? My gut feeling is I feel right now that I’ve done something that no one believed I could. And I shouldn’t be sitting here talking about it (my future). That’s my feeling, but it is what it is. As I said I am and probably I am talking now because I’m tired, mate. I have to think about another game and I just want to go on a break and enjoy my family and reflect on being part of something unbelievably special, unbelievably special. I’ve been fortunate to be in this position a number of times, but seeing those scenes Friday and people have reached out and talked to me about how it has affected them what has happened over the last couple of days. It’s a beautiful thing and I just want to enjoy that. To be honest the rest of it? You know I don’t even want to be talking about it. I just think it is unnecessary.

We don’t want to be asking it, but there is this vacuum at the moment?

No, you’re right to ask the question but you’re asking the person who can’t give you that answer. And I guess, even for you guys, you wouldn’t be asking it if there wasn’t a doubt, right? But I can’t answer it. There is nothing I can say that will answer that question. Other people can, so from my perspective, it doesn’t diminish the achievement. Like I said, I am so confident about what we can build at this football club and I want to push on and take it to the next level. We’ll see whether that happens.

You knew the history of the club when you arrived, has the reaction of the fans in recent days even surprised you?

I think, especially the parade, it's just been overwhelming, but I understand it, because when you think about 17 years without any sort of silverware, that means, you know, you work it out, what's that 50 games a year that these supporters have supported their football club with everything in their heart, and they haven't been able to enjoy a day like they have, for those whatever, 900 games, whatever they are, they know what they are.

And not only that, they've seen other clubs do it, which doubles the pain, and they've had no experience where they can you know, reflect on it for themselves, for everything they've been through. So I understand it. I knew that. There were the legends out there, and they're still remembered because of that and there's been a lot of footballers that have come through these doors since then, world class footballers, but they haven't made the impact that this group has and I think they'll be remembered for that.

I love how it's made people feel, it's filled a massive hole that they've had for so long, that they now can proudly say their club is a trophy winner. It's a champion of a competition. There is no more this slight of 'you're a great club, but you've never won anything', that's done and I'm super proud of that.

word message to Daniel Levy over his Tottenham future

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Ange Postecoglou sends pointed one-word message to Daniel Levy over his Tottenham future - Football London
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Ange Postecoglou delivered on his promise to bring silverware to Tottenham Hotspur.

But there remain lingering questions over his future in north London. Spurs ended their Premier League campaign on Sunday with a 4-1 defeat to Brighton & Hove Albion, confirming their worst-ever Premier League season as they finished 17th in the table.

Just one place above the relegation zone is unacceptable for a club like Spurs, but the Lilywhites did something they have so rarely done in their recent history and that is win a trophy.

Postecoglou put all his eggs in the Europa League basket and it paid off in spades. Spurs beat Manchester United 1-0 in Bilbao on Wednesday night to end their 17-year trophy drought.

It is what chairman Daniel Levy and the supporters have been craving for years. And turned a dreadful season into a successful one like that.

Levy has sacked managers for less than finishing 17th, however, and it will be interesting to see what the Spurs chief does next.

Postecoglou has been questioned on his future in N17 for weeks. And it's fair to say he is a bit exasperated by it all.

Speaking after the 4-1 defeat to the Seagulls, the Australian said: "I'll be honest, I've been finding it really weird talking about my future when we've done something unprecedented.

"I've got to answer the questions because nobody else is in a position to do so. Part of me is thinking 'why am I even being asked the question?' I've got no doubt though that this could be a really defining moment for this club.

"Wherever I've been I've made an impact for a club after they haven't tasted it for a while and they push on, even after I've gone."

There is no news as yet as to when Postecoglou and Levy might sit down and discuss the future, if they even will. But the question marks will remain until someone in the club's hierarchy comes out and makes a definitive decision.

There was one word Postecoglou said in his post-match press conference, however, that was a clear message to Levy: unified.

He added: "It's fair to say the last few days have shown how the club can be when it's unified. It's such a massive club with such a massive reach.

"You've seen the outpouring of emotion and that's something we need to build on. That's what a trophy does. That's what we've done does and people want more of it."

Big Postecoglou absence, Son leaves early

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Big Postecoglou absence, Son leaves early - Things spotted on Tottenham lap of honour - Football London
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It may not have been the way Tottenham wanted to end the season, but with the Europa League triumph clear in everyone's mind there was still a party atmosphere inside Tottenham Hotspur Stadium despite losing 4-1 to Brighton & Hove Albion.

The atmosphere ahead of kick-off in N17 was electric and even after going 4-1 down in injury-time at the end of the match, the supporters lifted the mood with an incredible rendition of 'Oh When the Spurs Go Marching In'.

Players and staff took part in a lap of honour after the game, to celebrate with the supporters who stayed behind to enjoy winning the Europa League once more.

Here are a few interesting things we spotted from that lap of honour.

Postecoglou can't help but smile

Losing 4-1 to Brighton, there was little for Ange Postecoglou to smile about on Sunday afternoon.

There had been plenty worth smiling about in the week leading up to this game, however, after Spurs won the Europa League - their first piece of silverware in 17 years.

But the Australian, his staff and the players did a lap of honour after the game, as is customary to round off the season, and particularly with a shiny trophy to show off.

The mood was initially sombre as they walked round the pitch. But eventually the players would get into the spirit of things, helped by the choice of music around the stadium.

Postecoglou applauded and waved to the fans on his way round and posed for photos with his family, obviously bringing a smile out of him.

But there was one moment that really brought a smile and that was when Freed From Desire was played in the ground and particularly when the crowd got to the first 'Na na na na na na na na na na na na na' part of the song.

Postecoglou could not help but beam as the whole of the South Stand sang along, jumping around, with flags waving.

Sonny leaves the celebrations early

Son Heung-min led the team out onto the pitch for their lap of honour, despite missing the game through injury. As club captain, that is to be expected.

And he got all the celebrations going, even running to the South Stand and lifting the trophy high above his head for about the hundredth time since doing so on Wednesday night.

However, he left the rest of his teammates in front of the South Stand to go over towards the tunnel. There he shook hands with all of the club legends who had turned up to give the players a guard of honour.

Sonny was not done there, he then went off around the ground on his own individual lap of honour, clapping the fans who had stayed around to celebrate with the players.

Vicario embrace

Guglielmo Vicario was another to leave the celebrations early as he walked away from the South Stand and off to the tunnel.

But just before Vicario walked down the tunnel, he was pointed back to the pitch. He had forgotten someone.

Vicario turned and saw the man who was being pointed out - Spurs legend Pat Jennings, one of those who had been part of the guard of honour.

Upon seeing him, Vicario looked a little embarrassed and ran to the Tottenham great, giving him a huge embrace and having a quick chat before heading down the tunnel on his own.

No Angels

As we've said above, the choice of music was imperative in the celebrations after the match.

Yves Bissouma got a bit of his Tequila song for his chant as he was shown on the big screens, Micky van de Ven was serenaded with the Baby Give It Up tune and even Pape Matar Sarr got Starman by David Bowie, with darts song Chase the Sun brought out for James Maddison.

But there was one song conspicuous by its absence - Angels by Robbie Williams.

Sung with the words 'I'm loving big Ange instead' normally, it was not played inside the stadium after the match, with there still being question marks over the Australian's future at the club.

How Tottenham missed out on £8.4m on final day of Premier League drama

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How Tottenham missed out on £8.4m on final day of Premier League drama - Football London
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Tottenham lost their 22nd and final game of a dreadful Premier League season on Sunday.

It was somewhat to be expected, with celebrations from their Europa League triumph on Wednesday going all the way to the open-top bus parade on Friday.

That meant that preparations for their final match of the campaign - at home to Brighton & Hove Albion - were hardly what you would call smooth.

Things remarkably started well for Spurs, who were the better team in the first half. Mathys Tel was bright in the first period and was the instigator for the opening goal, brought down by Mats Wieffer in the box for Dominic Solanke to step up and score from the penalty spot.

But in the second half Brighton roared back and dispatched with a tiring Tottenham side with ease in the end.

Jack Hinshelwood scored twice, one a cheeky backheel, before Matt O'Riley scored from the spot and Diego Gomez rounded things off with a screamer.

It meant Spurs ended the season in 17th place, just one position above the relegation zone, with the Europa League triumph making up for a desperately dismal domestic showing.

Spurs entered the final day knowing they could actually finish as high as 14th with a win and if results went their way.

And for almost half an hour in the first half they were in 14th place. And that would have seen them secure a significantly bigger windfall.

Every position in the Premier League is worth between £2million and £3million, with each position worth around £2.8million last season.

And finishing 17th, rather than 14th, means Spurs have missed out on approximately £8.4million, based on last season's financial figures.

In the end, the Spurs result did not matter, with other results not going the way they needed to, meaning they could not finish any higher than 17th in the end. But there were moments where Spurs could have pocketed more than £8million than they will actually take home now.

Tottenham boss on his future and final day defeat

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Ange Postecoglou press conference LIVE - Tottenham boss on his future and final day defeat - Football London
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Ange Postecoglou is holding his final press conference of the Premier League season after Tottenham's 4-1 loss against Brighton on Sunday.

In a great atmosphere following the Europa League triumph, the hosts opened the scoring with Dominic Solanke's calm 17th minute penalty after Mathys Tel was tripped in the Brighton box. Tel had a great chance to double the score late in the first half only for Bart Verbruggen to save well from his low shot.

The hosts visibly tired a lot in the second half and Brighton grabbed an equaliser early on as the ball hit Solanke and bounced perfectly for Jack Hinshelwood to smash into the roof of the net. Hinshelwood netted again after the hour when Pedro Porro stepped away from him and Archie Gray didn't get across to cover in time, leaving the Brighton man time to backheel the ball into the net as the ball fell his way from a corner.

Brighton got a third when Matt O'Riley scored from the spot, firing the ball inside the right-hand post after Yves Bissouma tried to cover the injured Destiny Udogie and took out Diego Gomez with a late challenge. Brighton's fourth came when Gomez curled in a shot from distance. The Tottenham fans responded with the entire stadium singing 'Oh when the Spurs go marching in' as they waved their flags, knowing this week was not really about this match.

Our Spurs correspondent Alasdair Gold is among those putting the questions to Postecoglou after the match and walkaround with the Europa League trophy. Scroll down for his latest updates from the press conference at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium.

Odobert and Bissouma struggle after early Solanke goal

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Tottenham player ratings vs Brighton - Odobert and Bissouma struggle after early Solanke goal - Football London
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Following their Europa League celebrations, Tottenham Hotspur had to finish off their Premier League campaign against Brighton on Sunday and they did so with a tired 4-1 defeat.

Spurs held a trophy parade in front of 220,000 Tottenham fans lining the streets of N17 on Friday but had to get themselves back into game mode for the match against a Brighton side pushing for a European spot themselves. Cristian Romero and Son Heung-min missed out with toe and foot problems but Ange Postecoglou only made three changes to the side that started the Europa League final.

Kevin Danso started at centre-back alongside Micky van de Ven in the absence of the injured Romero, while Archie Gray came into midfield for Yves Bissouma and Mathys Tel replaced Richarlison in attack.

Spurs opened the scoring with Dominic Solanke's calm 17th minute penalty after Mathys Tel was tripped in the Brighton box. Tel had a great chance to double the score late in the first half only for Bart Verbruggen to save well from his low shot.

The hosts visibly tired in the second half and Brighton grabbed an equaliser early on as the ball hit Solanke and bounced perfectly for Jack Hinshelwood to smash into the roof of the net. Hinshelwood scored again after the hour mark after Pedro Porro stepped away from him and Archie Gray didn't get across to cover in time, leaving the Brighton man time to backheel the ball into the net as the ball fell his way from a corner.

Brighton got a third when Matt O'Riley scored from the spot, firing the ball inside the right-hand post after Yves Bissouma tried to cover the injured Destiny Udogie and took out Diego Gomez with a late challenge.

It became four for Brighton when Gomez curled in a shot from distance. The Tottenham fans responded with the entire stadium singing 'Oh when the Spurs go marching in' as they waved their flags, knowing this week was not really about this match.

Here are our Spurs player ratings from the match:

Guglielmo Vicario

Made a couple of good saves but was beaten by the speed of Hinshelwood's first goal, the ingenuity of the second one and then couldn't get to O'Riley's late penalty or Gomez' late curling shot. 4

Pedro Porro

Got up and down the right with plenty of sprints and teed up Tel for a great chance in the first half. Stepped away from Hinshelwood for the second Brighton goal. Tired a lot as the game wore on. 5

Kevin Danso

Made some big challenges including one goal-saving one early in the second half. One of Spurs' better defenders on the day albeit with some sloppy passing. 6

Micky van de Ven

Not quite himself after those big celebrations and he came off at the hour mark. 5

Destiny Udogie

Made a couple of good runs down the left but struggled in the second half and lost the ball and seemed to suffer an injury to hand Brighton the chance to break for the penalty. 5

Rodrigo Bentancur

An all-action performance from the Uruguayan in the first half and had to take a yellow card for the team after a break he started should have ended with a Tel goal only for Brighton to break back dangerously. Worked hard but came off after the hour mark with that caution hanging over him. 7

Archie Gray

Made some big tackles in the first half. His second half wasn't as good - in keeping with the team - but he was one of the few ones still running at the end of the game. 6

Pape Matar Sarr

Lasted only a half, during which he put in his usual energy levels. 6

Brennan Johnson

Worked hard defensively without much joy at the other end in the first half before missing a big chance in the box when he scuffed wide from Tel's pull back. A miracle that he lasted 90 minutes after his celebrations since Wednesday. 5

Dominic Solanke

Hit the calmest of penalties off the underneath of the crossbar early on. Unfortunate with Brighton's goal as he knew nothing about the ball hitting him and deflecting to Hinshelwood. 6

Mathys Tel

Bright from the off and won the early penalty after being tripped on a run into the box. Should have made it 2-0 before the break only for Verbruggen to save his shot. Set up Johnson for a big chance before the hour mark with a great run down the left. Quiet after that before he came off. 6

Subs

Wilson Odobert

Came on in the midfield at the break and looked weak in the role compared to Sarr. You'd think it won't be a position for him going forward. 4

Ben Davies

Came on for the final half hour for Van de Ven and didn't have much to do with either goal after that. 5

Yves Bissouma

A clumsy challenge for the penalty and this was another cameo from the bench that was nowhere near his performances when starting, albeit he came into the game with a block. 4

Richarlison

Couldn't affect the game much in the final half hour. 4

Djed Spence

Why Ange Postecoglou raged at two Tottenham players as Daniel Levy sent clear message

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Why Ange Postecoglou raged at two Tottenham players as Daniel Levy sent clear message - Football London
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It was another rough day of Premier League action as Tottenham rounded off their poor domestic season with a 22nd defeat of the campaign at the hands of Brighton & Hove Albion.

Tottenham took the lead inside the fist quarter from the penalty spot. A bright Mathys Tel was brought down in the box and Dominic Solanke stepped up to fire in off the crossbar - straight down the middle of the goal.

But Brighton stepped it up in the second period and turned the game on its head with two Jack Hinshelwood goals, albeit from poor Spurs defending.

Matt O'Riley scored from the spot as a tired Spurs completely dropped off and Diego Gomez scored a stunner in stoppage time to make it 4-1.

Here's what you may have missed from the final day of action.

Maddison enjoys himself

With a strong side out there were not too many big names on the sidelines.

However, injured duo Son Heung-min and James Maddison were present inside the stadium and Maddison was still clearly in the party spirit.

With the tunes playing inside the stadium, Maddison could be seen on the touchline sharing a laugh and a joke with his captain and could even be spotted dancing along to Waka Waka, by Shakira.

First chant

There was an incredible atmosphere inside the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium before the players entered the arena.

The usual classics of Waka Waka, Freed From Desire and Can't Smile Without You whipped the crowd up into a frenzy, as if they needed it after the week the club has had, with flags on every seat utilised to make for an astonishing sight and sound.

And as the game got under way, the first chant from the supporters in the South Stand was for the head coach. 'Oh, ooooh Ange Postecoglou' reverberated around the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium.

Over to you, Daniel Levy.

Bentancur on it

The talk ahead of kick-off was around what sort of team Ange Postecoglou would pick given the party atmosphere around the club from the Europa League final win on Wednesday and the open-top bus parade on Friday.

Who would be nursing hangovers, who would be in a fit state to play?

As it happened, Postecoglou named a strong side, with only three changes from the final team.

And Rodrigo Bentancur showed he was at the peak of his powers and suffering no ill effects with an imperious display early on.

Spurred on by having his daughter as a mascot, the Uruguayan bit into tackles, demanded the ball, got things moving and even had the wherewithal to juggle the ball over a Brighton midfielder to get one attack started.

He was everywhere and truly back to the Bentancur of old.

Postecoglou runaround

Brighton started the second half strongly, after Spurs had the advantage in the first, and duly equalised through Jack Hinshelwood.

But Spurs had the opportunity to regain the lead moments after that leveller and it had Postecoglou running around his technical area.

A brilliant dart down the left by Mathys Tel saw him get almost to the byline having run from halfway. He cut the ball back and there, running in as he always does, was Brennan Johnson, but his shot into the ground flew past the post.

Postecoglou turned and almost ran in a circle around his technical area with his hands on his head, not taking them off his head for a good many seconds. He could not believe it.

Postecoglou rages

Postecoglou was at it again five minutes from time, for the moment that led to Brighton's clinching third goal.

As Spurs won the ball inside their own box, they looked to counter, but newly on the pitch on the left hand side of a front three, Djed Spence initially seemed reluctant to sprint forwards.

When he did he took a pass from from Destiny Udogie, the Italian then underlapped to take a return ball. But Udogie's return pass to Spence was woefully short and Brighton broke with Yves Bissouma bringing down Diego Gomez in the box for Matt O'Riley to score from the spot to make it 3-1.

Ange Postecoglou, arms outstretched, raged at Spence and Udogie, unable to comprehend what had just happened to allow Brighton to round off the match.