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Postecoglou loses Tottenham job but keeps his pride

Postecoglou loses Tottenham job but keeps his pride

The Advertiser21 hours ago

Ange Postecoglou will walk away from Tottenham Hotspur with his pride and his reputation intact and his place in the club's heritage assured after an eventful two-year stint in north London.
Ending the club's 17-year trophy drought by winning the Europa League made sure of that.
The Australian delivered on his claim of always winning a trophy in his second season at a club, but few could have envisaged the circumstances in which it happened.
From the ruins of a nightmarish Premier League season, Tottenham ground out a backs-to-the-wall victory against one of the worst Manchester United sides in decades with a display at odds with the club's 'to dare is to do' motto.
Earlier in the season, after Tottenham beat United 4-3 in a rollercoaster League Cup quarter-final, Postecoglou railed against studio pundits who criticised his expansive style.
"Are you not entertained?! What do you want? Do you want a scrambly 1-0? The studio's probably going into meltdown over my lack of tactics but I love the fact we go out there and take it to opposition," he bristled.
A few months later, Tottenham did just that, beating United 1-0 with a messy goal and a second half display in which they had 19 per cent of the ball and barely crossed the halfway line.
Postecoglou had only to point to the euphoric scenes in the stadium to answer those who sneered at Tottenham's glory night.
In a parallel universe it could have heralded the ignition point for a Postecoglou dynasty at Tottenham, just as Manchester United's 1989 FA Cup win did for Alex Ferguson.
Instead, it just marked the end of another brief chapter in the club's history, albeit a memorable one, as he became the fifth full-time manager to be sacked in little over five years.
When Postecoglou arrived in 2023 with his swashbuckling 'Ange-Ball' style he seemed the perfect fit for a club worn down by the joyless reigns of Jose Mourinho and Antonio Conte.
Twenty six points from his opening 10 Premier League games in the 2023-24 season was more than any other manager in his first season in the competition, eclipsing the likes of serial title winners like Mourinho and Pep Guardiola.
It was Tottenham's best start to a top-flight season since their last title-winning campaign in 1960-61.
Then the wheels fell off.
His 11th game, at home to Chelsea, offered an early clue as to what would become his eventual downfall.
The mood was ecstatic as Spurs scored early but then they suffered two big injuries and were reduced to nine men by the 55th minute when Destiny Udogie joined Cristian Romero in receiving a rash red card.
Even two players down, and with the score at 1-1, Postecoglou insisted his team play a high defensive line and go for goals and, while it was compelling viewing, they eventually subsided to a chaotic 4-1 defeat.
That loyalty to his attacking philosophy was admirable and earned him staunch support amongst the club's fans, but it also exposed a lack of tactical pragmatism.
Tottenham limped to fifth in Postecoglou's first term, securing continental football in the Europa League, and there were high hopes that his second season would see him mould a team capable of mounting a title challenge.
Instead, Tottenham endured their worst top-flight season since they were relegated in 1977, ending in 17th place with 22 defeats and 65 goals conceded.
There were mitigating circumstances. A chronic injury list took out central defenders Romero and Micky van de Ven, strikers Dominic Solanke and Richarlison and keeper Guglielmo Vicario for long periods and with no danger of relegation he put all his eggs in the Europa League basket.
He will also argue that the likes of Lucas Bergvall, Archie Gray and Mikey Moore promise a bright future.
He will not, however be the one to benefit with chairman Daniel Levy deciding that the Europa League triumph was the anomaly, rather than the 22 league defeats.
The biggest criticism of Postecoglou was that his insistence on high defensive lines and playing out from the back, even when the players obviously could not execute it, exposed the team's soft underbelly and made them easy to beat.
Relegated clubs Leicester City and Ipswich Town both beat Tottenham whose only league win in their last 12 games was against woeful bottom club Southampton.
Yet set against their Premier League slide, Postecoglou conjured a parting gift for the long-suffering fans and they do not care how it was achieved.
He leaves having changed the narrative around the club but whether the it can seize the moment and build a sustained challenge for regular silverware remains to be seen.
Ange Postecoglou will walk away from Tottenham Hotspur with his pride and his reputation intact and his place in the club's heritage assured after an eventful two-year stint in north London.
Ending the club's 17-year trophy drought by winning the Europa League made sure of that.
The Australian delivered on his claim of always winning a trophy in his second season at a club, but few could have envisaged the circumstances in which it happened.
From the ruins of a nightmarish Premier League season, Tottenham ground out a backs-to-the-wall victory against one of the worst Manchester United sides in decades with a display at odds with the club's 'to dare is to do' motto.
Earlier in the season, after Tottenham beat United 4-3 in a rollercoaster League Cup quarter-final, Postecoglou railed against studio pundits who criticised his expansive style.
"Are you not entertained?! What do you want? Do you want a scrambly 1-0? The studio's probably going into meltdown over my lack of tactics but I love the fact we go out there and take it to opposition," he bristled.
A few months later, Tottenham did just that, beating United 1-0 with a messy goal and a second half display in which they had 19 per cent of the ball and barely crossed the halfway line.
Postecoglou had only to point to the euphoric scenes in the stadium to answer those who sneered at Tottenham's glory night.
In a parallel universe it could have heralded the ignition point for a Postecoglou dynasty at Tottenham, just as Manchester United's 1989 FA Cup win did for Alex Ferguson.
Instead, it just marked the end of another brief chapter in the club's history, albeit a memorable one, as he became the fifth full-time manager to be sacked in little over five years.
When Postecoglou arrived in 2023 with his swashbuckling 'Ange-Ball' style he seemed the perfect fit for a club worn down by the joyless reigns of Jose Mourinho and Antonio Conte.
Twenty six points from his opening 10 Premier League games in the 2023-24 season was more than any other manager in his first season in the competition, eclipsing the likes of serial title winners like Mourinho and Pep Guardiola.
It was Tottenham's best start to a top-flight season since their last title-winning campaign in 1960-61.
Then the wheels fell off.
His 11th game, at home to Chelsea, offered an early clue as to what would become his eventual downfall.
The mood was ecstatic as Spurs scored early but then they suffered two big injuries and were reduced to nine men by the 55th minute when Destiny Udogie joined Cristian Romero in receiving a rash red card.
Even two players down, and with the score at 1-1, Postecoglou insisted his team play a high defensive line and go for goals and, while it was compelling viewing, they eventually subsided to a chaotic 4-1 defeat.
That loyalty to his attacking philosophy was admirable and earned him staunch support amongst the club's fans, but it also exposed a lack of tactical pragmatism.
Tottenham limped to fifth in Postecoglou's first term, securing continental football in the Europa League, and there were high hopes that his second season would see him mould a team capable of mounting a title challenge.
Instead, Tottenham endured their worst top-flight season since they were relegated in 1977, ending in 17th place with 22 defeats and 65 goals conceded.
There were mitigating circumstances. A chronic injury list took out central defenders Romero and Micky van de Ven, strikers Dominic Solanke and Richarlison and keeper Guglielmo Vicario for long periods and with no danger of relegation he put all his eggs in the Europa League basket.
He will also argue that the likes of Lucas Bergvall, Archie Gray and Mikey Moore promise a bright future.
He will not, however be the one to benefit with chairman Daniel Levy deciding that the Europa League triumph was the anomaly, rather than the 22 league defeats.
The biggest criticism of Postecoglou was that his insistence on high defensive lines and playing out from the back, even when the players obviously could not execute it, exposed the team's soft underbelly and made them easy to beat.
Relegated clubs Leicester City and Ipswich Town both beat Tottenham whose only league win in their last 12 games was against woeful bottom club Southampton.
Yet set against their Premier League slide, Postecoglou conjured a parting gift for the long-suffering fans and they do not care how it was achieved.
He leaves having changed the narrative around the club but whether the it can seize the moment and build a sustained challenge for regular silverware remains to be seen.
Ange Postecoglou will walk away from Tottenham Hotspur with his pride and his reputation intact and his place in the club's heritage assured after an eventful two-year stint in north London.
Ending the club's 17-year trophy drought by winning the Europa League made sure of that.
The Australian delivered on his claim of always winning a trophy in his second season at a club, but few could have envisaged the circumstances in which it happened.
From the ruins of a nightmarish Premier League season, Tottenham ground out a backs-to-the-wall victory against one of the worst Manchester United sides in decades with a display at odds with the club's 'to dare is to do' motto.
Earlier in the season, after Tottenham beat United 4-3 in a rollercoaster League Cup quarter-final, Postecoglou railed against studio pundits who criticised his expansive style.
"Are you not entertained?! What do you want? Do you want a scrambly 1-0? The studio's probably going into meltdown over my lack of tactics but I love the fact we go out there and take it to opposition," he bristled.
A few months later, Tottenham did just that, beating United 1-0 with a messy goal and a second half display in which they had 19 per cent of the ball and barely crossed the halfway line.
Postecoglou had only to point to the euphoric scenes in the stadium to answer those who sneered at Tottenham's glory night.
In a parallel universe it could have heralded the ignition point for a Postecoglou dynasty at Tottenham, just as Manchester United's 1989 FA Cup win did for Alex Ferguson.
Instead, it just marked the end of another brief chapter in the club's history, albeit a memorable one, as he became the fifth full-time manager to be sacked in little over five years.
When Postecoglou arrived in 2023 with his swashbuckling 'Ange-Ball' style he seemed the perfect fit for a club worn down by the joyless reigns of Jose Mourinho and Antonio Conte.
Twenty six points from his opening 10 Premier League games in the 2023-24 season was more than any other manager in his first season in the competition, eclipsing the likes of serial title winners like Mourinho and Pep Guardiola.
It was Tottenham's best start to a top-flight season since their last title-winning campaign in 1960-61.
Then the wheels fell off.
His 11th game, at home to Chelsea, offered an early clue as to what would become his eventual downfall.
The mood was ecstatic as Spurs scored early but then they suffered two big injuries and were reduced to nine men by the 55th minute when Destiny Udogie joined Cristian Romero in receiving a rash red card.
Even two players down, and with the score at 1-1, Postecoglou insisted his team play a high defensive line and go for goals and, while it was compelling viewing, they eventually subsided to a chaotic 4-1 defeat.
That loyalty to his attacking philosophy was admirable and earned him staunch support amongst the club's fans, but it also exposed a lack of tactical pragmatism.
Tottenham limped to fifth in Postecoglou's first term, securing continental football in the Europa League, and there were high hopes that his second season would see him mould a team capable of mounting a title challenge.
Instead, Tottenham endured their worst top-flight season since they were relegated in 1977, ending in 17th place with 22 defeats and 65 goals conceded.
There were mitigating circumstances. A chronic injury list took out central defenders Romero and Micky van de Ven, strikers Dominic Solanke and Richarlison and keeper Guglielmo Vicario for long periods and with no danger of relegation he put all his eggs in the Europa League basket.
He will also argue that the likes of Lucas Bergvall, Archie Gray and Mikey Moore promise a bright future.
He will not, however be the one to benefit with chairman Daniel Levy deciding that the Europa League triumph was the anomaly, rather than the 22 league defeats.
The biggest criticism of Postecoglou was that his insistence on high defensive lines and playing out from the back, even when the players obviously could not execute it, exposed the team's soft underbelly and made them easy to beat.
Relegated clubs Leicester City and Ipswich Town both beat Tottenham whose only league win in their last 12 games was against woeful bottom club Southampton.
Yet set against their Premier League slide, Postecoglou conjured a parting gift for the long-suffering fans and they do not care how it was achieved.
He leaves having changed the narrative around the club but whether the it can seize the moment and build a sustained challenge for regular silverware remains to be seen.

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AFL Carlton v Essendon: Who is closer to a premiership?
AFL Carlton v Essendon: Who is closer to a premiership?

Herald Sun

timean hour ago

  • Herald Sun

AFL Carlton v Essendon: Who is closer to a premiership?

They are two of the sport's most esteemed clubs with the richest history, but success is elusive for Carlton and Essendon. In years gone by, the hopes of a breakthrough premiership has appeared on the horizon for both the Blues and the Bombers, but neither side has harnessed their momentum at the pointy end of the season. Now entering the back half of 2025, both sides are out of the top eight and looking more like pretenders than contenders. But which side is closer to a flag? We look at what each side looks like the rest of the season, and who is better placed to contend in the coming years. FOR THE NOW INSIDE THE COACHES BOX The words are written on whiteboards around Ikon Park. 'Pound the Rock'. It's a reminder to Carlton's playing group of the unrelenting contested style of football that Michael Voss wants his side to play. There hasn't been any deflection from that strategy despite the evolution of football and the 17 other teams moving away from that style. While other teams get more explosive from the contest, more daring with movement off half back, and more chaotic with entries inside forward 50, Carlton doubles down. The Blues are league leaders in contested possession differential and pressure rating this season, and are sixth in clearance differential. They want to drag teams into a scrap and beat them there. It's an exhausting style and it costs them in the back half of games. The Blues are the second-best team in first halves this season (+98), but are the fifth-worst side in second halves (-74). Essendon has adopted a different strategy, focusing on possession football. Similarly to Carlton, the Bombers aren't exploding out of contests and focusing on gaining ground at all costs, which is a growing trend in the AFL. They are league leaders in the disposal count, sit fifth in uncontested marks due to their chipping style, and have the fourth-worst percentage of kicks gaining ground. 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Essendon does not have the same firepower in the prime, but gun midfielders Jye Caldwell and Nic Martin headline players entering their prime. Sam Draper was in strong form before his achilles injury, and Jordan Ridley has endured a rough run with injury but is an All Australian calibre defender at his best. Who is better placed: Carlton has more A-graders who are hitting their peak. SALARY CAP DRAMAS Carlton has plenty of cash tied up, and it is only going to get tighter if Tom De Koning stays. The ruck is currently being courted by a host of rival clubs, with St Kilda offering an eye-watering $1.7 million to move to Moorabbin. If De Koning opts to stay, he'll join Adam Cerra, Harry McKay (2030) and Jacob Weitering (2031) on expensive long-term deals. Mitch McGovern, Jack Silvagni, Nic Newman, Brodie Kemp and Nick Haynes the priority re-signings coming out of contract. It seems unlikely the Blues can keep De Koning and avoid pillaging its already-weak list depth. 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Aussie star announces engagement to Olympic medallist
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Aussie star announces engagement to Olympic medallist

Tennis star Daria Kasatkina has capped off her first grand slam as an Australian by getting engaged to her partner Natalia Zabiiako, a Winter Olympic medallist. Kasatkina switched allegiances from Russia earlier this year, having previously said it was 'unsafe' for her to return home because of her sexuality and opposition to the war with Ukraine. 'For me, being openly gay, if I want to be myself, I have to make this step, and I did it,' the 28-year-old said in April ahead of her first match with an Aussie flag next to her name. How life has changed in the space of three months. Kasatkina appeared to be the one to pop the question, with a picture shared by the couple showing her off a diamond ring on Zabiiako's finger. 'And just like that,' they wrote. If you'd like to view this content, please adjust your . To find out more about how we use cookies, please see our Cookie Guide. Congratulations rolled in from around the tennis world. Arina Rodionova, a fellow Russian-born Australian tennis player, joked: 'I will be at the wedding regardless if you want it or not.' Alex de Minaur's partner Katie Boulter said: 'Ahh congrats.' Priscilla Hon: 'Awww congrats you two.' Rio 2016 Olympics gold medallist Monica Puig said: 'Congratulations!!!!!!!!' One-time Australian Open runner-up Jennifer Brady wrote: 'Congrats Dasha and Natalia!!!' Former figure skater Zabiiako, 30, competed for her birth nation Estonia before switching to Russia for the most successful period of her career. Her crowning achievement — a silver medal in the pairs figure skating at the 2018 Winter Olympics — came under the Olympic flag in the wake of the Russian doping scandal. She now supports Kasatkina on the tennis tour and the pair document their experiences on a popular YouTube channel. Freshly minted Australian Kasatkina is fresh off a run to the fourth round at the French Open. 'I felt super good to step on the court as an Australian player,' she said. 'To feel the support from the stands so many times. I don't know if everyone who was screaming, 'Aussie', were from Australia, but I felt this support. 'Also, on social media I'm getting a lot of support from the Australians that they are so happy to welcome me, and they're happy for me. 'So this is the kind of support which I honestly didn't have before, it feels like it's something new to me — but it feels so nice.' Daria Kasatkina on her way to reaching the last 16 in Paris in her first grand slam for Australia. Credit: AAP Kasatkina also reached the fourth round at the Australian Open in January before the secret process to become an Aussie unfolded. The busy tennis season has kept the world No.17 from flying back to Melbourne to begin setting up her life here. But plans have been hatched with the help of Australian tennis veteran Daria Saville, who became friends with Kasatkina when they were both juniors in Russia. Saville, formerly Gavrilova, moved to Melbourne as a teenager and married Australian tennis player Luke Saville in 2018. 'We've been friends for very, very long time and to have someone like that as a neighbour, as a teammate, it feels great, honestly,' Kasatkina said during the French Open. 'First of all, she's super happy for me, which was super nice. She's always asking 'when you moving?', sending me the locations, the houses and everything. 'So she's very excited to have a new neighbour, and I'm also very happy about that.'

Australian tennis star Daria Kasatkina announces engagement to Winter Olympic medallist partner Natalia Zabiiako
Australian tennis star Daria Kasatkina announces engagement to Winter Olympic medallist partner Natalia Zabiiako

7NEWS

time3 hours ago

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Australian tennis star Daria Kasatkina announces engagement to Winter Olympic medallist partner Natalia Zabiiako

Tennis star Daria Kasatkina has capped off her first grand slam as an Australian by getting engaged to her partner Natalia Zabiiako, a Winter Olympic medallist. Kasatkina switched allegiances from Russia earlier this year, having previously said it was 'unsafe' for her to return home because of her sexuality and opposition to the war with Ukraine. 'For me, being openly gay, if I want to be myself, I have to make this step, and I did it,' the 28-year-old said in April ahead of her first match with an Aussie flag next to her name. How life has changed for the better in the space of three months. Kasatkina appeared to be the one to pop the question, with a picture shared by the couple showing her off a diamond ring on Zabiiako's finger. 'And just like that,' they wrote. Congratulations rolled in from around the tennis world. Arina Rodionova, a fellow Russian-born Australian tennis player, joked: 'I will be at the wedding regardless if you want it or not.' Alex de Minaur's partner Katie Boulter said: 'Ahh congrats.' Priscilla Hon: 'Awww congrats you two.' Rio 2016 Olympics gold medallist Monica Puig said: 'Congratulations!!!!!!!!' One-time Australian Open runner-up Jennifer Brady wrote: 'Congrats Dasha and Natalia!!!' Former figure skater Zabiiako, 30, competed for her birth nation Estonia before switching to Russia for the most successful period of her career. Her crowning achievement — a silver medal in the pairs figure skating at the 2018 Winter Olympics — came under the Olympic flag in the wake of the Russian doping scandal. She now supports Kasatkina on the tennis tour and the pair document their experiences on a popular YouTube channel. Freshly minted Australian Kasatkina is fresh off a run to the fourth round at the French Open. 'I felt super good to step on the court as an Australian player,' she said. 'To feel the support from the stands so many times. I don't know if everyone who was screaming, 'Aussie', were from Australia, but I felt this support. 'Also, on social media I'm getting a lot of support from the Australians that they are so happy to welcome me, and they're happy for me. 'So this is the kind of support which I honestly didn't have before, it feels like it's something new to me — but it feels so nice.' Kasatkina also reached the fourth round at the Australian Open in January before the secret process to become an Aussie unfolded. The busy tennis season has kept the world No.17 from flying back to Melbourne to begin setting up her life here. But plans have been hatched with the help of Australian tennis veteran Daria Saville, who became friends with Kasatkina when they were both juniors in Russia. Saville, formerly Gavrilova, moved to Melbourne as a teenager and married Australian tennis player Luke Saville in 2018. 'We've been friends for very, very long time and to have someone like that as a neighbour, as a teammate, it feels great, honestly,' Kasatkina said during the French Open. 'First of all, she's super happy for me, which was super nice. She's always asking 'when you moving?', sending me the locations, the houses and everything. 'So she's very excited to have a new neighbour, and I'm also very happy about that.'

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