It’s not everyday a football manager departs his job with both a bang and a whimper simultaneously. But Ange Postecoglu might just have instigated an entire new trend in this regard, having been sacked, ostensibly for losing twenty-two matches in a Premier League season, by Tottenham Hotspur, despite delivering the first piece of silverware in seventeen years.
Unfortunately, the silverware didn’t earn him sufficient gratitude to maintain his employment in the grand old theatre of English football, where managers waltz in with philosophies and exit to the sound of ROE printers. So, Ange Postecoglou has taken his final bow. The Australian-Greek tactician, who began his reign as a messianic breath of antipodean fresh air, is now finally relieved of his duties following what can only be described as the most paradoxical season since King Lear tried doing TikTok.
By Derek Ross

Postecoglu Takes The Fall
On paper, he won silverware, a miraculous Europa League win that had Spurs fans parading down the Seven Sisters Road like drunken Romans. But alas, the confetti hadn’t even been swept from the Europa parade before the Premier League table was glaring at them like a disappointed grandmother. Seventeenth. Just above the drop. One place worse and they’d have been slumming it with Preston and Wrexham.
And so, Daniel Levy, the club’s chairman and long-time aficionado of the poker-faced press release, pulled the plug on Ange’s erratic opera. To be fair, it really wasn’t that hard a decision. Anyone with a scintilla of footballing nous realised that Angeball passed away quietly in May following complications from chronic exposure to the Premier League.
It is survived by its ideals, fluid build-up play, aggressive pressing, and a totally blind trust in full-backs playing as number tens, and predeceased by several dozen hamstrings! It will no doubt be remembered fondly by purists, mourned by romantics and blamed by… Daniel Levy.

Front-Foot Football
Postecoglou arrived at Spurs in 2023, an enigma wrapped in a tracksuit, clutching a tactical manifesto that sounded like it had been penned on a bar napkin during a Melbourne pub crawl. ‘We want to play front-foot football,’ he declared with the intensity of a man who’d once led Brisbane Roar to immortality and had no intention of back-pedalling, even metaphorically.
This doctrine became known as Angeball, a high-octane, risk-embracing, emotionally reckless footballing style where defenders were forbidden from simply hoofing it, goalkeepers fancied themselves as Beckenbauers , and every game felt like a heart monitor on fast-forward. For a brief, blinding autumn, Angeball looked like a revelation.
Tottenham started the 2023-24 season unbeaten in ten, topping the league at Halloween. Pundits drooled, neutrals swooned, and Spurs fans dared to believe they’d finally hired someone who wasn’t a managerial equivalent of damp cardboard. Alas the gods of football are cruel and capricious. First came the injuries. Then came the wobble. Then came the existential unravelling.
When Style Meets Collapse
Angeball, it turned out, had the structural integrity of a papier-mâché drawbridge. Once the first domino fell, a Van de Ven hamstring here, an injured James Maddison there, a suspended Cristian Romero, it all became gloriously unhinged. The high defensive line, without pace, became a suicide pact. Pressing from the front turned into panting from the back.
By Christmas, Tottenham’s midfield looked less like a functional engine room and more like a breakers yard. Yves Bissouma began to play like a man who had once heard of football but had never formally been introduced. Postecoglou, bless his iconoclastic heart, refused to adapt. ‘It’s who we are mate,’ he would repeat during post-match interviews, even as his defenders looked like they’d just survived a near-death experience in every game.
There is something noble, almost Greek-tragic, about a man who watches his philosophy collapse in slow motion and still refuses to blink. But nobility doesn’t earn points. Or forgiveness. Or, as the man himself has found out, contract extensions.
The Europa League: A Glorious Red Herring
Let us not downplay the miracle of the Europa League win. The final was played at the magnificent San Mamés Stadium in Bilbao, a fortress of Basque steel and roaring echoes. And on that mild Spanish evening, Tottenham Hotspur managed something historic: they turned 90 minutes of controlled chaos into continental silver. It wasn’t the most thrilling match, but Spurs at least turned up.
They looked good in attack, decent in midfield and, if only they had done some of it during their 22 defeats, looked very confident in defence. The game ended 1–0. Tight. Tense. Tauter than a violin string in a thunderstorm. The winning goal? Scored by Brennan Johnson, a man whose name previously conjured the image of a promising apprentice builder, but who in that moment became a Welsh demigod.
The goal arrived in those crucial minutes before half-time. An incisive counterattack in which Johnson, fuelled by adrenaline and sheer disbelief, watched his slightest of touches seep past the desperate arm of André Onana. The Spurs end exploded.
Glory Glory
Brennan wheeled away, arms flailing, eyes wide like he’d just been told he’d inherited a Welsh castle and a pub. For Tottenham fans that electrifying night was made even sweeter by the fact that it came against Manchester United, a club that now operates more like a travelling circus than a football institution.
Spurs beating United four times in a single season is less a footballing statistic and more a pattern of abuse. If this were a relationship, someone would have stepped in. At the final whistle grown men wept in Bilbao and some fans face-timed their dead grandfathers.
There would soon be a parade down the Seven Sisters Road, during which Richarlison would fall off a float, only to land, inexplicably, on his feet. But in the cruel arithmetic of English football, a Europa League triumph is a fine trinket but not a full pardon. The Premier League is the bread and butter, and Ange’s loaf had long since gone mouldy.

Daniel Levy and His Allergy to Excuses
Now, Daniel Levy might be many things, not all of them printable! He is well known for being calculating, ruthless, and frugal to the point of fossilisation, but he is not a man to be seduced by sentiment. When the club slumped to 17th, he reportedly muttered to a board member, ‘We’re not fucking West Ham,’.
Thus he began consulting his managerial Rolodex with the grim urgency of a surgeon reading a will mid-operation. Ange’s post-match press conferences had long begun to sound like a Greek chorus of lamentations. ‘We’ve had injuries,’he said, again and again ad nauseam. His eyes gleaming with unshed tears and disbelief. But Levy, who once sacked a manager the day after beating Chelsea, was unmoved. He was already done with hamstring sermons.
Yes, the injury list read like a Game of Thrones death toll. Maddison, Sarr, Udogie, Bentancur, Van de Ven, but Levy’s patience wore thinner than Eric Dier’s positional awareness. The reality of course is that injuries happen to everyone. But not everyone finishes below Nottingham Forest after spending £140 million!
The Dressing Room: Belief AND Bewilderment
By the final weeks of the season, the players reportedly no longer knew if they were pressing or merely existing. Training was intense, spirits were not. Postecoglou, usually a warm and wise presence, began to look increasingly like a philosophy professor being heckled by first-year
students. The dressing room, as one unnamed source put it, ‘Was now so quiet, it felt like a collection of Carmalite Nuns.’ The faith might have still been there but nobody was prepared to talk about it. And when your back four is chasing shadows while your keeper plays sweeper-artist-poet, something has gone seriously awry.
Postecoglu: From Cult Hero to Cult Exit
When the inevitable news finally broke, sacked just a few weeks after lifting the Europa League trophy, it was met with a strange cocktail of anger, sadness, and rueful resignation. Ange had
become something of a cult figure among Spurs fans. He spoke with depth. He believed in beauty.
He was, for a while, cool. But football is an industry with the emotional tolerance of a gold fish with PTSD. One moment you’re the philosopher-king, the next you’re just another pub trivia question. Because for all the glory and ticker tape of that final win, the uncomfortable truth lingered like a gas hob somebody had forgotten to turn off. This was a midweek triumph whereas most of Ange’s Mondays, Sundays, and the occasional dismal Saturday had been utterly catastrophic. The Europa League win, in the end, was less a vindication and more an epilogue to a season-long existential crisis.
So, What Now?
Tottenham begin yet another managerial search, their seventh in as many years, proving once again that they collect coaches the way Victorian doctors collected leeches. Rumours swirl around and current Brentford Manager, Thomas Frank, is already lined up as the next man to try Levy’smpatience. Some Spurs fans had hoped for a possible second coming for Mauricio Pochettino, though
that’s probably just the delusional dreaming of supporters who’ve forgotten how bitterly divorce papers tend to read. But whoever steps into Ange’s big shoes, the squad itself remains a puzzle:
Talented but scatterbrained, cohesive only in theory. There’s a lot to like, but a lot more to fix. Whoever takes over will need the spine of a Navy SEAL and the patience of a monastery librarian.
The Verdict on Ange Postecoglu
Ange Postecoglou will be remembered as a romantic. A man who loved the game, perhaps too much. A man who refused to park the bus even when the engine was on fire and the tyres had been stolen. He gave us moments. He gave us quotes. He gave us hope. And, like all great tragic figures,mhe fell because he could not betray who he was. Was he a good manager? Yes. Was he the rightmmanager for Tottenham? Perhaps not. But by Zeus, he was never boring. And so he departs with ammedal and a mess. A bang and a whimper. A legacy that will take some unpicking. And somewheremin a little corner of Hotspur Way, a tactical whiteboard lies untouched, still bearing the words:
‘Build from the back. Never retreat. Always forward.’ One can only hope that Thomas Frank bringsan eraser. And maybe a Plan B.
Derek Ross is an occasional contributor for First Touch. He also writes for Soccer 360 and The Top Flight