Let's talk about Ange Postecoglou.
Let's talk about Ange Postecoglou.
Since Postecoglou came to us, he quickly got the fans talking. He
arranges the players in such a way (attacking football) that he has got
everybody singing, "We've got our club back again." His style is
reminiscent of our playing style under managers like Arthur Rowe, Bill
Nicholson, Keith Burkinshaw, Pochettino and a host of Tottenham
attacking-good-to-watch-inovators. Then it all changed after Pochettino was
ceremonially sacked, and Levy employed more defensive-money-orientated
schemers, such as José Mourinho, Nuno EspÃrito Santo, Antonio Conte and
Cristian Stellini. The fans started getting irritated (actually, they got
irritated long before they came, about the time Levy & Lewis took over our
club, in fact), and Levy had to reevaluate his managerial appointments once
again… Anyway…
… Postecoglou came,
saw and started to conquer with his attacking style of football, and the
players and the fans loved him for it. But what is his history? What are his
achievements?
Well… he (Ange)came
from Celtic to us. Yes, I REACTED UNFAVOURABLY when I heard that we were getting
a manager from a two-team-fish-pond-Scottish-Bowl League. But I am happy to say
that I have eaten my words and am very impressed with him… So, where does he originate
from… or if he was painted by his fellow compatriot Rolf' Two Little Boys'
Harris… "Can you guess what it is yet?"
Angelos Postecoglou
was born in Greece near Filadelfeia, a suburb of Athens, on 27 August 1965.
After his father,
Dimitris ("Jim"), lost his business following the 1967 Greek military
coup, the Postecoglou family migrated to Australia in 1970 when he was five
years old. From the age of five, when he grew up in Melbourne, Victoria, he
started to prosper in the Aussie land that had adopted him as their own.
Yes… Australia is the
home of many famous charactors: Skippy the Bush Kangaroo, The Seekers, Barry
Humphries, Cate Blanchett, Nicole Kidman, Kylie Minogue, Heath Ledger, Elle
Macpherson, Naomi Watts, Hugh Jackman, Chris Hemsworth, Keith Urban, Ned Kelly
and the list goes on…
Somebody once told me
that Australia is the home of 'Sheep shagging.' Even though the country is
famous for its sheep raising, they obviously got muddled up with Wales (sheep
and Wellington boots)... Moving swiftly on…
There, he progressed
from the Greek language to G'day Bruce's colloquialism. The next ten or so
years were spent learning the mangled English language Australians adapted from
the English convicts (POME's for short; meaning Prisoner of Mother England). He
eventually becomes competent enough to converse with the natives, learning
Kangaroo talk (anybody who watched Skippy will know what I am talking about),
Koala grooming and how the convicts played a very important part in their
upbringing and thinking (yes, I know… I went to school in Australia and I've
never been sane since!). Once all qualifications were sorted out, he moved to
sport (which he had loved from an early age). Once in Aussie Soccer, he started
to get noticed and had a prosperous Australian journey.
I won't bore you with the fine minute details… just
a brief summary… then a more meaty look at his proper football credentials.
Honours
Player
South Melbourne
National Soccer League Championship:
1984, 1990–91
NSL Cup: 1989–90
Dockerty Cup: 1989, 1991
Buffalo Cup: 1988
Australia
Trans-Tasman Cup: 1988
Manager
South Melbourne
National Soccer League Premiership:
1997–98
Oceania Club Championship: 1999
Australia U17
OFC U-17 Championship: 2001, 2003,
2005
Australia U20
OFC U-20 Championship: 2001, 2002,
2005
AFF U-20 Youth Championship: 2006
Brisbane Roar
A-League Premiership: 2010–11
Australia
AFC Asian Cup: 2015
Yokohama F. Marinos
J1 League: 2019
Individual honours…
National Soccer League Coach of the
Year: 1997–98
Australian Sports Medal: 2000
PFA Manager of the Year: 2010–11
A-League Coach of the Year: 2010–11
PFA Manager of the Decade: 2015
AFC Coach of the Year: 2015
Scottish Premiership Manager of the
Month: October 2021, January 2022, February 2022, March 2022, April 2022,
August 2022, September/October 2022.
PFA Scotland Manager of the Year:
2021–22, 2022–23
SFWA Manager of the Year: 2021–22,
2022–23
Football Australia Hall of Fame
inductee: 2022
------
After getting his experience from around the world in management, he
settled in England. But, before that, there was a little matter of amateur
gold-fish-bowl football in Scotland… before entering real football that is
appreciated by the world over… and even grudgingly by kilt-wearing men (&
women) in Scotland…
Yes, he went to
Celtic for a bit of haggis bashing and amateur football pantomime play… before
the real test of football descended upon him…
He joined Celtic on
10 June 2021, signing a 12-month rolling contract, making him the first
Kangaroo loving-Koala hugging Aussie G'day Bruce to manage a major European
club.
Celtic, who had just
lost their league title to Rangers, one of two dominant clubs (Celtic being the
other), in an insignificant league in Scotland, for the first time in a decade,
had abruptly missed out on hiring English manager Eddie Howe. Many fans at the
time, including ex-Spurs player Alan Brazil, mocked his appointment… they don't
mock now. To be fair, and as I said earlier, I doubted him… but that was
because he came from an irrelevant league. However, his ambition was always to
get into the English League, even if that meant managing below his experience
and capabilities, then so be it.
While
with the jokey-league, he won…
Scottish Premiership: 2021–22,
2022–23
Scottish Cup: 2022–23
Scottish League Cup: 2021–22,
2022–23
After spending two
years with the Scottish league, Daniel Levy came calling, and he was ready for
some real manly football… in a competing League. And even though Tottenham had
slipped down to 8th with the help of Conte-Stellini-Mason, he knew
that managing Spurs was a more robust professional challenge. Even a club like
Bristol City – currently in the Championship – would be Kings in the Scottish
Premier League… but enough of them and their inadequacies. To Tottenham, it
was…
…On 6 June 2023, Postecoglou was appointed head
coach of Tottenham Hotspur on a four-year contract. His appointment made him
the first Australian and Greek to manage in the Premier League.
After four undefeated
games, our club rests second in the Premier League (before the international
break). His first game in charge was a 2-2 draw against Brentford at their
Vitality stadium. This was followed by victories over United (2-0) at home,
Bournemouth away (2-0) and Burnley at Turf Moor (5-2, yes, 5-2 to us). However,
his real test will be when he faces Arsenic away and the Scousers at home.
A bit
about his personal life…
Postecoglou is
married to Georgia, who worked at South Melbourne as a marketing manager when
he served as clubs manager. Together, they have three sons, James, Max and
Alexi. Their oldest son, James, currently serves with the Hellenic Armed Forces
and is based in Lemnos.
Postecoglou grew up
supporting Liverpool and AEK Athens. But not everything can be perfect about
him… Notice there are no Aussie clubs… which probably tells you a lot about
Australian Kangaroo soccer.
In November 2022,
Postecoglou was inducted into the Football Australia Hall of Fame for his
outstanding contribution to Australian football on and off the field as a
player and as a coach.
In addition to
Australian English, Postecoglou is fluent in Greek.
So that is the story
of our fair dinkum Aussie manager.
Thoughts…
Even though Scottish
football is a below-par league (going by European, English and South American
standards), he showed a flicker of potential… and since coming to Tottenham – a
more tougher/ serious league – he has outperformed what some have expected of
him.
His training methods
style have got the players engaged even more. His attacking, flowing style has
got the fans talking and feeling that there is hope at the end of Levy's
tunnel. Of course, we are only 4 games in, but there is enough to see and what
we can expect. I don't expect miracles this season, however, I can see the
potential.
A key principle of
Postecoglou is not to have the ball at the highest point of the attack, with
runners in behind and rotations – mainly in central spaces – used as frequently
as possible.
He also said that he
wanted to see played – attacking/ entertaining football – that would make his
dad proud.
Good days ahead (or
is that G'daaayyyyyyysssssssss)… hopefully we can start playing real football,
not the defensive football of Mourinho and Conte. As for trophies, yes, please!
G'day.
Up the Spurs!
COYS!
Glenn
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