Tottenham boss Ange Postecoglou told he could regret selling striker

Submitted by daniel on
Picture
Remote Image

Former Tottenham attacking midfielder Rafael van der Vaart has hinted Spurs may live to regret their decision to sell Troy Parrott on the cheap following an exciting start to his AZ Alkmaar career.

Ange Postecoglou's side flogged the 22-year-old Republic of Ireland international to the Dutch outfit for £6.7million in the summer transfer window and also negotiated a 20 per cent sell-on clause. And Parrott, who hit 17 goals in Holland last season while on loan at Excelsior, has needed no time to settle in at his new club after recently netting four in the brutal 9-1 demolition of Robin van Persie's Heerenveen.

Van der Vaart has since said of the forward, once dubbed the next Harry Kane: “I think he’s going to be a really big player. I don’t know what it is. I saw him at Excelsior, but then he was more on the counter. Now he is a good, footballing striker, who actually has everything. He just needs to develop his killer instinct a bit.

“He can perhaps play football a bit too well to be a killer. Then you start wandering a bit and that costs strength. In the final phase you lack some strength to score. I really think he is a gem.” While Parrott was rated very highly by Spurs, he failed to force his way into the first-team picture following multiple loan spells with Millwall, Ipswich Town, MK Dons and Preston North End, respectively.

But he now appears to have found a home in the Netherlands and if he continues to score at will, it might not be long before he seals a return to English football where he undeniably has unfinished business. Speaking to De Telegraaf in the summer, Parrott admitted he felt the time was right to leave Spurs, stating: "It was important for me to go to the Netherlands. I was used to playing football in Ireland and England. It was time for a new environment, a new culture.

Speaking to De Telegraaf in the summer, Parrott admitted he felt the time was right to leave Spurs, stating: "It was important for me to go to the Netherlands. I was used to playing football in Ireland and England. It was time for a new environment, a new culture.

"I think AZ is a good place where players get the chance to develop. I have been at Tottenham for a long time, but it was time to move on.” And when asked if he could ever see himself returning to north London, the young attacker replied: “You never know how things are going to go in football.”

Source