Football365

Postecoglou sack? Tottenham make axe 'decision' with 'key day' revealed as Levy hatches 'review' plan

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According to reports, Tottenham Hotspur chiefs have made a ‘decision’ on whether to ‘sack’ head coach Ange Postecoglou, who is under pressure.

The former Celtic boss is towards the end of his second season at Spurs after joining the Premier League outfit ahead of the 2023/24 campaign.

Postecoglou was praised for his work during his debut season as he overhauled his side’s style of play, making them one of the most entertaining teams to watch in the Premier League.

Tottenham’s end to the campaign was disappointing as they narrowly missed out on Champions League qualification, but Postecoglou’s debut year was still a success and they were expected to kick on this term.

However, the 2024/25 season has been a huge disappointment for Spurs, who are languishing in the bottom half of the Premier League table.

READ: Premier League signings of the season: Forest, Bournemouth duos make top 10; one ‘Big Six’ player

Injuries have impacted Tottenham more severely than most of their rivals, but they still massively underperformed as Postecoglou has become one of the favourites to be the next Premier League manager sacked.

At the beginning of this season, Postecoglou put more pressure on himself, insisting he has always won a trophy in his second season and this would happen at Spurs.

Despite this, Spurs have been dumped out of the FA Cup and Carabao Cup, while they trail AZ Alkmaar 1-0 on aggregate heading into their second leg in the Europa League knockout stages on Thursday evening.

Spurs are fancied to go far in the Europa League as their better players are returning from injury, but they have work to do in the second leg if they are to reach the quarter-finals of the competition.

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A new report from Football Insider claims to have ‘revealed’ Tottenham’s ‘sack decision’ with a ‘key day’ approaching.

‘Tottenham are not likely to sack manager Ange Postecoglou if the club are dumped out of the Europa League on Thursday (13 March), sources have told Football Insider.

‘The AZ fixture is huge for the Australian’s future but it is believed a loss won’t lead directly to his sacking at this time.

‘Instead, sources say Tottenham plan to hold a review of the 2024-25 campaign in the off-season – with the number of key injuries expected to be held up as a mitigating factor for Postecoglou.

‘If Spurs were to progress in Europe – club chiefs have optimism they can go far in the competition with key players beginning to return to action after long spells on the treatment table.’

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Amorim sack? Man Utd 'ready' to 'implement revolution' with Spurs target named Ratcliffe's 'foremost' choice

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According to reports, Manchester United and Tottenham Hotspur are considering ‘another revolution’ with Ruben Amorim and Ange Postecoglou under pressure.

The Red Devils and Spurs are enduring woeful seasons as they are languishing in the bottom half of the Premier League.

In November, Man Utd appointed Amorim to replace Erik ten Hag after the Dutchman was fortunate to keep his job at the end of last season.

United’s FA Cup win saved Ten Hag, but their struggles in the Premier League from last season have carried over into this campaign as they have swiftly exited the race for European qualification.

Man Utd have arguably been worse under Amorim than Ten Hag as their new head coach has struggled to implement his preferred 3-4-3 formation, which isn’t suited to their squad.

READ: 16 Conclusions on Man United 1-1 Arsenal: Arteta’s obsession, Amorim’s compromise and Neville’s wall

Spurs have been similarly woeful as they have massively declined since they narrowly missed out on Champions League qualification last season.

Injuries have impacted Spurs more than most teams, but their performances have not been good enough as Postecoglou joins Amorim among the favourites to be the next Premier League manager sacked.

It remains to be seen whether Amorim and/or Postecoglou will remain in charge heading into the summer, but Man Utd and Spurs are linked with potential replacements.

A report in Italy claims Man Utd and Spurs are ‘first and foremost’ among the Premier League and European sides tracking Inter Milan boss Simone Inzaghi.

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The 48-year-old has emerged as one of the leading managers in Europe as he’s done a brilliant job since joining Inter Milan in 2021.

After losing the 2022/23 Champions League final, Inter Milan won the Serie A title last season and have also lifted the Coppa Italia and Supercoppa Italiana under Inzaghi.

This season, Inter Milan are one point clear at the top of Serie A and they are well-placed to qualify for the Champions League quarter-finals.

Despite this, Inzaghi’s long-term future is in doubt as his current contract expires in 2026 and he is earning admiring glances from clubs around Europe.

The report adds.

‘Inzaghi’s name is clearly present in the dossiers of those – Manchester United and Tottenham first and foremost – in English latitudes seem ready to implement yet another revolution on the bench.

‘Inzaghi, a year ago, swore love to Inter but only obtained a one-year renewal (until June 2026) compared to the one expiring in June and, twelve months later, at the end of the season we will still be in a similar situation, considering that Inzaghi will still find himself with only one year left on his contract.’

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Tottenham boss Sherwood predicts 'carnage' in 'give time' plea to Levy

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Former Tottenham manager Tim Sherwood has declared there will be ‘carnage’ if his former club crash out of the Europa League against AZ Alkmaar on Thursday, as he gave his verdict on the future of manager Ange Postecoglou.

Speaking exclusively to Football365 with Foot Italia, Sherwood has backed Tottenham to overturn a 1-0 first leg deficit in their last-16 tie, as he suggested the criticism will reach breaking point for Postecoglou and Spurs chairman Daniel Levy if their trophy hopes end for another season.

“It will be carnage if they go out on Thursday night, there’s no doubt about that,” Sherwood told Football365 with Foot Italia.

“This game is everything for the football club. Their whole season revolves around it as they are very unlikely to qualify for Europe via the Premier League position as there is too much catching up to do.

“They are 1-0 down against a team they should be beating. Yes, AZ Alkmaar did brilliantly to win the first leg, but the quality of the Eredivisie isn’t great and Tottenham have to be beating them at home and getting into the quarter-finals.

“I think they will get through to the next round, I really do. The players coming back to fitness now have to turn up and they have to do at them a million miles an hour from the start. They have to deliver now.

“If you were going to offer any manager a squad to work with at the start of this competition, they would all have picked Tottenham’s squad, so they have to fancy their chances of winning it.”

READ: Premier League worst XI: Van Dijk partners Romero as three Spurs players named and shamed

“Of course, the best players don’t always win, but if they are playing anything like they can play, they will win this tie against AZ Alkmaar and they will win the trophy and qualify for next season’s Champions League.

“If that happens, this will suddenly become an absolutely magnificent season for Tottenham and there will be a statue of Ange outside the ground as the manager who ended the club’s trophy drought.”

Sherwood, who was Tottenham manager during the 2013/14 season, has insisted the pressure that will pile onto Postecoglou if his side go out of the Europa League should not lead to his exit as manager, as he insisted the constant managerial changes overseen by Spurs chairman Daniel Levy has not been a successful policy.

Nuno Espirito Santo is now thriving at Nottingham Forest after his reign as Tottenham manager lasted just 17 games in charge in 2021, with serial winners Jose Mourinho and Antonio Conte also failing to bring success to Spurs during their time at the helm.

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Now Sherwood as urged Tottenham chairman Daniel Levy to give Postecoglou time to build a winning team, after a season that has seen his squad decimated by injuries.

“You can’t keep hiring and firing managers at the rate Tottenham have done,” he added.

“There was a cloud hanging over Tottenham for a few years due to the style of football managers like Nuno, Mourinho and Conte were playing. That’s not a criticism of the fans as they want to see attacking football, but look what those managers have done since and you can see it is a style of football that can work.

“I look at Nuno and what he is doing at Nottingham Forest and it’s incredible. He got run out of town quickly at Tottenham, so who knows what he would have done if he had time at Spurs, but the fans wanted a different type of football and that’s what they get with Ange.

“Everyone is getting entertained. There are goals at both ends. He played a high line when his team went down nine men against Chelsea and everyone applauded them off the pitch. Postecoglou was is a breath of fresh air, but it has been tougher this season.

“Is he fortunate to still be there? The reason he is still there is he did so well last season. He does something different than the Spurs manager who went before him and that’s exactly why the club employed him, but the injuries he has had, especially to his centre-backs this season, have been a big problem.

“The way he wants to play, he needs centre-backs with pace and he still wants to play that same way and he has stuck to his guns on the style of play. So give Ange time, see if they can win the Europa League this season.

“In saying that, we all know that if they go out against AZ Alkmaar at this stage of the competition, there will be a lot of noise around the club and it will be carnage for the manager and the chairman.”

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Tottenham: Levy 'to sack' key man with 'low credibility' after 'embarrassing failure' amid Postecoglou 'concern'

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One Tottenham Hotspur club chief is reportedly likely to be sacked by Daniel Levy in the coming months after his “embarrassing failure” in January.

Spurs are enduring a disastrous season as they have exited the FA Cup and Carbaao Cup, while they sit 13th in the Premier League table.

Ange Postecoglou‘s side have been impacted by injuries more than most this season, but their performances have not been good enough as they have massively underdelivered after they narrowly missed out on Champions League qualification last term.

The North London outfit are also at risk of elimination from the Europa League as they are trailing 1-0 on aggregate heading into their return leg against AZ Alkmaar on Thursday night.

READ: Next Spurs boss? Andoni Iraola should heed Potter and Nuno warnings after late collapse

Tottenham’s injury woes forced them into the market in January as they signed Mathys Tel, Kevin Danso and Antonin Kinsky.

Spurs initially looked set to miss out on Tel as their permanent bid was rejected, but they eventually fended off competition from rivals to sign him on loan with an obligation to buy, which is dependent on one quite important factor.

Spurs insider John Wenham claims the Tel saga was “embarrassing” and it leaves technical director Johan Lange at risk of losing his job, with Levy ‘to sack’ the club chief with ‘very low credibility’.

“This season has been an absolute disaster,” Wenham told Tottenham News.

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“Therefore, I wouldn’t say it is without possibility that Lange could be relieved of his duties very quickly at the end of the season. His credibility is pretty low at the moment.

“Daniel Levy and Postecoglou had to get involved to get a deal done for Tel after Lange failed originally. It is embarrassing.

“As a result, I wouldn’t be surprised if the people who have been involved with recent failures, except the ownership, are removed at the end of the season, and that includes Lange.”

Another report from The Boot Room claims Spurs chiefs are ‘deeply concerned’ after their performance in the loss against AZ Alkmaar last week.

‘TBR Football has previously revealed – some sections of Spurs’ hierarchy have felt that a change of head coach could be required and work has been done on possible alternatives.

‘As we confirmed, Bournemouth’s Andoni Iraola, Brentford’s Thomas Frank and Fulham’s Marco Silva are all names that have been discussed within the corridors of power at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, and all are admired for the work they have and are currently doing.

‘We can also confirm that another name appreciated by the club is Ipswich Town’s Kieran McKenna and we are told the one-time Spurs youth player and former coach, should not be ruled out of contention.’

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up with player mooted as Spurs board reveal 'deep concern' over result

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Tottenham boss Ange Postecoglou has ‘deeply concerned’ the Spurs board with his side’s performance in their loss to AZ Alkmaar, according to reports.

Spurs recovered well from being knocked out of the Carabao Cup semi-finals and FA Cup fourth round in the same week in early February by beating Manchester United and Ipswich Town in the Premier League in back-to-back victories.

However, their inconsistency has reared its head again this season with a 1-0 defeat at home to Manchester City before another 1-0 loss to AZ Alkmaar in their first leg of the Europa League last 16 last Thursday.

While Tottenham were held at home to high-flying Bournemouth on Sunday in a 2-2 draw with Postecoglou’s men coming from two goals down to grab a point.

The last few results have heaped pressure on Postecoglou once again as Tottenham fans were hoping they could now push on to a more respectable position in the Premier League and have a chance of winning the Europa League.

Spurs are currently 13th in the Premier League and the excuses from Postecoglou are beginning to run out with a number of injured players starting to return to their starting XI.

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And now TBR Football claim that the Tottenham board were ‘deeply concerned’ by their performance against AZ Alkmaar and told Postecoglou ‘that the result was unacceptable’.

The report adds:

‘TBR Football has previously revealed – some sections of Spurs’ hierarchy have felt that a change of head coach could be required and work has been done on possible alternatives.

‘As we confirmed Bournemouth’s Andoni Iraola, Brentford’s Thomas Frank and Fulham’s Marco Silva are all names that have been discussed within the corridors of power at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, and all are admired for the work they have and are currently doing.

‘We can also confirm that another name appreciated by the club is Ipswich Town’s Kieran McKenna and we are told the one-time Spurs youth player and former coach, should not be ruled out of contention.

‘Spurs have been insistent that they are not looking to make a change this season, no matter what, and that remains the message coming down from club boss Daniel Levy – but TBR Football can confirm that Spurs’ 1-0 loss to AZ on Thursday has rocked the club.

‘TBR Football understands that whilst the club have not told Postecoglou that he will be sacked if he does not win the Europa League, they have made it clear to the Australian that their latest defeat was deemed ‘unacceptable’ by the club and sources have told us they were ‘deeply concerned’ by the result and performance.’

Despite showing good character to turn around the result against Bournemouth on Sunday, it was another poor performance from Postecoglou’s side.

And former England striker Gary Lineker has questioned why James Maddison didn’t start against the Cherries and speculated that there might be some sort of bust-up between the Tottenham midfielder and Postecoglou.

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Van Dijk stinker sees Liverpool captain in worst XI of the weekend; three Spurs flops included

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Well, that was hardly Boxing Day 1963. Liverpool v Southampton was unsurprisingly the biggest margin of victory in the Premier League this weekend, but the champions-elect were somehow the only team to score three goals or win by a two-goal margin.

No drubbings sets up an interesting worst XI of the weekend, with no Southampton or Manchester United representatives, which feels weird. As always, match ratings are taken from WhoScored.

GK: Kepa Arrizabalaga (Bournemouth) – 5.44

The Bournemouth goalkeeper saved Ederson and Alisson after their errors leading to a goal with a foul on Heung-min Son in his box, helping Tottenham Hotspur come from 2-0 down to eventually earn a 2-2 draw on Sunday.

In the most entertaining match of the weekend, Kepa only made two saves and misplaced 12 of his 25 attempted passes. He’s dropped down this ranking.

RB: Nelson Semedo (Wolves) – 5.99

We were treated to a clash on the big screen between Wolves and Everton on Saturday evening. Jack Harrison finally scored his first Premier League goal of the season before Marshall Munetsi’s equaliser in a 1-1 draw.

Playing right-wing-back, Semedo had a forgettable night, making zero key passes, completing zero dribbles, winning no aerial duels, being dispossessed four times and being dribbled past once.

CB: Virgil van Dijk (Liverpool) – 5.83

No heavy defeats for the relegation fodder of the Premier League means there is an opportunity for some big names to creep in the worst XI, and that has happened with Virgil van Dijk, who would probably win PFA Player of the Year if Mohamed Salah was not allowed.

Van Dijk and Alisson decided to run it back to their Arsenal brainfart last February by handing Will Smallbone an unlikely opener for Southampton at Anfield. Even with the bottom club ahead at half-time, Liverpool’s comeback was never in doubt. Shooting towards the Kop, they came from behind to win 3-1, with Salah scoring two penalties to extend Liverpool’s lead at the top of the Premier League.

CB: Cristian Romero (Tottenham Hotspur) – 6.02

Making his first appearance since lasting 15 minutes against Chelsea on December 8, Romero had an afternoon to forget in Spurs’ Desmond against Bournemouth.

The Argentine international lasted an hour this time around – probably because he wasn’t rushed back this time – and Spurs went 2-0 down four minutes later. Romero committed two fouls, had an error leading to a shot, lost possession 13 times, misplaced 13 passes and made zero tackles or interceptions.

LB: Victor Kristiansen (Leicester City) – 5.85

The first of three Leicester players in the worst XI, Kristiansen was substituted late on after a fairly uneventful match-up v Jadon Sancho.

CM: Kalvin Phillips (Ipswich Town) – 5.21

What are we going to do with you, Kalvin?

Crystal Palace v Ipswich somehow only had one goal, with Dean Henderson and Alex Palmer making 10 saves between them, but the decisive strike from Ismaila Sarr came via a Phillips error. Well, it went down as an error led to a goal, but it was very harsh. He lost a 50-50 against Daichi Kamada and Sarr latched onto the loose ball to dink over Palmer.

Besides the debatable error, Phillips failed with his two dribble attempts, was dribbled past once, made zero interceptions, committed two fouls and was dispossessed once.

CM: Yves Bissouma (Tottenham Hotspur) – 5.85

Hooked at half-time on a booking, Bissouma did not play horrendously but Ange Postecoglou had seen enough.

The Malian midfielder had an error leading to a shot and was dribbled past once.

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CM: John McGinn (Aston Villa) – 5.92

An abysmal opening 45 minutes between Brentford and Villa was quickly forgotten when Unai Emery’s side scored two goals in the first five minutes of the second half, though their second was disallowed for an offside against Ollie Watkins.

McGinn’s midfield partner Youri Tielemans – in the Premier League XI of the season – had the highest rating of the match on a rubbish afternoon for the Scot.

RW: Brennan Johnson (Tottenham Hotspur) – 5.84

Poor Johnson failed with his two dribble attempts, lost his only aerial duel and contributed nothing defensively before, like Bissouma, being substituted at the break.

His replacement (Son) won a penalty and scored from the spot to equalise. Bissouma’s replacement (Lucas Bergvall) assisted Pape Matar Sarr’s goal.

LW: Bilal El Khannouss (Leicester City) – 5.75

Leicester City suffered their fifth straight Premier League defeat to nil at Chelsea on Sunday. After winning and drawing their first two under Ruud van Nistelrooy, their only points have come away to Tottenham Hotspur, scoring in only two of their 12 defeats under the Manchester United legend.

El Khannouss has been a positive in an otherwise miserable campaign for the Foxes and the Moroccan playmaker could not do much against Enzo Maresca’s side, completing zero key passes and being dribbled past three times.

ST: Jamie Vardy (Leicester City) – 5.99

Vardy was helpless in defeat at Stamford Bridge and a 5.99 is far from horrendous, to be fair to him.

His only shot of the afternoon was on target but other than that, the Leicester legend was anonymous and Van Nistelrooy would have been as well playing an extra defender – or himself.

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Next Spurs manager: Postecoglou replacement impresses despite late collapse amid Nuno warning

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We can’t ignore that Bournemouth are in a mini wobble that has turned legitimate top four hopes into an outside chance – but by god, some of the football they play on their day is brilliant.

Andoni Iraola’s side took just 20 seconds to confirm they were going to be firmly the better team against Spurs. Within four minutes, they should have been two goals up after their press twice forced the hosts into giving the ball away just outside their own box. Guglielmo Vicario saved both efforts; they should really have been converted.

Milos Kerkez was brilliant in winning the ball on the edge of his own third and driving up the pitch before playing an inch-perfect cross to the back post for Marcus Tavernier to slide home for 1-0.

A wonderful second goal – a flowing team counter-attack that ripped Spurs to shreds – was ruled out for an unnecessary offside, but Evanilson soon made it 2-0 for realsies. With Bournemouth also hitting the stanchion, Tottenham could not have complained if it had been five or six.

That it ended up 2-2 was utterly bizarre, owing everything to a mis-hit Pape Sarr cross flying into the top corner and Kepa Arrizabalaga being an absolute moron, flying off his line to bring down Son Heung-min when the forward looked to be going nowhere. The South Korean watched Kepa dive the wrong way then calmly passed his penalty into the net.

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Despite what the scoreboard said, though, nobody who watched the game could be in any doubt about which side had been on top. Bournemouth were not just the better team, but incredibly well-drilled off the ball and scintillating on it.

Despite the result, Iraola’s stock keeps on rising. In normal circumstances, he would feted for the next big job going. But in this case, that next move is far from obvious.

If Bournemouth’s rise up the table had come 12 months sooner, he would surely be talked about as a potential successor to Jurgen Klopp. Had Pep Guardiola not decided to extend his stay at Manchester City, would they be sniffing around? And Mikel Arteta is in an immovable position at Arsenal.

Aston Villa have been slightly disappointing in the Premier League this season, but Unai Emery has more than enough credit in the bank to earn another season. And would a move to Tottenham or Newcastle be appealing if neither is at least in the Europa League next season?

The most obvious Premier League destination, perhaps, would be Chelsea, should they go through another bad spell and decide to bin off Enzo Maresca. But Graham Potter is just one of a long line of managers to serve as a warning about going to Stamford Bridge.

Which raises another question for Iraola to ponder. Nottingham Forest boss Nuno Espirito Santo’s spell at Spurs sits alongside Potter’s at Chelsea as a reminder that the grass is not always as green as the dollar bills that make up a nominally bigger club’s budget.

The top end of the Premier League has become far less entrenched since the monstrous rise in TV money that kicked in around the beginning of this decade, after all. Look at Newcastle two years ago. Look at Villa last year. Look at Nottingham Forest right now.

That may put Iraola in a similar (albeit lesser) position to Xabi Alonso last season: a young, up-and-coming manager with good reason to feel he still has more to achieve at his current club, and thus no need to rush such a big decision.

Iraola will surely have no shortage of offers, but Potter and Nuno both show that choosing the right move is more important than just taking the first big offer that comes along.

Until then, Bournemouth fans look set to continue having an awful lot of fun.

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Spurs vs Bournemouth: Prediction, expected line ups, how to watch, referee, stats

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Tottenham Hotspur will be looking to bounce back from their abject European display when they welcome Bournemouth to the capital this Sunday.

Ange Postecoglou is like a cat who has used eight of his nine lives. The Australian remains in charge despite a sorry display in the Netherlands on Thursday. Spurs were beaten 1-0 by AZ Alkmaar and are now on the brink of elimination in the only competition they have any chance of winning this season.

Postecoglou’s men have now lost 18 games across all competitions during this dreadful campaign – numbers you’d expect from Bournemouth.

Instead, the Cherries appear to have stolen Spurs’ position as European contenders and are well in the race for a top-six finish.

Andoni Iraola’s men slipped to ninth in the Premier League table after Saturday’s results but could climb back into the top five and within a point of Man City if Sunday’s results go their way.

The south coast side have endured a slight dip in form, losing three of their last four Premier League games. However, the Cherries boast a scary away record, winning six and losing one of their last nine away from home.

Iraola has done brilliantly. In fact, he may be doing too well after becoming odds on favourite to become the next Tottenham Hotspur manager. What kind of reward is that meant to be?!

Finding the solution to Spurs’ problems is probably as difficult a task as was overcoming the ‘Curse of the Bambino’. If you’re not familiar with baseball, it took the Boston Red Sox 86 years to end their title drought.

Whatever is wrong at Spurs, we expect it to continue this weekend. But if you want our full prediction, you’ll have to scroll down to the end.

Tottenham Hotspur team news

The big injury news for Spurs concerns Dominic Solanke. The England international marked his return from injury on Thursday but only lasted around 20 minutes. He is expected to miss the reunion with his old employers on Sunday.

Dejan Kulusevski remains out of action due to a foot injury and isn’t expected back until April.

In better news for Postecoglou, Ben Davies and Richarlison are close to making their returns. Whether the Aussie decides to throw them back into action against the Cherries remains to be seen.

There’s also Radu Dragusin. The Romanian is on the mend from an ACL operation which took place last month. His estimated return date is towards the back end of 2025.

Tottenham predicted line up

Bournemouth team news

Bournemouth will be without influential centre-back Ilya Zabarnyi who serves the third game of his suspension.

He will be joined on the sidelines by Enes Unal who is out with a long-term knee injury. Macros Senesi and Julian Araujo are both out with thigh problems while Adam Smith is struggling with his calf.

Ryan Christie is reportedly struggling with his groin, though he has not officially been ruled out of action.

Bournemouth predicted line up

Tottenham Hotspur vs Bournemouth: How to watch and listen

Fans can watch Sunday’s match live across multiple platforms, including Sky Go UK, NOW, Sky Sports Main Event, and Sky Sports Premier League. Radio coverage is available on BBC Radio 5 Live.

Tottenham Hotspur vs Bournemouth stats

Spurs have won six of their seven Premier League home games against Bournemouth

Following their 1-0 win at the Vitality Stadium, Bournemouth are looking to complete their first ever season double over Spurs.

The Londoners have lost seven Premier League home games this season – their worst return since the 1996/97 season.

Bournemouth have lost three of their last four Premier League games – as many as they had in their previous 18.

Only Brentford’s Gtech Community Stadium has seen more Premier League goals than the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium this season.

Tottenham Hotspur vs Bournemouth referee stats

Sam Barrott will be the man in the middle at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium. The official has taken charge of 17 Premier League games this season and has dished out 73 bookings – an average of 4.3 per game.

His last game was certainly an eventful one as Crystal Palace dismantled Aston Villa 4-1 at Selhurst Park. Meanwhile, his last fixture involving Spurs was back in December as they were beaten 6-3 at home by Liverpool.

This will be his first time officiating a Bournemouth match this season.

Tottenham Hotspur vs Bournemouth prediction

Tottenham have arguably hit their most miserable low of the season after losing in Alkmaar on Thursday.

A Bournemouth side that is firing on all cylinders would undoubtedly pounce on the wounded Spurs. Unfortunately for Iraola, his men have also experienced a recent dip.

See below our prediction for the game…

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Postecoglou sack? Levy 'will find new Tottenham boss' after 'miserable' Ange fails to 'overcome adversity'

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Former Crystal Palace chairman Daniel Levy would be shocked if Tottenham boss Ange Postecoglou is “still in a job” if he fails to win the Europa League.

Spurs recovered well from being knocked out of the Carabao Cup semi-finals and FA Cup fourth round in the same week in early February by beating Manchester United and Ipswich Town in the Premier League in back-to-back victories.

However, their inconsistency has reared its head again this season with a 1-0 defeat at home to Manchester City last week before another 1-0 loss to AZ Alkmaar in their first leg of the Europa League last 16 on Thursday.

And that has heaped pressure on Postecoglou once again as Tottenham fans were hoping they could now push on to a more respectable position in the Premier League and have a chance of winning the Europa League.

Spurs are currently 13th in the Premier League and Jordan would be surprised if Tottenham chairman Daniel Levy doesn’t replace Postecoglou if they fail to win the Europa League after their poor showing in another competitions.

Jordan said on talkSPORT: “This is a moment in time, it’s not reflective of Tottenham Hotspur because it’s not their staple diet.

“People look at Tottenham Hotspur besides their own fans and think it’s a good club to be involved with. Yes you’ve got the stigma of what people perceive Daniel Levy to be or not to be.

“The fact is they still spend a hundred-odd million plus on transfer fees most seasons and most managers with a few exceptions would bite your arm off for a job like that.

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“So they’ll find a replacement for Ange Postecoglou. Whether it’s the right one, whether it gets you in the right direction and whether Daniel Levy will continue to make appointment without winning anything, who knows.

“But I would be surprised if you finish 13th in the league, you get knocked out of the cup competitions – besides the credible performance in the League Cup – if he’s still in a job.

“That’s not me talking him out of a job, that’s not me suggesting I want him fired I think it’s the reality of looking at two years and yes the football manager will want you to price in nuance and context and say ‘I’ve had this and I’ve had that and I’ve had the other.’

“But that’s what top managers are paid to do, is overcome adversity.”

Stan Collymore described Postecoglou’s demeanour against AZ Alkmaar as “miserable” with his side matching the Tottenham boss’ body language.

Collymore told Caught Offside: “Spurs’ performance against AZ Alkmaar was a mirror of his demeanour, which is rather miserable. His reactions in the media will be seen by his players, and it has an effect on them, and as a result, I have no doubt that his body language and demeanour contributed to Spurs’ lacklustre performance in Alkmaar.”

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Liverpool truth emerges and 'lightweight' Spurs midfielder slammed for 'hiding'

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Liverpool ‘absolutely deserved’ to beat PSG because they did beat PSG; go and watch the NBA if you disagree. And Spurs are back in their doom cycle.

Send your thoughts to theeditor@football365.com.

Redunancies

I suggest the next person to be made redundant at old Trafford is the guy who chooses what studs to wear. I counted 8 slips to zero. (Yes I’m very sad counting such sh*t but it was a boring game) but the point still remains.

Tony

Bentancur. Bergvall

Hi

“But Tottenham will have to do without midfielder Rodrigo Bentancur in next Thursday’s home leg after his third booking of the season.” reads the 5th paragraph of BBC Sports write up of the Spurs game. Sky Sports News had something similar.

In the words of Vicky Pollard, do I look like I’m bothered though? Bentancur is a lovely looking footballer. Bit Jamie Redknapp. Bit Anderton. A bit every lightweight Spurs midfielder of the last 30 or so years. He hid against Liverpool and Villa in the cup, he hid again against AZ. He plays football like his team are two or three up with 15 minutes to go. He hides so much that deeply promising 18-year-olds (looks like an angel but is a proper hatchet man) make comedy errors because they’re scared no one else will take responsibility. Which they won’t. Bergvall being suspended would be a story. Bentancur isn’t.

And another thing. Solanke got injured after 20 minutes. Romero got injured after 15 minutes on his comeback against Chelsea. I’m not sure that medical team knows how to condition players or get them back from injuries.

Lastly, have you ever seen a more depressing-looking coaching staff? They all just sit there motionless. No one talks to one another. There’s not much plotting or scheming. There certainly isn’t any joy in their work. There are just blank expressions. I’d take Jason Tindall and his questionable antics over that lot any day of the week.

We’re a hot mess.

Cheers

Andrew

Luckypool

Donnarumma should have saved that shot from Elliot but he didn’t.

Alisson had no right to save some of those PSG shots, but he did.

Last time I checked the keeper is part of the 11.

Rob, Hove

Genuinely intrigued to know the MBs objective views on the Konate incident. I get if you dont like Liverpool you’d want him off but as far as I could see it was a shoulder barge. Fair game in the 90s, is it now? If you were playing Sunday league and your defender did that would you be incensed by a red? I kind of think it could be but I’d be livid. It seems like players get away with it ‘cos they are not using their arms. Virgil does it a lot, never gets blown.

PSG were so much better, but Elliot’s goal was the most joy I’ve felt so far this season!

Put your club loyalties aside and discuss!

Tom, Leaning in.

Following our admittedly slightly fortunate win Vs psg arsenal fans have been crying on social media.

For ages I couldn’t understand why. I get Everton fans doing it or even United fans. Why are arsenal fans crying about what Liverpool does or doesn’t do?

Then I realised, the reason they cry is because Liverpool achieves things arsenal fans can only dream about.

Sleep well arsenal fans of social media, it’s the only time you’ll have a chance of a champions league trophy…

Lee

Liverpool kept PSG completely at arm’s length

One of the interesting things I’ve noticed about the PSG v Liverpool game is how perspective can be skewed. Conventional punditry wisdom is that Liverpool were ‘battered’ 0-1 and Liverpool got lucky. However, a trip to Opta might give a different impression if you look at the xG and how they rated the chances. It turns out that roughly half of PSG’s 1.78 total xG came from the one v one against Dembele that Alisson saved that also saw a couple of shots blocked from Barcola in the immediate aftermath. All of those fabulous diving saves we all saw him make actually came from very low xG chances that the PSG forwards hit superbly. It was essentially a masterclass on ball striking by the PSG forwards and a masterclass on goalkeeping in response.

Armed with that knowledge, it swings the pendulum slightly back in favour of a victory built on really good defending by Liverpool as opposed to absurd luck. They by and large limited PSG to taking shots with low likelihood of scoring, with that one exception. Now, make no mistake, I freely admit that PSG dominated possession of the football, and were far, far better with the ball than Liverpool, with superb pressing to boot. I’d just suggest that a day removed from the action with cooler heads suggests that Liverpool actually defended really, really well too, and earned that clean sheet.

Just wanted to push back on some of the utter codswallop I’ve seen making the rounds – even seen one journalist try to claim that Liverpool’s clean sheet was so lucky that saying they had been ‘lucky’ is utterly inadequate, which seems a bit extreme for an xG of less than 2…

Greg, Taunton. (Looking forward to seeing my mail misrepresented for ragebait in the bold bit. Might I suggest something along the lines of ‘Liverpool kept PSG completely at arms length’, or something similar? I know you guys are better at that than I am, so please, go wild! It’ll be fun.)

Celebrate good times, come on!

Derek – LFC

I read this “I must admit it’s the first time I think I’ve not celebrated a Liverpool winner in my almost 50 years of supporting them”

and immediately called bullsh*t and bolox!

If you havent celebrated that goal, after being under the cosh for almost the entirety of 87mins, you sir are a liar or not a fan of the scoring team

I have to restrain myself more often than like as it totally freaks the dog out for ages after, he thinks Im mad at him (or something I guess) He just stand and stares at me for almost 90min every game (although non Liverpool games depend on the comms and co comms – He much prefers Lucy Wards calm tones to Darren Fletchers shouting) but briefly lost my sh*t when that went in.. was impossible to contain!

But I digress…

We were def lucky, why pretend otherwise..?

Was a fantastic win and we were pretty much totally outplayed. Im fine with that, thanks!

Al – LFC – Dont be silly Derek!..

Watch basketball

Disclaimer- I am a Liverpool fan, but I watched the game with an Everton fan and no productive discussion was had, so I have come to the famously reasonable and non-reactionary forum of the internet to discuss it.

But Liverpool absolutely deserved to win, because they did.I think the entire appeal of football is that the best team is not at all guaranteed to win. Goals are rare in football, which is why drama and unpredictability is so prevalent, and also why detractors might call it boring. If you want to see the better team win, football is plainly the wrong sport for you, go watch incrementally scoring sports such as the NBA, their season is getting towards the business end right now.

I have seen more times than I remember Liverpool dominate a team and not win the game, and Liverpool did not deserve to win those games, because they didn’t. You only deserve to win a game if you actually win it, barring some complete refereeing calamity such as penalties or disallowed goals I would say.

Maybe my bias is showing, but I don’t class the Konate incident in that category as it wouldn’t have provided a clear goal opportunity to PSG. It’s not like Liverpool suddenly turned on after that, if Konate was off it may not have been so different, I don’t think it was possible for PSG to dominate more anyway. Liverpool were certainly lucky he wasn’t sent off though, clear red.

Many have already written in to point out the stupidity of calling the result lucky as a whole, but it is absurd to say, it’s not lucky that Allison is as good as he is. Maybe you could say PSG are unlucky in that maybe the same shots would beat many other keepers, and the Konate incident.

Anyway, in short, I think it’s worth remembering that the reason we bother watching matches is that the winners often aren’t the best team, but are still deserving winners. And incredible players doing incredible things has nothing to do with luck.

C, Greece.

Trent out of shape

So for years I’ve been a huge critic of Trent. I’ve made my feelings known on this website. He’s a Hollywood passer. He costs Liverpool so much possession every game because he constantly looks for that big pass. When he gets it he’s lauded but never gets criticised for the amount of down right awful attempts he makes and for the amount of times he loses us possession. Commentators and internet ‘experts’ alike never hold him accountable.

I wonder is it because he’s English 🤔 I hope he goes in the summer. For me Bradley, although not as good with the Hollywood type passes is definitely good on the ball, pacier and a much better at defending. The stick Trent got after the United game from Liverpool fans was so uncalled for. Why? Because it’s not the first time he’s looked half arsed in a game. It’s probably the first time they notice it because of the contract situation. It’s amazing how fickle fans can be. I’m not fickle, I just know what I see and I have for years with that chap.

Anyway I’ve anyways wondered, nay, I’ve always known, but without proof, who the player is that loses the ball most in possession. I’m not talking Liverpool, I’m talking the league so here you….. guess who? Surprise suprise!! Go to Madrid please. We’ll be fine without you just like when Owen, Coutinho et al left. The main one we need to stay is Big Virg. The rock and soul of this team!

Alex

Offside or not

A caveat to start off: The example used is just to reflect the thoughts on offside, not about the match itself (Liverpool pulling out that win is just how football can be at times).

On the Kravadona (I would butcher his actual name, so going with the nickname) offside goal, it just makes me question what the offside rule is meant for. Essentially, my understanding is a player is offside if they 1) impact play or 2) gain an advantage from it.

In this case, the player was coming back from a marginally offside position to receive a pass to feet and then cutting inside to shoot. If he had received a pass in front of him or turned toward the outside and shot, totally understand that being called as offside as he had an advantage, no matter how slight. But the actual situation makes me question where that advantage is.

All I’m saying is there should be some flexibility and situational context applied. I’ve seen other similar scenarios before and it’s as though the refs apply the law because it’s safer than going against it.

Jason, Singapore

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Club DNA is nonsense

Funnily enough, I’ve had the “club DNA” type topic on my mind recently, and did a bit of digging (i.e. a google search of League winners and then a quick paste into Excel with a Pivot table).

Whilst in the past 50 years, several clubs have won multiple leagues. As Mark, LFC, An Mhí correctly pointed out, that history/club DNA is very much a manager of the moment not the club DNA.

In the past 50 years, the clubs that have won the league with multiple managers are:

Liverpool = 4 (probably soon to be 5)

Chelsea = 3 (but you could argue, that really, it’s 1 owner)

Man City = 3 (similar to Chelsea, 1 owner)

Arsenal = 2

That’s it.

Even Manchester United with the most titles in the past 50 years (13) won them all with 1 manager. There’s no legacy there, they were even in the 2nd tier in that timescale (just).

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