Tottenham boss Ange Postecoglou has doffed his cap to the intuitiveness of West Ham vice-chair Karren Brady after she predicted in May he would take the Premier League by storm.
Spurs host West Ham on Thursday aiming to end a four-match winless run, but they still sit fifth in the table after an excellent start to the campaign.
Postecoglou has been without a host of players during the past month but earned plaudits for an unwavering commitment to his attacking philosophy, which resulted in Tottenham fighting back to earn a 3-3 draw at Manchester City last weekend.
Back in May, Brady used her column for the Sun to tip the then Celtic boss to flourish in England if given the chance.
Asked if he had seen Brady’s “love letter”, Postecoglou said: “Ha ha, no. I don’t know Karren, I’ve never met her and I don’t think I’ve ever come across her, but in many respects, wouldn’t that make her fairly ahead of the game?
“I reckon she’s a pretty smart operator! I’m not sure about the love letter stuff, mate.
“I guess me moving to Celtic kind of brought me closer to this part of the world.
“I was aware, particularly Celtic-Rangers, everyone down here watches it and it gets into people’s consciousness. I guess if Karren knows, then all credit to her.”
Tottenham head into Thursday’s London derby having ended a three-match losing streak.
Ange Postecoglou tipped for Prem job after nearing back-to-back league titles with Celtic |
— The Sun Football (@TheSunFootball)
Dejan Kulusevski 90th-minute effort at the Etihad Stadium earned a draw for Postecoglou’s injury-hit team, who were predicted by some pundits to lose heavily at the Etihad if he continued to adopt his bold tactics.
“With a game like that, when you come out of it, what you want is to give the players something,” Postecoglou said.
“Show them something to say, ‘look, you did it. It’s not just words, this is not just an idea, you did it’. And it may have only been for small parts of the game, but if you can do it for small parts, then the challenge is can we extend that to bigger areas?
“Whereas if you never even try it, you never know. So, if I changed my approach for the Man City game, that’s where I would have lost. I wouldn’t have had any opportunity to give that feedback to the players.
“So, from that perspective, we got a lot of good information out of that game. Good and bad, like areas where we really struggled.