Postecoglou bemoans 'worst defeat of tenure' after Spurs collapse at Brighton
STRAIGHT TALK: Tottenham Hotspur manager Ange Postecoglou during the Premier League match at the American Express Stadium, Brighton.Â
Tottenham manager Ange Postecoglou has described his team's performance in a woeful defeat at Brighton â in which they threw away a two-goal lead to lose 3-2 â as the worst of his tenure and warned his players a lack of competitiveness in the second half will not be accepted.
The set-back, which came on the back of five wins in a row in all competitions and denied Spurs a chance to move into the top six, was almost unthinkable at half-time when the north London side had dominated play and taken what looked like a decisive lead through Brennan Johnson and James Maddison.
But the way they collapsed after the break to be steamrolled by Brighton, who scored through Yankuba Minteh, Georginio Rutter and Danny Welbeck to take three points, left Postecoglou bewildered and hurt.
He cut a morose figure in the post-match press conference and, perhaps for the first time since taking over as manager in June 2023, was not afraid to criticise his players for their total collapse on the south coast.
âWe werenât competitive, we didnât win our duels, we lacked intensity. We didnât deliver the things you need to do at this level, the basics of the game, and we paid the cost,â he said.
âStraight after the game you are emotional, but Iâd say thatâs probably my most disappointing loss since Iâve been here in terms of the way we went about it and itâs something I need to assess.
âIt was a stark reminder of what elite sport is about. The core of it is to be competitive. If youâre not competitive it doesnât matter how good you are â or how good you think you are â you are going to trip up.âÂ
The insinuation there, perhaps, is that Tottenhamâs players became complacent after five wins in a row and a strong first half performance at the Amex in which they dominated the game and looked irrepressible in attack.
But there was little chance of Postecoglou defending his players after watching their limp second half performance in which poor defending, particularly from Destiny Udogie, gifted Brighton three goals â before Spurs virtually gave up with almost half an hour to go.
Postecoglou said: âI donât know if it was complacency, I donât know where it comes from and that doesnât really matter to me. Wherever it comes from itâs unacceptable at the end of the day.
âYouâve got to understand youâre not going to win every game. But itâs the first time weâve lost game in that manner since Iâve been here and itâs unacceptable âIf you donât compete and you allow the opponent to overrun you in that manner youâre not going to win.
âIâm sure the players are disappointed, but I donât really care about that. They should be disappointed. I want them to understand that disappointment comes from us not doing the very basics of what is expected.â Itâs unusual to hear Postecoglou speak in that way, and you certainly wouldnât want to be a Tottenham player when the match is analysed in back in north London.
The Australian will have some serious questions to ask about the nature of his sideâs collapse, just when it seemed evidence of their top-four credentials was building.
Their first-half dominance was so complete, and the performance so impressive, that if you watched that opening 45 minutes in isolation you would almost certainly conclude that Spurs are good enough to challenge the big boys.
But by the 66th minute, when they were 3-2 down, the lack of mental and physical energy in the side â and the lack of belief â hinted that all those deeper problems that have dogged the club for decades are still easily prodded.
Opta stats encouraged a âTottenham have gone all Spursyâ headline by confirming they have now lost a Premier League game after being two or more goals ahead 10 times â the first club to hit double figures with that unfortunate stat.
Postecoglou knows that, of course, but what is frustrating for Spurs fans is that just when you thought the Australian coach had built a thicker skin for his team, the ease at which it was peeled off by Brighton.
They scored just minutes into the second half when Kaoru Mitoma crossed low, Udogie completely failed to deal with it and Minteh pounded.
It was 2-2 when Mitoma set up Rutter to score smartly and then 3-2 when Udogie fell asleep in the box, allowing Rutter to reach a ball he should never have got near â and cross for Welbeck to head home.
There was still 30 minutes left but Spurs were bereft of confidence or ideas â and Brighton saw it out comfortably.
Albion manager Fabian Hurzeler said: âI have a lot of trust and belief in the potential of the team. At half time we spoke about fulfilling our plan with more energy and being more intense.
âWe werenât ready for the intensity of Tottenham in the first half. Iâm proud of how the team reacted. We showed character, took responsibility and then created chances in the second half.â Pride was not a word that Postecoglou used, despite his teamâs impressive first half display. All he could remember was the misery of their collapse, and another painful example of what has been a Tottenham trait for far too long.
âItâs a terrible loss, as bad as it gets,â he concluded.
Brighton: Verbruggen 6; Veltman 5, Webster 5 (Igor 9), Dunk 7, Kadioglu 5 (Estupinan 46; 7); Baleba 6 (Wieffer, 74; 6), Hinshelwood 6; Minteh 7, Mitoma 8, Rutter 7 (Enciso, 73; 6); Welbeck 7.
Unused subs: Steele, Lamptey, Ayari, Gruda, Ferguson.
Tottenham: Vicario 6; Udogie 5, Van de Ven 6, Romero 5, Porro 6; Kulusevski 7, Bentancur 6 (Bissouma 79; 6), Maddison 8 (Moore 85; 6); Johnson 7, Solanke 7, Werner 6 (Sarr 79; 6) Subs: Forster, Dragusin, Gray, Spence, Sarr, Bergvall, Lankshear.
Referee: David Coote




