LONDON — We are 11 games into the Premier League season, and it is still impossible to gauge the merit of Tottenham Hotspur.
Are they the side that orchestrated a 3-0 dismantling of Manchester United at Old Trafford, a 4-1 triumph over high-flying Aston Villa and knocked Manchester City out of the Carabao Cup? Or are they the unit that contrived to lose 3-2 to Brighton & Hove Albion after being 2-0 up, and gave Crystal Palace and Ipswich Town their first — and so far only — wins of the season?
The simple, if frustrating, answer is that Spurs are both: capable of reaching soaring highs or crushing lows on any given day. And while the underlying numbers suggest that more of the former should be on the horizon, it’s this inconsistency that is the biggest threat to manager Ange Postecoglou’s unbroken career record of delivering silverware in his second year.
The two sides of Spurs
There is probably no better fixture to speak to Spurs’ Jekyll and Hyde-like nature than their trip to face Manchester City on Saturday. A fortnight ago, not many would have anticipated that Postecoglou’s side would fall to Ipswich at home but, at the same time, few would have been outright aghast at the concept. It just felt like the type of game that Spurs would drop.
Conversely, few will be anticipating that they will take something off Pep Guardiola’s men this weekend; but it also wouldn’t be completely shocking if they returned to London with all three points. Spurs have become something of a bogey side for City in recent years, and it is well-known that Postecoglou relishes the opportunity to test himself against the best in games such as this.
Given the tight nature of this season’s Premier League, Tottenham enter the weekend sitting 10th, just three points back of third-placed Chelsea, but also just a point clear of 13th-placed Manchester United. Had they got the job done against Ipswich, they’d be sitting third and — as Postecoglou would likely be the first to wryly observe — the tone surrounding his side would likely be vastly different. But while the vibes in North London in the Australian’s sophomore season are a far cry from what they were like at this point a year ago, when they sat top of the Premier League after 10 weeks and suffered their first defeat on the season only on matchday 11, a look under the bonnet will suggest the foundation Spurs are working off this season is stronger.
It’s only a sample size of 11 games, but Spurs are scoring more goals and creating more expected goals (xG) per 90 than they did across 2023-24, as well as conceding fewer goals and allowing fewer xG conceded per 90. They’re taking more shots while allowing fewer at the other end, winning the ball higher up the pitch, and turning it over less in their defensive third. Their PPDA (passes per defensive action) — a metric that measures the intensity of a team’s press — is just 6.82, the lowest in the Premier League. In more tangible measurements, no team in the Premier League has scored more goals than Tottenham this season, and only league leaders Liverpool possess a better goal difference than their +10.
When they’re at their best, Spurs are very good, capable of blowing all but the most elite sides out of the water with a relentless attacking approach — something more in keeping with the club’s mythos than the defensive trappings of its three previous full-time coaches: Antonio Conte, Nuno Espírito Santo and José Mourinho. And it’s these flashes that will convince Postecoglou that he remains on the right track; the footballing philosophy that has painstakingly paved the way from his native Australia to the Premier League continuing to bear fruit. Probably somewhat importantly, unlike a couple of those previous coaches listed, he seems to actually enjoy being at Spurs’ helm, too.
“I’ve enjoyed every step of the way,” Postecoglou tells ESPN. “Every challenge has been different. Every club has had different sorts of environments and different kinds of cultural resets that I’ve had to do. But I’ve enjoyed all of it and I’m enjoying this as much as I’ve enjoyed everything else I’ve done in football.
“And hopefully that continues, because that’s what kind of keeps driving me. If I get to the point where I’m getting up in the morning and not looking forward to what’s ahead, then I know that it’s probably time for me to try and look to do something else. But I’m loving every minute of it.”