Ange Postecoglou has stood by his "assessment" of Timo Werner's performance in Tottenham's 1-1 draw at Rangers but called on other senior players to join him in the fight to lead the club through choppy waters.
Injury-hit Spurs were able to fight back through Dejan Kulusevski's 75th-minute leveller to leave Ibrox with a point and stay ninth in the Europa League after six matches. Postecoglou insisted the display of Werner, who was replaced at half-time, "wasn't acceptable" and reiterated his view before tomorrow's trip to Southampton in the Premier League, but admitted the RB Leipzig loanee will be required with nine players unavailable.
"It wasn't criticism. It was assessment," Postecoglou said.
"With Timo it wasn't about whether he played well or not. It was a difficult game last night.
"I'm asking 18-year-olds to do some massive jobs and you want senior players, and he's a senior player, he's an international and he's won the Champions League, there's a level of application and performance you need to rise to to help the team. He didn't reach that.
"Me taking him off at half-time was a statement enough. The same way I won't be hiding behind poor team performances, the same with and no different for the players or anyone else.
"It wasn't criticism, it was just an assessment of his performance and on a really challenging night for us, which we knew going into it, it needs to be better. We're in a fight here, collectively we're in a fight. I'm not going to go around worrying about people's bruised egos. This football club, we want to achieve things and be successful. We're down to the bare bones in players. If there's somebody in the dressing room who's fit, able to contribute but who feels he needs something extra in this moment, he's probably not the right type.
This story is from the December 14, 2024 edition of The Guardian.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the December 14, 2024 edition of The Guardian.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
The day after Ceasefire seals defeat of Tehran's 'axis of resistance' - for now
The ceasefire that, barring a major last-minute problem, is due to come into force on Sunday will cement massive changes across the Middle East and may seal a significant defeat for Islamist militant groups that for years have been powerful actors in the region.
Mitoma and Rutter end Brighton's winless run to stall Ipswich progress
A first league win in nine for Brighton and the latest hard truth for Ipswich.
Meta's UK staff 'concerned and let down' by new policies, says union
UK staff at Facebook's owner, Meta, feel \"concerned\" and \"let down\" about its decision to scrap fact-checkers and end diversity, equity and inclusion programmes, the trade union representing tech workers has warned the company.
Blue Origin 'mega-rocket' achieves lift-off in challenge to Musk's SpaceX
Blue Origin's New Glenn rocket blasted off from Florida yesterday on its first mission to space.
Urgent review to be held into grooming gangs
Yvette Cooper announced an urgent national review of the scale of grooming gangs along with a series of other new measures to tackle them, in a significant shift of approach yesterday following intense political pressure.
Pressure on Reeves eases as economy returns to growth in November
The UK economy grew by just 0.1% in November, which was weaker than expected but eased some pressure on Rachel Reeves after it contracted in the previous month.
We are living on our nerves' Palestinians pin hopes on speedy release of loved ones
Families of Palestinian prisoners held in Israeli jails are eagerly awaiting their release following a ceasefire deal between Hamas and Israel that could liberate hundreds of detainees.
'Bombing hasn't stopped' Anxious wait in the cold as airstrikes continue
A mid continuing airstrikes, bitter cold and news of delays, millions of people in Gaza were waiting anxiously yesterday for confirmation that the ceasefire for hostages deal between Hamas and Israel was going ahead.
Who deserves the credit? Biden praises his team but Trump says win is his
Biden praises his team - but Trump says win is his
Trading with Trump EU will need carrot and stick to take on tariffs
If there is one thing the EU knows about Donald Trump, it is that he loves tariffs.