In a bombshell interview that has sent shockwaves through North London, former Tottenham Hotspur head coach Ange Postecoglou has claimed that Spurs are “not a big club” while revealing a rejected four-man transfer wishlist that could have redefined his tenure.
Speaking on The Overlap podcast alongside Gary Neville, Roy Keane, and Jamie Carragher—just hours after his successor Thomas Frank was sacked—Postecoglou laid bare the frustrations that led to his exit last summer.
The “Quadruple” Wishlist
Postecoglou revealed that following his first season, in which Spurs finished fifth, he presented the board with a list of four “Premier League-ready” targets to bridge the gap to the title challengers.
The targets identified were:
- Pedro Neto (then at Wolves, now at Chelsea)
- Bryan Mbeumo (Brentford, now a star at Manchester United)
- Antoine Semenyo (Bournemouth, now at Manchester City)
- Marc Guéhi (Crystal Palace, now at Manchester City)
“To go from fifth to really challenging, we had to sign Premier League-leading players,” Postecoglou explained. “I was looking at Neto, Mbeumo, Semenyo, and Marc Guéhi. That is what the other big clubs would do in that moment.”
“Not a Big Club”
The Australian’s most stinging criticism was aimed at the club’s self-perception versus its financial reality. Despite the world-class infrastructure of the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, Postecoglou argued the club’s “wage cap” and conservative spending prevent it from ever truly competing at the top.
“When you walk into Tottenham, what you see everywhere is ‘To Dare Is To Do.’ And yet their actions are almost the antithesis of that. When you look at the expenditure, particularly the wage structure, they are not a big club.”
Instead of the proven stars he requested, Postecoglou noted that the club opted for a different strategy:
- The Compromise: The club signed Dominic Solanke (whom Postecoglou praised) but paired him with three teenagers rather than established veterans.
- The Result: While the teenagers are “outstanding prospects,” Postecoglou argued they were never going to provide the immediate jump from 5th to 1st.
A Bitter Legacy
The timing of the interview adds a layer of irony to the current chaos at Spurs. Postecoglou was sacked at the end of the 2024/25 season despite ending the club’s 17-year trophy drought by winning the Europa League.
The decision to replace him with Thomas Frank backfired spectacularly; Frank was dismissed this week with the club languishing just five points above the relegation zone.
Impact of Missed Targets (2026 Context):
Player Current Club 2025/26 Status Bryan Mbeumo Manchester United Leading goalscorer for the Red Devils Antoine Semenyo Manchester City Key rotation piece in Guardiola’s attack Marc Guéhi Manchester City England regular and defensive anchor Pedro Neto Chelsea Primary creative outlet at Stamford Bridge Postecoglou’s revelations have left many Spurs fans wondering “what if,” as the players he identified have since gone on to become cornerstones for the very rivals Tottenham is struggling to keep pace with.
