Every word Ange Postecoglou said on Micky van de Ven's special training and Cristian Romero update
Ange Postecoglou had positive Tottenham injury news for a change and plenty of clarity on Micky van de Ven and Cristian Romero's injury recoveries at his press conference on Friday.
Tottenham return to Premier League action with the visit of Manchester United on Sunday. Spurs won their last Premier League match at Brentford but then exited both the Carabao Cup and FA Cup at the hands of Liverpool and Aston Villa. However, Postecoglou has now finally had a string of players returning to training this week from injury and he delivered a big update on who will be back and available to be part of Sunday's squad.
Tottenham supporters have been looking for updates on Micky van de Ven and Cristian Romero and they got plenty of detail from the Australian.
READ MORE: Ange Postecoglou explains exactly when he hopes to have Micky van de Ven and Cristian Romero back
READ MORE: Tottenham could make five changes vs Man Utd as Ange Postecoglou considers midfield switch
Our Tottenham correspondent Alasdair Gold was among those putting the questions to Postecoglou. Here's the full transcript from the press conference at Hotspur Way.
What's the latest team news?
It has been a good week, it’s fair to say, in terms of the health and wellbeing of the group of young men I look after. The guys who have been playing have benefitted a fair bit from having a couple of days off and regenerating. That has been really important for us.
On the injury front, it is certainly good to have some significant players back. For training purposes to start with as it raises the level and quality of our training but also in terms of helping us from a playing perspective.
Vicario has trained really well and is good to go. Madders is good to go. Then we have had Destiny, Wilson and Brennan also training with the group. They are in a good space as well so it’s been a good training week.
Have Van de Ven and Romero suffered setbacks or are you just being cautious with them?
It is not either. With Micky we made a decision, and I was certainly the catalyst of that, to just have a look at exactly beyond the injury how we can get him back in a good spot. He is doing some different things and working with some different people it’s not as much about the injury as about the mechanics of him because we want him back and we want him back in a real good space. He is training and feels really good. We are still confident his return is imminent but we want to make sure we get it right.
With Romero it has been a healing issue. The injury hadn’t healed up as quickly as we thought it would which, again, we could have pushed him and risked it but we have waited to give him a bit more time. We will get some clear indication as to his healing and depending on that his return could be imminent as well.
How much respect do you have for Ruben Amorim sticking with his ideals?
I have said before I have respect for all managers because I know how tough it is. I’m sure if you ask Ruben he would just say that he is doing what he was brought in to do.
Obviously they have scouted and identified him. The way he plays and goes about his business. You don’t just make these appointments because you like the look of someone. You do actually a lot of work and you bring him in with a purpose. If anybody believes anything can change significantly in a short space of time then you are living in an alternative universe that is not based in reality.
I’m sure, and who am I to advise anybody, if Man Utd stuck with Ruben for the next two years, they would see progress. Absolutely because that is how long it takes. If anybody can show me somebody who has done it quicker without significant investment, by all means put it across my desk and I will follow that blueprint. But we know there is a blueprint there. I’m sure, irrespective of the noise and I have only spoken to Ruben for maybe 30 seconds at a game, I’m sure he is going ‘I’m going to do what I was brought in to do.’ And that is what he should do.
Can you be more specific with Romero and Van de Ven?
No, mate because I am not a doctor and also as I keep saying, there is a barrier you can’t cross when you are talking about people whether that is injuries or medically. Unless you want to call me a liar, what I am saying is both of them are training. There is evidence of that if you want that. Both of them are in a good place in terms of their recovery. Different reasons we’ve held both back and again once they are right, they’ll be in
I'm not calling you a liar, but from the outside, it looks like all or nothing for Europa League, are you saving them for that?
No and we’re not all or nothing on anything. We still want to progress in the league. We’re not happy with the position we’re in. There are still significant games. It’s not like there is a few games to go. There is still a lot of football to be played in the league and we want to address our league position and finish the season strong. Alongside that obviously the Europa League now is a great focus for us with us being out of the other cups, but we’re not saving anyone for anything because ultimately what I want is both Micky and Romero have had disrupted seasons in that they’ve got injured, come back and got injured again and I don’t want the same scenario.
You know whilst it may look with Micky like we had a false start with the Elfsborg thing, I think it gave us an indication of where he is at. We could have pushed on absolutely and we could have pushed on with Romero, but my view is let’s get them back and get them back right until the end of the season so we give them a chance as well to make a contribution to hopefully a strong finish for us.
I guess this has been one of your best weeks of the whole season because you’ve had a chance…
Because we haven’t had a game? And we haven’t lost? Yeah, it’s been a decent week it is fair to say!
Do you feel like a new you after a bit of rest?
I’ve been grumpy?
A little bit...
It’s fair enough too. I’ve sometimes had to do this three times a week with zero sleep, cut me a little bit of slack. I can’t be bubbly and cheery all the time. No, it’s fair to say I appreciate the fact that there wasn’t a game this midweek for sure. I had dinner with my family last night and my boy said it seems like you haven’t had a game for a while dad and it has been four days. That’s the cycle we’ve all been in. Not just me, the other coaches. It certainly, when you are going at it all the time, it does become a bit of a grind but you have to do it. I have to do it, there is no alternative, I can’t not do things I am responsible for. You know, having the opportunity, like this, not to front up the same kind of questions allows you to take a breath and hopefully I am back to the same man as I was before.
Are you the same man?
I’ve always been the same. I am sure that grumpiness will emerge at the appropriate time when it is needed.
How important is it to have Vicario and Maddison's leadership back?
Yes, it is massive. Both of them, particularly Vic, it is not just that Vic is an outstanding goalkeeper but in training he is such a presence among the boys. He gets everyone going and it has been tough without him because we’ve used three other goalkeepers. They’ve all contributed but none of them have let us down. It’s just that Vic is experienced and has a strong personality. Madders is the same. He has enormous self-belief and that filters through the team. The energy and experience they bring to training will certainly make a difference for us.
Could Maddison or Udogie start?
Madders is a possibility. Destiny, with the guys who have missed a little bit more, Madders has been a shorter term one, we will see. They may be on the bench and we look at our schedule when next week we have no game and can train and then the following week we have got a midweeker so what I really want is when we get to that midweeker that Destiny, Brennan, Wilson and Timo, at a stretch, call get some gametime so when we need to rotate from Ipswich into City that these guys have played significant minutes.
When you spoke about Van de Ven and the mechanics of his body, is that down to his previous hamstring injuries and those before Spurs?
Yes, it is just him understanding his body. Look, it is not my space but you look to the experts in that space and there are people looking at different ways, because he is an elite athlete but he is also at the extremities of speed and with those athletes you look at how they perform at the optimum level without putting their body at risk. You know, he is still a very young man in terms of footballing experience, and his career. What you want is Micky to play 10 years at the best possible level, this gives us the opportunity to address what we can while in the middle of the season to get him to the best possible level he can get to.
It's the first chance to ask you about your Europa League squad changes, can you let us know the thinking behind the three changes?
[Turns to his press officer] He was always going to. (Laughs) Yeah, pretty straight forward. Obviously with Radu going down we're short a central defender there and with Micky and Romero we've got to see when they come back in there, it made sense to bring Kevin and Djed into the squad. Obviously keen to bring Mathys in there as well. That's why we signed him and we could only make the three changes. We're obviously limited because we don't have club-trained [players] and that's going to be an issue for us for the next couple of years. So that limits the opportunities for us to tinker any more, but with the three changes I thought they were the logical ones.
It sounds like from what you're saying, Guglielmo Vicario is still the number one goalkeeper now he's back, and I was wondering how you see the relationship between him and Kinsky?
He's still the number one. I mean he got injured when we beat Man City and we were fifth in the table, so he wasn't dropped, he was injured, so he's back now and certainly we're happy to have him back. I've been really happy with with Toni.
Even at Villa, I mean, obviously you know he made the mistake, but his reaction to that was I thought outstanding for a 21-year-old in that environment to bounce back from a mistake like that. I mean we've thrown him in and given him some enormous tasks with very little sort of preparation and I just think he's going to be an outstanding goalkeeper.
Brandon as well has really grown through this period, so I know [Rob] Birchy's really happy now with the goalkeeping group in that we've got a really strong goalkeeping group now that can push each other. Really, really pleased to get Toni into the club, because we think he's going to be an outstanding goalkeeper and no better one to work alongside than than Vic.
The intensity has been dialled down for the last four games for obvious reasons, but I was wondering with the week off and players coming back, can you kind of go back towards what you believe in?
We never stop going towards what we believe in, it's just that we weren't able to do it. As I said after the game, you're talking about players who are fatigued, tired, mentally, physically, facing enormous challenges with 60 hour intervals. There hasn't been a change of approach.
What the week does give us, it does give us a chance to re-energise and hopefully allow us to better execute the kind of football we want to play.
That style of football, that's going to continue from now on?
That's always been the aim, it's never wavered from that. That's the kind of football we want to play. It's the kind of team we want to be, and the next two to three weeks allows us to get some players back, which will help with our training, help with our preparation, help with our ability to rotate, but also not having midweek games gives us a good chance to recover between games to reach those levels.
With Sonny, as captain, can you give us a bit of an insight about the sort of things he does off the pitch, behind the scenes, because I imagine his leadership's been quite important during this difficult period?
I think with Sonny, the main thing is he sets the standard in terms of the way he trains, the way he prepares himself. He sets the example with everything he does in and around the club and outside the club, and he tries to be a positive influence on everyone, keep everyone's mind focused in a positive way and it hasn't been easy because he's probably feeling, he has been feeling, the same as the other players, you know, fatigue. It's hard to put that to one side as an individual, because you're a leader and try to transfer that positiveness to others.
I think, him and some of the other guys have stepped up as well in this period. The fact that the players have stuck together through that whole process, at no stage did they splinter off or look to absolve any responsibility of themselves as individuals is a testament to the fact that there's a good bonding there that's been laid down by Sonny and and the other leaders. Hopefully now he gets a bit of help, like I said with guys like Vic and Madders who are on our leadership group, Romero's the other one, that could help him carry the load.
Did you feel though as captain, obviously having been here for so many years, that he's felt that sense of responsibility a bit more during the difficult period?
Yeah I'm sure he did but that's the nature of leadership. There's no point in taking on a leadership role if you don't want that responsibility. That's an essential, core part of leading people. During tough times you have to carry the extra load, otherwise you're better off not being in that position. It's not easy and requires a lot of discipline and internal fortitude to make sure you're constantly putting aside your own personal feelings for the better of the group.
Have you been speaking to people outside the club on Micky van de Ven?
Yeah, we always are but we've had a couple of people externally have a look at him and give him some more guidance and information and [speak] to our staff as well about some things he can do differently which will help him as much around, not the injury, but making sure his body is better equipped to handle the kind of athlete he is.
Has Micky been frustrated?
He was frustrated. But I had a good chat to him. I guess he just wanted to keep going but I said to him he's still got a 10-year career ahead of him and once he's well into his career and flying, this period will seem insignificant, an extra two or three weeks, for the benefit hopefully of him coming back and playing to the levels [required]. Look, he's a big part of this football club, not just now but for the future as well. It's in our interests, you've always got to protect your assets and he's a major asset to this football club. His career is much more important than one or two weeks of doing some extra work.
Were you worried at any point that either Micky or Cuti may need surgery?
No, never close. Neither of them have ever been discussed. I don't know why people think I'm hiding stuff, maybe I don't explain myself clearly. The injuries were the injuries, Cuti had a quad strain, Micky had a hamstring. When Wilson did his hamstring, he had surgery. There was no issue there. He was out for three months. Micky was never even close, never discussed, it was never... But when you re-injure something, there's invariably a more cautious approach. When it's someone like Micky, who's an extreme athlete, I think you need in my experience to take it a little bit further.
But surgery has never ever entered any discussion with other player. Now, if we pushed them back early and they weren't ready, that becomes a real issue and we tried to avoid that. But it was never surgery. The injury was the injury. With Micky it's a hamstring, Cuti's it's a quad. With Micky there's no issue around the injury any more, it's just about mechanics. With Cuti, it's just healing slower than we thought it would.
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