Tottenham Hotspur boss Verzecoglou claimed that he deliberately had antaons’ fans of his own club by getting into her direction during the defeat of the Premier League against Chelsea on Thursday.
Thanks to Enzo Fernandez ‘header in the second half, when Poseteclou turned to his bank, Spurs was already 1-0. The decision to replace the fan favorite Lucas Bergvall by Pape Sarr in the 64th minute was not known with Jers and chants of “You know what you were doing from the end of the Stamford Bridge.
Within two minutes, Sarr let a long -term exertion that Robert Sanchez ‘wrist fell on the underside of the crossbar and over the line. Postecoglou celebrated by turning to the away from the away – what had stopped her singing on Tottenham’s second shot on the goal of the game – and attributed his ear.
A VAR evaluation showed that Sarr Moises Caicedo had fought before finding the back of the network. Tottenham’s compensation was quickly excluded, and postecoglous apparently provocative gesture was examined after Chelsea conveniently achieved a 1-0 victory.
“Lord, buddy, it is unbelievable how things are interpreted,” sighed Postecoglou when he was asked about his actions after the game. “We just had a hit, I just wanted to hear her cheering. Because we had gone through a difficult time, and I thought it was a crisp goal.
“I wanted them to be very excited. At that point I felt that we could win the game and win the game [side]. It doesn’t bother me. It is not the first time that you have boosted my substitutions or my decisions. That’s okay, you can do that.
“But we had just scored a goal, just achieved a balance, I had only hoped that we could get some excitement. If people want to read in somehow trying to do something about something, as I said, we had a hard time, but I only had the feeling that there was a bit of a swing shift there.
“If they really came behind the boys, I thought we had the momentum to end on them.”
Tottenham’s 16th defeat of the Premier League season makes her 14th place in the Premier League table. The outfit in North London is still involved in the Europa League, whereby an increasingly discouraging quarter-finals against Eintracht Frankfurt quickly approaches, but postecoglous position at the top seems to be precarious.
The midfielder of Spurs, James Maddison, did not question the dissent, who seeps out of traveling fans. “At the moment you have the right to be an angry bunch,” admitted the English international.
“I don’t really want to talk here and I am sure that the fans don’t want to listen to me. It can still be a very special season when we lift cutlery. We need them as much as they need us. So the message is to hold together.”