Wenger wants UEFA to look at a system that can result in six teams from the one league qualifying for the Champions League, with the obvious implication being that it looks like a European Super League in everything but name - but that was the whole point all along. The organisers want as many big teams as possible in the Champions League as it's the only way to keep the most powerful presidents and owners happy and, thus, stave off the threat of another breakaway attempt.
Lest anyone forget, this year's farcical Champions League expansion was all about generating more games because that means more money for the continent's richest clubs. The creation of two 'European Performance Spots' was also just a means of ensuring that England - and most likely Spain - will nearly always have at least five teams in the Champions League.
There's absolutely nothing to suggest, then, that UEFA is going to suddenly perform a U-turn after years of facilitating the growing divide between the haves and the have-nots in European football. The goal all along was to provide the elite with as many safety nets as possible and the Champions League spot allocated to the Europa League winners is one of them. In football's current economic climate, removing it would unfortunately kill the competition, as you can be sure that most top teams would immediately stop taking it so seriously.
At the end of the day, a Spurs-United final is a decent outcome for UEFA from a marketing perspective, given it should be an entertaining scrap between two well-known teams fighting to salvage their respective seasons. However, it should also be a cause for concern, as the all-English affair certainly won't have gone unnoticed by the likes of Real Madrid president Florentino Perez, who has long been envious of the Premier League's financial might and remains one of the driving forces behind the proposed Super League.
Consequently, there may be more turbulence ahead, because while a final between the 16th-and 17th-placed teams in the Premier League could well prove an amusing anomaly, it really will have upset a lot of people - and not because it's Spurs, as Postecoglou claims. Or even much-maligned Manchester United, a club that so many rival fans love to hate. It's more that their weakness represents an ominous demonstration of the strength of the Premier League.
A year after Gasperini said Atalanta had given hope to 'smaller' sides by giving them an example to follow, the United-Spurs showdown suggests that Europe's mid-tier teams are still struggling to compete with even England's worst-run clubs.