We can speak all day about believing in theory and working hard in training to perfect a certain brand of football. The hard truth is we're well beyond rational discussion in those terms. That '15 points in his last 23 matches' stat from earlier does all the talking possible for a manager in charge of a Europa League team for a second straight season.
The anxieties over how Postecoglou's preferred style of play would transfer to the English game took a while to marinate because of how off-guard they caught opponents when he first got to Tottenham. Conversely, once one team figured out how to play against them, everyone did. Spurs dropped more points from winning positions during the 2024-25 Premier League season than any other side, and that's not a coincidence.
'Ange-ball' can be compared to nuclear energy. When it works, it's a marvel of humanity and what we as a species can accomplish with our resources, but when it fails, you get Chernobyl.
There was a running belief before Postecoglou's Forest had even played a game that they had a team suitable for his setup. Ola Aina, Oleksandr Zinchenko and Neco Williams are model inverted full-backs. Murillo is a fantastic ball-playing defender. Elliot Anderson, Douglas Luiz and Ibrahim Sangare can control midfield battles. Morgan Gibbs-White, Omari Hutchinson and James McAtee share many playmaker qualities as James Maddison, Postecoglou's previous creator-in-chief. There are several tricky wingers in the squad, not least former Spurs target Callum Hudson-Odoi. If Chris Wood's goals dried up, then summer signings Arnaud Kalimuendo and Igor Jesus could get a look in. On paper, that's all fine. In the real world, it isn't. Postecoglou's tactics have been figured out in England. Everyone and their dog knows how to play against his teams (with the exception of Ruben Amorim, maybe) and Forest are finding out about this the hard way having seemingly dismissed all the warning signs beforehand.
Nobody feared Spurs by the time they won the Europa League and even after it, which is exactly why they pivoted to Frank instead. They wanted to be an adult team again, not one who rehearsed the same patterns over and over just to find themselves undone on a counter or set piece because Postecoglou thought he was above working to prevent such goals. He himself claimed near the start of 2024-25 he should be judged by his league performance above all else, and finding a way to tank Tottenham to 17th is as unprecedented a managerial gambit as we have seen. The injuries and the focus on the European run cannot be the main reasons behind a team of such stature and riches finishing one place away from relegation.
This is no slight on Postecoglou or what he stands for. He's brought joy to hundreds of thousands, perhaps even millions, of people all over the world. He's one of the most unique figures we have in the game. His ideals are what you want in a football manager. Clubs such as Ajax or Porto or others in that Celtic 'one-to-three team league' bracket would be lucky to have him, but he can no longer survive in a Premier League environment. Sooner or later, Forest and Marinakis will pull the trigger. There's every chance he's remembered in England more for his lows than his highs.