Guglielmo Vicario explained the differences between Thomas Frank's methods to Ange Postecoglou's as the goalkeeper admitted that Tottenham have a better "understanding" under the new boss. The Italian talked about the dramatic shift inside the dressing room, revealing how Frankâs pragmatic approach has ripped up Postecoglouâs ultra-attacking mantra and replaced it with discipline, structure, and grit.
Clean sheets are the new currency
Tuesday nightâs 1-0 triumph over Villarreal in the Champions League wasnât just a statement win. It was another defensive masterclass. That shutout made it four clean sheets in their first five matches under Frank. Compare that to the same stage under Postecoglou a year ago, when Spurs had just one clean sheet to their name. The difference couldnât be starker. Vicario insists the team now have a far deeper understanding of how to manage games from back to front.
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Talking to reporters, Vicario said: "What has changed is being able to recognise the different phases of the game, understanding when we need to press high with intensity and when we need to cover the pitch better. In general, thereâs more focus on defending the box, also because we have more clarity about the different movements without the ball."
But the keeper wasnât blind to the flaws, either. He admitted Spurs gave Villarreal too many opportunities on the break and warned they need to âtake away hopeâ from teams trying to hit them on the counter.
âAgainst Villarreal, we allowed a few too many transitions, and we need to take away a bit of hope from the opponents when they go on counterattack. Overall, it was an excellent defensive performance as a team, and we have to keep going this way," he added.
A club reborn by silverware
Vicario believes the biggest transformation has come from the Europa League triumph last season, a moment that broke Tottenhamâs infamous cycle of near-misses.Â
âWinning surely gives you a different dimension, probably even in the eyes of others and a bit of healthy respect. We used to have this thing, even within the club, of being the ones who always got there but never managed to win,â he said.
âBut now weâve done it. Thatâs freed us up a little. Weâve taken a weight off our shoulders, so we can now move forward, aware of our strengths. And also with some goals, which weâll keep to ourselves, but we absolutely want to achieve.â
AFPFlying start proves the point
Tottenhamâs early-season form suggests Frankâs blueprint is already paying off. Three wins from their opening four league matches have them planted firmly in the mix at the top end of the table. The next challenge comes on Saturday at the Amex, where Brighton will test Spursâ newfound defensive steel.