Ange Postecoglou’s hilarious description of the Tottenham vibe

Most clubs want to turn their ground into a “fortress”, but Ange Postecoglou joked that Tottenham is “becoming a nightclub”.

The mood is high at Tottenham as Spurs top the Premier League standings amid their unbeaten start to the season, with Crystal Palace next up on Saturday (AEDT).

Postecoglou has enjoyed a record-breaking start to life in England, with the Australian legend’s haul of 23 points from nine games the most of any Premier League manager in their opening nine matches.

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After their 2-0 win over Fulham, ‘Islands in the Stream’ by Dolly Parton and Kenny Rogers has been heard pumping inside the dressing rooms.

Asked about the post-match music and who Tottenham’s DJ is in the dressing room, Postecoglou smiled and said: “Ah mate, I’ve got no idea.

“And I stay out of the dressing room partly because of the music choices of the players.

“Most clubs want to turn their grounds into a fortress – ours is becoming a nightclub, mate.

“I’m all for it, whatever makes people happy that’s my thing.”

Postecoglou is loving his time at the Premier League leaders, but is bullish about what expectations should be despite the club’s lengthy trophy drought.

Spurs have not won silverware since 2008, although fans are dreaming of challenging for the title after winning 23 points from a possible 27 so far this season.

It has taken Tottenham to the top-flight summit and they could move five points clear of Manchester City and Arsenal with victory at Crystal Palace on Friday, ahead of the weekend fixtures.

“I didn’t come here to not be successful. This club has all the fundamentals to be successful. The expectations should be there,” he said.

“Part of the reason why there’s been this real desperation for a trophy is because they feel that’s the space they should be in. That is the expectation, that’s the reality, but what drives me isn’t raising or trying to dampen expectations.

“What drives me is trying to build something that will realise the ambitions that this club has at this particular moment. People’s perceptions don’t concern me too much. This is a big club and should be in a position to challenge for trophies every season in my opinion.

“At Celtic we were on top for a very long time but at the beginning when we weren’t on top, I don’t think people saw anything different in my demeanour. I don’t think they will (here).

“It is one thing I do. It’s not about staying kind of level-headed or getting carried away with either thing. It’s just that, my role in that context is to be the one thing that people can rely upon to be consistent.

“In that I have one objective all the time: how can we be better? When that is your objective, it doesn’t really matter where you are on the table or kind of what the outside noise may or may not be doing.

“It is about the players and the staff and everyone involved with the football club, looking at me. The one thing I do is I come in every day, I am buzzing about doing what I am doing. You know, that’s the kind of demeanour I have consistently.

“It’s just the way I am. I get so much satisfaction from what I do. I really enjoy what I do, on a daily basis. There isn’t a day I don’t get up and I’m not looking forward to the day ahead.

“There’s no other levels of satisfaction in me to get. That’s it. I’m buzzing to do what I do.

“Within that context I also understand that I have a real big responsibility to lead an organisation, players, staff, people to what I hope will be a successful place.

“There’s got to be some reliability there in what they see and what they feel with me so some of it is conscious but the other bits, I’m not skipping about the place but I’m really happy. I love what I do. Just the way I am. I’m very, very happy.”