XABI ALONSO’S PREMIER LEAGUE RETURN: WHY THE "CHOSEN ONE" IS MAKING LIVERPOOL WAIT
Xabi Alonso eyes a return to the Premier League but won't rush. Discover why Liverpool and Tottenham may have to wait until the summer.
Xabi Alonso wants a Premier League job, but clubs hoping to sign him need to be patient—especially with all the talk about him returning to Liverpool.
He’s out of work now. Real Madrid let him go last week after they lost the Spanish Super Cup final. Honestly, his sacking had been coming for a while. Things got tense between him and the players, so it wasn’t a huge shock.
Even though his time at Madrid barely lasted eight months, Alonso’s already linked with a bunch of English clubs, Liverpool included.
Right now, Arne Slot is feeling the heat at Liverpool again. Sure, his team’s unbeaten in 12 games, but they’ve drawn six of those, including their last four league matches. Fans aren’t thrilled with how the team looks, and talk about a change in the dugout keeps getting louder. Alonso being available just adds to the pressure on Slot, but he still has support from people inside the club, which is good, because Alonso doesn’t plan to jump straight back in.
The Times says Alonso wants a Premier League job, but he’s taking a break before coming back. He’ll look at offers from June onwards.
So, if Liverpool decides to move on from Slot before the season ends, they’d probably have to wait if they want Alonso. That’s just how it is. And it’s not just Liverpool in that boat—Tottenham’s in a similar spot.
Over at Spurs, Thomas Frank is under fire after that loss to West Ham, and fans aren’t happy. He’s staying on for their Champions League match against Dortmund, but his job’s up in the air. Alonso’s name has also been mentioned for the Spurs job, but again, the timing doesn’t really work for him if they act quickly.
Manchester United is another club sniffing around. They’ll make a permanent hire in the summer, with Michael Carrick holding the fort for now.
And don’t forget Manchester City. They’ve talked about Alonso as a possible replacement for Pep Guardiola, who’s rumoured to be thinking about leaving this summer.
So, Alonso’s in demand, but he’s not rushing. Anyone who wants him will need to wait their turn.
SCATHING VERDICT: ANGE POSTECOGLOU CLAIMS TOTTENHAM ARE "NOT A BIG CLUB" TODAY
Ange Postecoglou claims Tottenham "isn't a big club" in a scathing review of their transfer policy following Thomas Frank's sacking.
Ange Postecoglou didn’t mince words about why Tottenham keep falling short. He says the club’s refusal to really compete with the Premier League’s top spenders holds them back, simple as that.
Postecoglou got the boot last June, right after he delivered a Europa League trophy and ended a 17-year wait for silverware. Now his replacement, Thomas Frank, is out too. Tottenham sit 16th in the league, just five points clear of relegation, and they’ve got league leaders Arsenal up next. Not exactly a fun place to be.
After Frank’s sacking, Postecoglou went on The Overlap’s Stick to Football podcast and pretty much called out Tottenham’s whole approach. “If you look at what they spend and how they structure wages, they’re just not a big club,” he said. He saw it firsthand while trying to sign players; Tottenham just weren’t in the race for the big names.
In his first season, Postecoglou managed to get Tottenham up to fifth. But things went downhill. The next year, even with that Europa League win, they slipped to 17th. He’s convinced the club just doesn’t get what it takes to win, you have to take some risks, and they just won’t.
“I felt like the club was saying, ‘We’re one of the big boys,’ but honestly, they’re not,” he said.
Frank was Tottenham’s fifth full-time manager since Mauricio Pochettino left in 2019, even though Pochettino took them to a Champions League final. Fans are frustrated. Tottenham keep missing out on their transfer targets. Frank wanted Morgan Gibbs-White from Nottingham Forest last summer, but that didn’t happen. Arsenal snatched up Eberechi Eze instead.
Postecoglou, who later had a short, rocky stint at Forest himself, thinks Frank might not have realised what he was getting into. “There’s no guarantee with any manager. They’ve had some world-class people in that job and still no real success. Why is that?” he asked. “What’s the real objective here? Did Thomas even know what he was walking into? Who knows?
136-YEAR CURSE: BURNLEY AVOID MATCHING 1890 RECORD WITH A SENSATIONAL COMEBACK CRYSTAL PALACE 3-2 WIN
Burnley escaped a historic 136-year record! Read how Scott Parker’s men scored three in six minutes to stun Crystal Palace 3-2.
Burnley looked finished. Down 2-0 after just half an hour, with Jørgen Strand Larsen scoring his first goals for Crystal Palace, it pretty much felt like Scott Parker’s team were about to tie their old record: 17 top-flight games without a win, a streak that’s haunted them since 1890. For Burnley fans, the past three months have been brutal. Then, out of nowhere, everything flipped in six wild minutes right before halftime.
Hannibal Mejbri pulled one back. Jaidon Anthony levelled it. Then Jefferson Lerma, of all people, knocked in an own goal. Just like that, Burnley snatched only their second away win since promotion. It keeps their survival hopes alive, barely, but Parker knows they’ll need a few more miracles like this to actually stay up.
For Palace, this was a harsh wake-up call. Their big win over Brighton had just snapped a 12-game winless spell, and for a while, it looked like Oliver Glasner’s side were cruising to only their third home victory of the season, something that would’ve eased their relegation fears. But sloppy defending let Burnley right back in.
Burnley’s luck before kickoff didn’t exactly scream “comeback”. Parker had never won a league game in London as an away manager, and the team bus got stuck in traffic, pushing kick-off back by ten minutes. Palace, for their part, hadn’t lost at home to a promoted side since Sunderland thrashed them 4-0 back in 2017.
When Strand Larsen smashed in a gorgeous ball from Adam Wharton and then dived to head in Lerma’s cross after Kyle Walker messed up, it just seemed like Burnley were doomed.
But then Mejbri gave the visitors a lifeline, beating Dean Henderson with a sharp finish. Suddenly, Burnley were level. There was some debate about whether Lesley Ugochukwu handled the ball before setting up Anthony to score, but nobody could argue with the bottom corner finish – no chance for the keeper.
Then came the third: Bashir Humphreys’ header was stopped by Henderson, but Lerma could only turn the rebound into his own net. Palace trudged off at halftime to boos. Glasner sent them back out early, probably after some choice words in the dressing room.
Even with £35 million man Brennan Johnson on the pitch, Palace couldn’t break down Burnley’s defence. Daichi Kamada missed a decent chance, and Martin Dubravka’s save in stoppage time kept out Ismaïla Sarr. In the end, it was Burnley’s small but loud travelling support celebrating. Somehow, their team had pulled off a rare and badly needed win.