As a battle of the Premier Leagueâs most idealistic managers, it registered as no-contest. Such was the dominance of Ange Postecoglouâs version of the glory game over Southamptonâs it led to Russell Martinâs misguided evangelism being discontinued. Saintsâ main contribution to any free-flowing football was letting Spurs play as they liked.
Two seasons ago, on Tottenhamâs previous Premier League visit to St Maryâs, a rancorous 3-3 draw had preceded Antonio Conteâs post-match rant for the ages, leaving Daniel Levy and the clubâs exec classâs ears burning, the Italianâs last act at Spurs. This time, Martin became the casualty, Saints fans making their feelings clear.
âI donât know, mate,â Martin replied to post-match questions on his job prospects. âYouâre speaking to the wrong person.â The response of the Southampton board was swift.
For Spurs, Sunday night by the south coast proved a highly enjoyable holiday from the eternal existentialism of being English footballâs most mercurial club. If Southampton were easy prey, particularly in the first half, then Tottenhamâs top stars rose to the occasion. There was even a role to play for a forgotten man in a first win since Saintsâ fellow Premier League whipping boys, Manchester City, were beaten 4-0 on 23 November.
âIt was outstanding,â said Postecoglou. âWe had 10 first-team players unavailable tonight. We had to come out quickly because we knew we were going to get tired. We are asking a lot of our players and the quality and energy showed was outstanding.â
The defensive selection had looked makeshift, with Archie Gray at centre-back and at right-back, Djed Spence making his first Premier League start since joining from Middlesbrough in August 2022. Could a discarded relic from the Antonio Conte era deliver an instant impact? Spence marching through the yawning gap in Saintsâ midfield and laying on James Maddison to score after 38 seconds provided an answer.
âHeâs been patient, and heâs a great lad,â said Maddison. âDjed is quite a laid back character anyway, so I donât think he needed too much of a pep talk.â
Martinâs teamâs reputation as a soft touch with poor levels of concentration preceded itself, and was augmented again, this time fatally. No Sunday songs of praise for Saints. The home boos and calls for Martin to depart rang out once Spurs scored their quick second, Son Heung-min slotting home after Maddisonâs ball was helped on by Jan Bednarek.
âI understand itâs not personal, so I donât know them and they donât know me,â said Martin of the fansâ reaction. âAs a manager? Yeah, of course it hurts me. It hurts the team. I also understand it.â
âWe want Martin outâ sounded as the third came. Sonâs cross found Dominic Solanke, and Bednarek could only divert the ball to Dejan Kulusevksi. If home fans had seen enough then so had their manager. A 14th-minute tactical substitution of Kamaldeen Sulemana for defender Nathan Wood led to a touchline standoff between the subbed player and his desperate manager. Having completed five from six passes, the Ghanaian was guilty only of being the closest player to Martin. âI could have taken anyone off,â said Martin.
Saints fans barrelled to the exit en masse as Pape Sarr scored the fourth in the 25th minute. Martin stood, isolated and aware that, like Steve Cooper last month, and Gary OâNeil earlier on Sunday, when a managerâs number is up, it is public opinion that delivers the final blow. He headed down the tunnel before the half-time whistle even came, thus missing Maddison scoring the fifth from a tight angle.
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Would he quit at half-time? Anything seemed possible before he made a reappearance to low-level boos. Spurs fans, meanwhile, sang the praises of their manager, whose team, when getting it right, give them much to enjoy.
âNothing has changed with me,â said Postecoglou. âI still have the same resolve and determination to make sure we become the football club and football team we want to be. Tonight was about the players, really.â
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With Tyler Dibling leading the charge, and those fans who remained finding their voice, there was a Saints improvement. Spurs did not go for the throat. The scorelineâs lack of jeopardy meant Lucas Bergvall could gain further experience in midfield on his first Premier League start. Grayâs all-round talents are being used at centre-back and he looked as composed as in midfield and at full-back.
Spence, subbed off, left the field to a standing ovation. Southamptonâs fans recovered their humour with sarcastic laughter when Mateus Fernandes scored an offside goal. Not that the gallows humour spared Martin, well aware his teamâs first-half performance had likely damned him. âI think we have no choice but to work and fight, and thatâs what Iâve done since Iâve been in this job,â he said. âAnd so Iâll continue to do until Iâm told otherwise.â Little more than an hour later, the inevitable news arrived.






