By SABC Sport
2nd April 2024
Spurs had hit the league summit in November, before a spate of injuries sparked an inconsistent winter period.
The north London club are now 11 points off leaders Liverpool and battling for Champions League qualification with Aston Villa.
Postecoglou has repeatedly insisted a top-four finish is not the priority this season. He is instead more focused on the development and improvement of his young squad.
Asked whether he expects Spurs to be challenging for the title next term, Postecoglou replied: "I hope so. Or why am I doing what I'm doing? That's why I came to the club.
"As somebody said to me last week, 'Just do your job Ange' and my job is to come here and try to bring success.
"And if you don't think you're going to be in the title race in 12 months' time, then I don't know why I'm here."
The former Celtic boss also doubled down on his Champions League qualification claims.
He once more pointed to the examples of Manchester United and Newcastle, who were third and fourth respectively last season, as teams that did not kick on after finishing in the top four.
"It'd probably make my life easier if I said, 'Let's make Champions League, that's great' because everyone thinks I've done a great job," Postecoglou said, speaking ahead of Tuesday night's game at West Ham.
"But from my perspective, I keep saying it, I look at the teams who made the Champions League this year from last year and that wasn't the catalyst for them kicking on.
"It's not their fault - it's more demanding. But I'm not going to let this club rest on where we finish this year. Where we finish should be a foundation for us being better next year."
Last weekend marked Spurs' first home match since the club announced planned ticketing changes which will result in senior concession season tickets no longer being available from the 2025-26 season.
A group called 'Save Our Seniors' was formed last month as a result, and staged a protest where fans turned their backs on the action during the 65th minute of Saturday's 2-1 win over Luton.
"I think my constant position on this is that the fans have a voice," Postecoglou said.
"And they should be able to use that voice in any manner they find appropriate, as long as it's not disruptive, as long as it's not to the detriment of the club in an overall way.
"At the beginning at (my time at) Celtic, there was fan protests there. They have a voice and we've seen in the past when fans feel strongly about something."