Micky van de Ven supports Tottenham boss Ange Postecoglou's attacking style
Micky van de Ven is optimistic about Tottenham's future under manager Ange Postecoglou.
Micky van de Ven reckons Tottenham manager Ange Postecoglou can usher in an exciting period of attacking football at the club.
The Dutch defender was thrown into the deep end in Sunday's Premier League opener at Brentford after only three training sessions with his new team-mates, but impressed in the 2-2 draw.
It had been a whirlwind week for Spurs with growing speculation over record goal-scorer Harry Kane eventually resulting in his departure for Bayern Munich on Saturday.
A degree of optimism remains rife amongst supporters following a busy summer of transfer activity and with a new bold, front-foot approach set to be adopted by Postecoglou.
"It's an amazing club," Van de Ven reflected after his debut. "I had a good meeting with the trainer and it was a really good meeting.
"He's a really good trainer. I love the club, I love the players and I think there is so much potential under this trainer so we will see where this season heads.
"He has a good view on football, that's what I think. Attacking football is what I love, playing with a lot of space in the back doesn't matter for me.
"Offensive football is what I like and I think if we play a lot of offensive football and we train, we train, we train then I think we can do some beautiful things."
Spurs had chased Netherlands Under-21 captain Van de Ven all summer and eventually secured his services on August 8 for an initial £34.5million fee, which could rise to £43.1million in add-ons.
Despite featuring for Wolfsburg during pre-season, the 22-year-old had not completed 90 minutes all summer, but Postecoglou's decision to include him in the starting XI was vindicated.
Van de Ven admitted: "Everything is harder, it's going quicker and it's going up and down, up and down. There is no moment in the game where you feel you can rest a bit, you always have to be sharp and 100 per cent focused.
"It is my first game with the team, so of course at the beginning we have to watch a bit how everything is going and afterwards you feel more comfortable. The guys are talking positive to you so that is also helping.
"I trained three days with the team but they gave me some confidence and the trainer was talking to me and also gave me some confidence. I didn't stress at all that I can't do it.
"All the trainers were positive, all the players were positive saying 'do your job, do what you can do and we will help you' and I think it went well."
Comparisons to Jan Vertonghen, another left-footed centre-back who started out in Eredivisie, occurred before Van de Ven had even signed his contract at Tottenham.
The ex-Volendam defender revealed he used to study Vertonghen before the Belgian moved to Spurs, where he went on to make 315 appearances and become a hugely popular figure with the club's fanbase.
"I was always in the stadium when Jan Vertonghen was playing for Ajax so I always saw him play and always said he was a good left-footed, centre-back. I learned some from him as I watched videos of him," Van de Ven added.
"I watched a lot of times Spurs because a lot of players from Ajax also went to Spurs and also players from Holland.
"Always when you see a player go to Spurs it is an amazing step if you went from Ajax, AZ, PSV to Spurs.
"Of course with the history they didn't win a prize for a long time but you never know what is going to happen."