Tottenham Hotspur
·15 Oktober 2025
Andreas Georgson Q&A - coach answers fans' questions on Reddit

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Yahoo sportsTottenham Hotspur
·15 Oktober 2025
Andreas Georgson is part of Thomas Frank's coaching team, renowned for his expertise on set pieces, an ever growing feature of the Premier League this season.
We've scored two goals from corners in our seven matches so far and it was no surprise to see Pape Matar Sarr and his team-mates point to Andreas after Pape's header from Xavi Simons' corner opened the scoring in our 3-0 win at West Ham.
Earlier this week, our fans on Reddit had the chance to ask Andreas questions - here's how it played out...
Andreas: "Honestly, set pieces didn’t attract me! It was Thomas Frank who lured me into it... but the passion grew over time. So, actually, what attracted me in the beginning was working for Brentford, a very progressive club, and working together with Thomas."
Andreas: "That’s correct. When I got my first opportunity to work full-time in football it was as a support teacher and school coach. I was helping kids with challenges in English and Maths to get through school without having to sacrifice their football! It’s probably just a way of seeing how you need to connect with people before you can help them!"
Andreas: "I’d say around maybe 40 minutes with the full squad. But then a big part is trying to add a little bit here and there, so maybe another 60 minutes of individual work or unit work on the pitch as extra work. Then obviously there’s individual feedback and team meetings on top of that. A big part of the role is being effective with the minutes rather than wishing for more. It’s just using the minutes you have."
Andreas: "I’ve had to think so much more about throwing tactics and technique than I ever thought I would. I feel it’s still an area where I need to learn a lot more!"
Andreas: "This is my favourite of all-time... We had a back-post routine for Ethan Pinnock at Brentford when I did set-pieces for the first time in my life. It was just very successful and effective. So that will always stick in my head, like a first love, that will never go away."
Andreas: "I think a lot is not so much surprise special routines, actually just gradual improvement of a set of principles and routines."
Andreas: "Sure, that happens. It is quite rare that I actually just pick something and add it completely to our process, but there can definitely be small details."
Andreas: "It depends a bit on the skills of your players. I would say if you look back, I’ve mainly promoted in-swinging corners."
Andreas: "I think it is a set piece. We consider it that, so we need a strategy for it. But if you think we have 40 minutes per week, very little is dedicated to kick-offs. But there needs to be a strategy with some flexibility in it - so we have that."
Andreas: "I think it comes back to the time you have. If you’re going to make a special free-kick routine, it takes a bit of time to get everything synced and worked... then maybe you don’t get a free-kick from that position in 20 games! So you spend quite a lot of your 40 minutes a week on it to get it right, and then it doesn’t happen for a long, long while - maybe you even forget about it when it comes. So that’s why few coaches prioritise that time, whereas many would rather use that time for a corner, which you know will happen five or six times in a game."
Andreas: "I do look at other sports for inspiration. So far not so much from Rugby because I don’t understand the game well enough yet but now I will..."
Andreas: "I think there’s a sweet spot, because if you’re too close to the penalty box it’s hard to get up and down over the wall. When it’s more than 25 metres, it’s too hard to score. So it’s a sweet spot between 20 and 25 metres, quite well within the range of the posts, where I’d like them to shoot. Most of the others I’d like them to try something else."
Andreas: "From the sweet spot - 16 to 25 metres - the wall of four or five players makes total sense. Anything further out, I agree, then they might just kill the vision of the keeper and delay his response."
Andreas: "It definitely can be done. The details that you pick up and steal. At different points you see something and it might of course trigger an idea yourself."
Andreas: "As they get warmer and the relationship with me improves, they come with more and more input - which I really enjoy."
Andreas: "Yes! It’s very important for the timing of the receiver. It helps everyone get to their right place at the right time."
Andreas: "It’s a dream! He’s a very good leader overall - good values, spreads very positive energy, and has very clear roles and responsibilities. And on top of that he’s a very competent, world-class manager."
Andreas: "I’d probably say before working as a coach, you think it’s all about technique and tactics and selecting the right players. But then as you start working, the more you understand it’s about spirit, cohesion, and processes - quite slow processes that need to be improved over a long time!"
Andreas: "Please don’t train set-pieces! Let them play and let them enjoy the open spirit of the game."
Andreas: "I think in anything, especially in football because it’s such a random industry, it’s hard to plan a career. So I think it’s more about just improving the things you think you’ll need in your dream job, and then making sure you’re prepared when that dream job comes."
Andreas: "It’s the colleagues and the players. It’s a very good group of people willing to sacrifice enough of their own agenda for the better of the team. It’s just a nice environment to be in."
Andreas: "No, that’s a team effort at home."
Andreas: "You can ask anyone here - it’s breakfast. I light up like a child on Christmas Eve when I go into the breakfast buffet."
Andreas: "That’s very nice, thank you!"
Andreas: "I don’t think there’s a certain sport. It’s just a general way of seeing improvement and having a growth mindset - that’s been my biggest influence."
Andreas: "100% I’d add that you can take a maximum of maybe 15 seconds to restart the game. I do enjoy a long throw, but I don’t enjoy taking 45 seconds to do it! Like the eight-second rule for goalkeepers - I’d like a similar one for throw-ins and free-kicks, so teams speed up the game. It’s more enjoyable, more fun."