So, I did what I almost never do I watched the series again. Every episode contains lessons that leaders can use in probably any work environment to help them support and therefore get the most out of their team members, and I’ve already begun to draw on these lessons in my professional practice. So smart that, as I watched episodes the first time through, I found myself thinking repeatedly about how I wanted to be more like Ted Lasso in my role as a high school principal. It’s surprisingly funny and heart-warming, and it’s shockingly smart. Ted Lasso, on AppleTV, tells the story of an American football coach who goes to England to coach a soccer (also football, everywhere but the US) club. So, we got several scenes of Dr Sharon (Sarah Niles) in some anonymous hotel room watching the game, one of Rebecca's mum Deborah (Harriet Walter - a jump scare after her exquisite turn as Succession's Caroline just days prior) and far too many of the trio of Richmond fans with publican/occasional guardian angel Mae (Annette Badland).I have new favorite show. In its finale - and the last ten-minute montage in particular - the show became about checking off characters one by one to create the illusion of resolution. Nowhere is that more apparent than with Nate and Keeley, both of whom arguably went on the biggest journeys over the show's run but were cast to the wind in its final stages in favour of giving absolutely everyone a look in.ĭid we really need the mock horror of Rupert pushing over his new manager on the sideline? Or the prolonged DIY job to the BELIEVE! sign, done with the reverence of an archaeologist uncovering an ancient artefact and set to Chariots of Fire-type music? Throughout this final season, as the episodes became bloated and the storylines racked up apace, Ted Lasso spread itself far too thin. ![]() Whoever thought to bin that, when the scene in which the team train with their penises tied together via string wasn't left on the cutting room floor where it belonged, needs to take a long, hard look in the mirror. The pair acknowledge they both want to be with Keeley and decide to scrap it out in what we will have to assume is a Bridget Jones-style street brawl, since the entire thing, again, happens off-screen. Just as we never saw crucial scenes like Nate quitting his post as manager of West Ham, we never see his return to the fold or reintegration into the team after an expertly spun baddie arc.īut it's hard to get too worked up about this when genuine plot developments happen off-screen throughout the finale - which instead dedicates many, many minutes to a Ted Lasso x Sound of Music collaboration that leaves you wondering if we're actually still in Amsterdam and this is all part of Ted's not-really-high trip.Īnother key example comes when a spanner is thrown in the works of Roy Kent (Brett Goldstein) and Jamie Tartt's blossoming bromance (Phil Dunster), in the form of the show's very own shadow of her former self, Keeley Jones (Juno Temple). Much like the hastily repaired BELIEVE! sign, the naïve but brilliant iteration of Nate we all fell in love with in season one is taped back together for the last episode, with very little explanation for how he got there after the second season had carefully plotted his slow but steady retreat into bitterness. By the season's end, Nate has shed his villainous skin as if it never existed, seemingly because Rupert Mannion (Anthony Head) tried to lure him away from his one-dimensional girlfriend Jade (Edyta Budnik) with a pair of charmless supermodels. The episode kicked off with Nate Shelley (Nick Mohammed) back in the Richmond locker room sporting the greyhound kit, as if he had never left. Yet while Ted had a modicum of narrative resolution stateside, with the door open for a possible return in the future, several of the other characters in the locker room's orbit were denied a similar fate. ![]() The questionable way season three storylines were sliced and diced on screen became no more explainable in the last episode of the third season, when Ted Lasso (Jason Sudeikis) clearly saw the writing on the wall and packed it in at AFC Richmond. If the Ted Lasso finale is guilty of one thing, besides a criminally long run time, it's of getting in its own way.
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