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[11] Paul Dailly of TV Fanatic gave the episode a 4 star rating out of 5 and wrote, "'So Long, Farewell' marked the end of Ted Lasso in its current form, and it featured closure for all of the characters we've grown to love throughout the show's three-season run. There were tears, laughs, and moments of satisfaction, but there were also moments ...
Lacy Baugher of Telltale TV gave the episode a 4 star rating out of 5 and wrote, "Ted Lasso Season 3 Episode 3, '4-5-1', is ostensibly named after the soccer formation with four defenders, five midfielders, and one striker. But it probably should be called 'Zava', as the mega-talented if somewhat divaesque new Italian addition officially joins ...
Manuel Betancourt of The A.V. Club gave the episode a "C+" and wrote, "In a way, this was a close-to-perfect season-one episode about Ted coaching the team in an unorthodox way that made its players embrace their own senses of community and humanity (also, it was all about soccer!), But it needlessly had to jockey for attention with Keeley and ...
The show follows Ted Lasso, an American college football coach who is hired to coach an English soccer team whose owner secretly hopes his inexperience will lead it to failure, but whose folksy, optimistic leadership proves unexpectedly successful. The first season of 10 episodes premiered on Apple TV+ on August 14, 2020.
[6] Paull Dailly of TV Fanatic gave the episode a 4 star rating out of 5 and wrote, "All things considered, the premiere delivered in many ways, and I'm cautiously optimistic about the season ahead." [7] Lacy Baugher of Telltale TV gave the episode a 3 star rating out of 5 and wrote, "In the end, the Season 3 premiere is a mixed bag. There's a ...
And with that, Ted Lasso is positioned to bring the season (both the football season and this season of television) to an end." [6] Paul Dailly of TV Fanatic gave the episode a perfect 5 star rating out of 5 and wrote, "It's no secret that I've struggled with the longer episodes this season, but 'Mom City' didn't waste a single minute. It was a ...
Manuel Betancourt of The A.V. Club gave the episode a "C+" and wrote, "We'd already seen episodes ballooning past the 40 minute mark last season; this one doesn't seem to want to break from that: '(I Don't Want To Go To) Chelsea' is a whopping 48 minutes. And listen, I'm not saying such length is a detriment to the quippy Lasso sensibility. But ...
After the second episode of this season also dropped hints around the series' future, it seems that only time will tell." [7] Christopher Orr of The New York Times wrote, "This episode of Ted Lasso was a bit disjointed — what Raymond Chandler would have called 'passagework' — following individual stories that were only loosely connected ...