‘Ted Lasso’ review: Ted has lost the spring in his step — as has Season 3 of this Apple TV+ comedy

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Nina Metz | (TNS) Chicago Tribune

“Ted Lasso” began as a fish-out-of-water comedy, of the eternally upbeat Ted running headlong into the British skepticism of anyone invested in the Premier League soccer team — sorry, football club — known as AFC Richmond. With his can-do spirit winning over the doubters, Season 2 took a different tack, revealing a more complicated man behind the mustache and a deep well of sadness beneath his sunny facade. With Season 3, it’s too early to tell what the overall theme might be just yet; only four of the 12 episodes were provided to critics. But Ted has noticeably lost a spring in his step.

So has the series.

Some of that is due to the expanded episode length. The first season stuck pretty close to 30-minute episodes. That inched upward the following season. This time, episodes are in the 44-50 minute range — roughly the equivalent of two half-hour network comedies — and it makes you wonder why they didn’t just slice things up differently and make it a season of 24 half-hour episodes instead of a bloated 12. As it is, the pacing meanders and the show’s signature tonal assuredness feels off-balance.

I wonder if that matters, though, when we’re talking about a show filled with characters with whom you want to spend time. Creators Jason Sudeikis (who also stars as Ted), Bill Lawrence, Brendan Hunt (who plays Coach Beard) and Joe Kelly have laid enough groundwork to ensure that you’re invested in these people — from team owner Rebecca (Hannah Waddingham) to PR maven Keeley (Juno Temple) to the perfectly grumpy Roy Kent (Brett Goldstein) — even if the show itself has lost some of its comedic snap and focus.

From left, Brett Goldstein, Brendan Hunt and Jason Sudeikis in "Ted Lasso." (Colin Hutton/Apple TV+/TNS)
From left, Brett Goldstein, Brendan Hunt and Jason Sudeikis in “Ted Lasso.” (Colin Hutton/Apple TV+/TNS) 

There’s a melancholic cloud hanging over Ted this season. No longer burdened with hiding his panic attacks, he’s an aimless man simply going through the motions. “I guess I do sometimes wonder what the heck I’m still doing here,” he says. “I mean, I know why I came. It’s the stickin’ around I can’t quite figure out.” The show doesn’t seem to know either, at least in the season’s early going. But the writers of the series are too smart to plant seeds they have no intention of growing.

This year, the sports punditry have picked Richmond to finish last. Underdogs yet again! But a star player from Italy suddenly becomes available and he might just improve their chances — as well as upset the team’s delicate balance.

Keeley’s unshakable brightness remains intact. She has her own PR company now but is struggling to run it the way that she wants. She and Roy are in splitsville, a breakup from which they are both quietly reeling.

Rebecca looks fabulous as always, all stiletto heels and perfectly tailored pencil skirts, but has regressed back to obsessing over her ex Rupert (Anthony Head), a snob of the worst kind who owns rival team West Ham. Rupert has lured away Nate (Nick Mohammed), Richmond’s kit man-turned-coaching ace, and that’s one of the more meaningful wrinkles of the season.

Journalist Trent Crimm (James Lance) is writing a book about Richmond and as a result, he’s been invited into the fold. And the players are as endearing and delightfully antic as ever, even if Sam Obisanya (Toheeb Jimoh) doesn’t have much to do besides being the object of Rebecca’s subtle but longing stares.

Juno Temple, left, and Hannah Waddingham in "Ted Lasso." (Colin Hutton/Apple TV+/TNS)
Juno Temple, left, and Hannah Waddingham in “Ted Lasso.” (Colin Hutton/Apple TV+/TNS) 

Coach Beard remains his usual oddball self, although I prefer the old contrast of Ted’s chatty optimism and Beard’s still-waters-run-deep quiet reticence of the first season. The show has shifted away from that and maybe it’s because Hunt wanted a bit more to do, character-wise. But it’s made Beard less of an enigma and that also disrupts some of the show’s original comedic framework.

If the writing doesn’t quite pop, there’s the occasional line that does stand out. Ted’s description of rugby: “If American football and sumo wrestling gave birth to a baby with huge muscular thighs all caked in mud.” Or this pearl of wisdom courtesy of Rebecca: “Crying is like an orgasm for the soul.”

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