The big myth Lucas Bergvall can't buy into this summer
New Tottenham Hotspur manager Roberto De Zerbi is doing his darndest to make sure this isn't their destiny, but Spurs are in the bottom three of the Premier League right now and in serious danger of going down to the EFL Championship.
So as fans think about the future, what has to be in the back of their minds is the number of quality footballers who could leave this summer. Spurs may not be too burned up about underperformers like Micky van de Ven cashing in their chips to bigger clubs, and there are a few players Spurs have been looking to offload for a year now, such as forward Richarlison and center midfielder Yves Bissouma.
But the players Tottenham really, really don't want to lose this summer are the young stars of the future like center midfielders Archie Gray and Lucas Bergvall, who are earning major interest from elite clubs abroad like Real Madrid and Bayern Munich, as well as top clubs in England like London rivals Chelsea and Arsenal.
Lucas Bergvall is showing his flaws
There is this idea that these players are too good to go down to the Championship, and people may invoke that claim about Bergvall. But the young Swedish international cannot buy into his own hype or fall victi to the transfer rumblings that will surely try to inflate his value both to excite interested fan bases and potentially drive up the price for Tottenham (and Bergvall's reps).
But as we have seen this season and since his return from his latest injury - and injury proneness is an issue in and of itself, too - Lucas Bergvall is far from the finished product. He was so, so good for Tottenham Hotspur in the 2024/25 season when they won the Europa League title, but, well, they also won the title without him actually on the pitch due to injury.
And recently, Bergvall's performances have been lackluster. Roberto De Zerbi actually benched him against Brighton last weekend, and surprisingly Rodrigo Bentancur, Yves Bissouma, and even Conor Gallagher were all better than the Swedish sensation.
Now, that doesn't mean Bergvall is flopping by any means, but it is a reminder that he still has work to do before he can be a top Premier League midfielder. This idea that Bergvall is already too good for the Championship is a myth. One, the Championship isn't THAT bad, and, two, the reps against weaker sides could help Bergvall get more confidence and play within himself to translate that to the bigger teams in the Premier League in 2027/28.