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Premier League fixtures 2026-27: Full schedule and dates

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The 2026-27 Premier League season will get underway on Friday, August 21, when champions Arsenal host Coventry City.

Arsenal begin their title defence at the Emirates against Frank Lampard’s newly-promoted side, while Manchester City start their new post-Pep Guardiola era at home to Bournemouth.

Coventry are back in the Premier League after 25 years away, and fellow promoted side Hull City are pitted against Manchester United. Ipswich Town, who also sealed a return to the top flight, face Sunderland.

In the highlight fixture of the opening weekend, Newcastle United and Liverpool meet at St James’ Park on Sunday, August 23.

Premier League 2026-27 opening weekend fixtures

All times BST

Friday, August 21

Saturday, August 22

Sunday, August 23

Monday, August 24

Premier League 2026-27 final day fixtures

All times BST

Sunday, May 30

Premier League fixtures by club

Click or tap on the team names below to see a full fixture list for your Premier League club.

Arsenal

Aston Villa

Bournemouth

Brentford

Brighton & Hove Albion

Chelsea

Coventry City

Crystal Palace

Everton

Fulham

Hull City

Ipswich Town

Leeds United

Liverpool

Manchester City

Manchester United

Newcastle United

Nottingham Forest

Tottenham Hotspur

Sunderland

Broadcast picks

Premier League champions Arsenal will raise the curtain on the 2026-27 season at the Emirates Stadium on August 21, when they host newly-promoted Coventry City, managed by former Chelsea and England midfielder Frank Lampard, on Friday night.

Championship play-off winners Hull City will host Manchester United in their first Premier League match since 2017, with the game kicking off at 12.30pm on Saturday, August 22. Brentford then host Tottenham Hotspur in an all-London contest at 5.30pm.

The first Sunday of the season will feature Manchester City’s first league match since Pep Guardiola’s departure, with Bournemouth visiting the Etihad Stadium at 2pm on August 23. Europa League champions Aston Villa begin their campaign at the same time with a trip to Brighton & Hove Albion. Andoni Iraola then begins his tenure as Liverpool manager with a trip to Eddie Howe’s Newcastle United at 4.30pm.

The opening weekend concludes with a west London derby on Monday night, as Chelsea travel to Fulham on August 24.

Key derby dates

North London derbies:

Tottenham Hotspur v Arsenal — Saturday, December 5

Arsenal v Tottenham Hotspur — Saturday, May 1

Manchester derbies:

Manchester United v Manchester City — Saturday, September 12

Manchester City v Manchester United — Saturday, March 20

Merseyside derbies:

Everton v Liverpool — Saturday, November 28

Liverpool v Everton — Saturday, January 30

Tyne-Wear derbies:

Newcastle United v Sunderland — Saturday, December 5

Sunderland v Newcastle United — Saturday, May 1

North-west derbies:

Liverpool v Manchester United — Saturday, November 21

Manchester United v Liverpool — Saturday, January 23

Key dates for the 2026-27 season

The summer transfer window officially opened on Monday, June 15 and closes on Tuesday, September 1 at 11pm (BST).

Clubs will have a further opportunity to do business during the winter transfer window, which will open on Friday, January 1 and close on Friday, February 1 at 11pm (GMT).

The season begins with the 2026 Community Shield between league champions Arsenal and FA Cup winners Manchester City on Sunday, August 16.

The 11 Premier League teams not participating in European competition will enter the Carabao Cup at the second round, while the nine teams who qualified for Europe will join in round three. These are set to take place in August.

Premier League teams will enter the FA Cup at the third round stage, which takes place across the weekend of January 9 to 10.

The 2026-27 Premier League season will conclude on Sunday, May 30, 2027.

Those in the Champions League will begin their European campaigns between September 8-10, following the league phase draw on August 27. The 2026-27 Champions League final takes place on June 5, 2027 at Atletico Madrid’s Estadio Metropolitano.

The Europa League ‘league phase’ begins on September 16, with the draw taking place on August 28. The final will be played at Deutsche Bank Park, formerly known as Waldstadion, the home of Eintracht Frankfurt in Germany on May 26, 2027.

The Conference League, meanwhile, commences its league phase on October 15. Brighton will have to go through a two-legged play-off on August 20 and 27 in order to make it into the hat for the draw on August 28. The final will take place at Besiktas Park on June 2.

Tottenham’s Premier League fixtures: Full 2026-27 schedule and dates

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Tottenham Hotspur will begin their Premier League campaign away to Brentford.

Last season saw the north London side escape relegation by only two points, and have three different head coaches at the helm.

Roberto De Zerbi replaced Igor Tudor in March, after Thomas Frank had left earlier in the season, and has already added defenders Marcos Senesi and Jan Paul van Hecke to his squad, with Pedro Porro having signed a new contract.

Their first test against a fellow Big Six side will come on away at Manchester United on the weekend of October 10-11. The first north London derby against rivals and Premier League champions Arsenal will take place on the first weekend of December at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, before the reverse fixture on the weekend of May 1-2.

They end the season away to Aston Villa.

Tottenham’s Premier League fixtures 2026-27

All times BST/GMT

A brutal ending to the season

Analysis by The Athletic’s Elias Burke

After starting and ending their season with a home fixture last season, it’s perhaps understandable that they should be on the road for the opening and climax in 2026-27.

They won’t have far to travel for their first game of the season, taking on Brentford in west London. Improving on last season’s trip to the Gtech Community Stadium shouldn’t be too hard, with Spurs and Brentford playing out a 0-0 draw that was surely a contender for the worst game played by any team, in any league, anywhere in the world last term.

Then it’s three home matches in their next four, which should, in theory, be a nice opportunity to put some points on the board, though the opposition is tricky: Newcastle (H), Nottingham Forest (A), Everton (H) and Aston Villa (H).

Tottenham have a dire record at Stamford Bridge, but Spurs fans will surely be getting out the red pens to circle their first fierce London derby on October 24-25. But they will have to wait until December 5 for the big one, the North London Derby, which will be played in front of a home crowd.

Spurs end 2026 with a two-game home stand against Bournemouth on Boxing Day, followed by Brighton on December 30. While a trip to the Etihad Stadium to face Manchester City is a cruel way to bring in 2027, a five-game run up to early February, where Spurs face Fulham, Leeds United, Crystal Palace, Sunderland and Ipswich Town, could be an opportunity to build momentum for the second half of the season.

And they might need it too, with a brutal run of fixtures to close. Spurs’ last five games of the season include trips to Arsenal and Aston Villa (on the final day) and home fixtures against Chelsea and Manchester United. An away match against Coventry City, which is sandwiched between those four matches, may be a welcome one, though Spurs only won two of their six games against promoted sides last season.

Key dates for the 2026-27 season

The summer transfer window officially opened on Monday, June 15 and closes on Tuesday, September 1 at 11pm (BST).

Clubs will have a further opportunity to do business during the winter transfer window, which will open on Friday, January 1 and close on Friday, February 1 at 11pm (GMT).

The season begins with the 2026 Community Shield between league champions Arsenal and FA Cup winners Manchester City on Sunday, August 16.

The 11 Premier League teams not participating in European competition will enter the Carabao Cup at the second round, while the nine teams who qualified for Europe will join in round three. These are set to take place in August.

Premier League teams will enter the FA Cup at the third round stage, which takes place across the weekend of January 9 to 10.

The 2026-27 Premier League season will conclude on Sunday, May 30, 2027.

Tottenham interested in Mateus Fernandes deal, remain keen on Sandro Tonali

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Tottenham Hotspur are interested in a move for West Ham United midfielder Mateus Fernandes, while they remain keen on signing Newcastle United’s Sandro Tonali.

Spurs head coach Roberto De Zerbi is pushing to sign Fernandes, 21, who West Ham have set an asking price of £80million ($106.7m).

Tottenham have also held talks with the camp of Newcastle’s Tonali but face competition from other clubs including Manchester City, who are serious contenders for the Italian’s signature.

Manchester United have held talks over a potential fee and wages for Fernandes and are focusing their efforts on the Portuguese with Nottingham Forest’s Elliot Anderson appearing too expensive. European champions Paris Saint-Germain and Real Madrid are also among Fernandes’ suitors.

West Ham need to raise £150m this summer following their relegation to the Championship, and Fernandes — who joined the club from Southampton for £38m in August 2025 — is one of their most saleable assets. Southampton negotiated a 15 per cent sell-on fee.

The Athletic reported in May that Fernandes does not have a release clause in his contract, which expires in 2030.

Manchester United have already bolstered their midfield by reaching an agreement to sign Ederson from Atalanta in a deal worth up to €45m. Fernandes remains on their list of targets, with United head coach Michael Carrick eager to find a midfield partner for Kobbie Mainoo.

Fernandes recorded five goals and five assists in 42 appearances in all competitions for West Ham in the 2025-26 campaign. He was a contender for the club’s player of the season award, which was won by defender Konstantinos Mavropanos.

Fernandes won his first international cap for Portugal in April, but was not named in Roberto Martinez’s squad for this summer’s World Cup.

Spurs, meanwhile, are looking to revamp their squad after consecutive 17th-place finishes. They have allowed midfielder Yves Bissouma to leave on a free transfer.

Karl Darlow ended the season as Leeds’ No 1. Now he has admirers at Manchester United

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Karl Darlow ended the season as Leeds’ No 1. Now he has admirers at Manchester United - The Athletic - The New York Times
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Manchester United are exploring the goalkeeper market and Karl Darlow has emerged as a genuine option, prompting the possibility of a player making that rare footballing journey from Leeds United to Old Trafford.

Darlow is one of the names being discussed in Manchester, with Sam Johnstone of relegated Wolverhampton Wanderers another, and while none of the conversations are advanced, the club are holding talks to establish costs of possible deals, in terms of fees and wages.

Darlow, 35, would be available as a free agent, with his Leeds contract expiring at the end of this month.

As summer goes on, Manchester United are expected to sign a new goalkeeper, given the exits that are set to happen from their squad.

Tottenham Hotspur may rival them for the Wales international, who would follow Eric Cantona, Rio Ferdinand and Alan Smith in swapping Elland Road for Old Trafford, and/or Johnstone, depending on how their goalkeeping situation develops — Antonin Kinsky is regarded highly at Spurs now, but Guglielmo Vicario’s future could be away from north London.

Why are Manchester United looking at Darlow?

Manchester United are considering the goalkeeper market to add an experienced No 2 to support first-choice Senne Lammens as they embark on a season with many more fixtures than last term.

Andre Onana’s future is elsewhere, with the club wishing to remove his salary, of around £160,000 per week, from the wage bill. Onana spent last season on loan at Turkey’s Trabzonspor but is scheduled to return to the mothership for pre-season training in July. An exit, possibly back to Turkey on another loan or permanently, is expected.

Altay Bayindir, who was the principal backup to Lammens for most of last season, is in line to leave too, most likely making a return to his native Turkey. Istanbul side Besiktas have been linked.

Radek Vitek, the 22-year-old who swept the board for Bristol City’s Player of the Year prizes while on loan to the Championship club last season, could be an excellent deputy but is expected to depart to somewhere he’ll get more regular first-team football, either on loan or permanently. Several clubs have expressed an interest in him.

Tom Heaton signed a new one-year contract this month and is seen as a vital member of the dressing room in terms of maintaining standards. But the former England international turned 40 in April and hasn’t played a senior game since February 2023.

Darlow, when in such circumstances as a backup, has shown he can push a No 1, dislodging summer 2025 signing Lucas Perri at Leeds in January and staying in the team until the end of the season. He has nearly 300 career appearances in club football, including 74 in the Premier League, and 15 Wales caps.

Is there a financial and registration benefit to signing him?

Darlow being out of contract this summer is appealing to the Old Trafford hierarchy, who are looking to save money. English born and having come through the Aston Villa and Nottingham Forest academies, he counts as a homegrown player. Clubs must have a minimum of eight such players in their 25-man Premier League squads, so signing Darlow to replace Bayindir would free up a place elsewhere.

The same is true of Johnstone. He has two years left on his contract at Molineux but Wolves might need to raise funds through sales after relegation from the Premier League. Johnstone is 33, with 380 career club appearances, including 85 in the Premier League, and four England caps. He came through Manchester United’s academy before being sold to West Bromwich Albion in 2018 after being sent out on loan nine times.

What would this mean for the club’s other goalkeepers?

Lammens has established himself as the clear No 1, but with Champions League action back on the schedule next season, there might be occasions where he needs rotating for domestic action, predominantly in the two cups. Having tried-and-tested Premier League goalkeepers would give head coach Michael Carrick flexibility over selections.

Vitek is highly regarded after starring in the second tier last season, where he played in 41 of the 46 league games and kept 12 clean sheets, but the likelihood is he will want first-team football again in the new campaign, and so will be subject to interest from several clubs.

Heaton would remain as a valued training partner and influence around the club’s Carrington base. Dermot Mee, a 23-year-old who played four games on loan at neighbours Altrincham in the fifth-tier National League during the 2022-23 season, could also be a presence in sessions.

Laurie Whitwell

Where would Darlow fit in at Spurs?

After three years with the club, Vicario’s Tottenham future is uncertain. The Italy international was first-choice for the majority of last season before hernia surgery in March. He missed five games and then had to watch from the bench as Kinsky produced key saves in Spurs’ final two games to help them avoid relegation. The latter’s stock has risen dramatically since his humiliating first-half substitution against Atletico Madrid under Igor Tudor in March, and he looks far more suited to current head coach Roberto De Zerbi’s possession-based style.

It is unlikely 29-year-old Vicario will be happy as the backup, which is why the pursuit of an experienced, older goalkeeper such as Darlow makes sense. Kinsky, 23, could be officially promoted to No 1 and be supported by the former Leeds man, and Vicario sold to raise funds which Spurs could reinvest elsewhere in the squad.

Do Tottenham need a player like Darlow?

Vicario’s relationship with the Spurs supporters was damaged last season due to a series of high-profile errors. He was ironically cheered by the home crowd following a mistake which led to Harry Wilson’s long-range goal in November’s damaging defeat to Fulham.

De Zerbi has referred to his countryman as his first-choice goalkeeper on multiple occasions but it would be a huge risk to play him over Kinsky at the start of next season. During his time with Brighton & Hove Albion, De Zerbi rotated between Bart Verbruggen and Jason Steele in the 2023-24 season, but nobody at Spurs wants a repeat of that bizarre scenario.

Darlow will be 36 in October and could be relied upon in the cup competitions for the next couple of years and, crucially, has the quality to step in and play Premier League football if required. It makes sense for Tottenham to sign him on a free and move on from Vicario after three mixed years.

Jay Harris

How has Darlow played? Would he be a good No 2 for an elite side?

He’s been really good. He began each of the last two seasons as the backup at Leeds, but ended each as manager Daniel Farke’s first-choice, having forced his way past Illan Meslier and Perri respectively.

Darlow made some fantastic saves last season which kept Leeds in several games as they successfully fought to stave off relegation. Notably, one of his better performances came at Old Trafford in April, where the visitors won 2-1.

Also currently No 1 for Wales, he looks like the ideal backup choice for a Champions League side. He’s experienced, homegrown, a great character for the dressing room, two weeks from being out of contract and dependable if needed.

Do Leeds want to keep him?

Yes. The goalkeeping picture at Elland Road is uncertain. Darlow was good for Leeds, but given he’s begun all three of his seasons at the club as a backup, there are clearly reservations about his overall ability to be their undisputed starter.

While Leeds do want to retain him, it’s unclear whether Farke will give Darlow any assurances about playing time, and there is every possibility Leeds want to bring in another goalkeeper.

Darlow may, understandably at 35, want something verging on guaranteed starts next season, which would put Manchester United out of the picture as a destination anyway.

How would this move go down?

Manchester United are the club Leeds fans hate more than any other. If a player leaves Elland Road, a supporter’s sole request, generally, is, ‘go anywhere but Old Trafford’.

The more explosive examples of this particular divide being crossed are Ferdinand, Cantona and Smith. Seeing Smith, as a Leeds native and homegrown academy starlet, in the red shirt smarted more than any, however.

If Darlow does end up in Manchester, it would not sit well with Leeds fans, but there would be nothing like the strength of feeling that greeted those previous examples. He has had a nomadic career (his next club will be his seventh in senior football since a 2011 debut for Forest), does not have especially deep roots in the Yorkshire city and, as a backup goalkeeper, he has not had the high-profile presence of the others to make this move.

Beren Cross

Newcastle losing Sandro Tonali to Man City makes sense. But Tottenham? Surely not

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Newcastle United need to be better sellers and everybody knows it. They need to be smarter, more strategic, less emotional and more dispassionate, doing what works for them when it works for them. Sandro Tonali leaving for Manchester City would tick most of those boxes — accompanied by a sharp pang of regret — but were he to join Tottenham Hotspur, it would tick none. Some moves come at too high a cost, no matter how much money they might generate, and this is one of them.

Anthony Gordon’s €80million (£69.3m; $93.2m) departure to Barcelona was a case study in efficiency. Negotiations were swift, the deal suited all parties and the England forward left radiating positivity about his time at St James’ Park, sentiments which were reciprocated. Newcastle were not heartbroken; it had taken a lot of patience and effort to get Gordon focused and re-energised after Liverpool attempted to sign him two years earlier, and there was no desire to go through all that again. It felt right.

In many ways, it was the antithesis of Alexander Isak’s drawn-out and discomforting transfer to Liverpool the previous summer, a partially self-inflicted mess which is instructing much of what Newcastle are doing now. They rebuffed Liverpool’s interest, Isak effectively went on strike, and Newcastle maintained that the Sweden international was not for sale until the moment they sold him, bringing in £125m, a British record fee, but with no time to spend it judiciously.

It was a desperately chastening transfer window. Newcastle had finally won a trophy and were back in the Champions League for the second time in three seasons, but their early attempts to pick off good players from fellow Premier League teams met with failure. And there were always going to be ramifications from the loss of Isak, whether the negative effect it had on Eddie Howe’s team or the potential precedent it set to his former team-mates.

Gordon left with the precision of a surgeon’s scalpel, his move completed early, with no chance of festering or disenchantment. It set a tone; Newcastle were open for business, albeit on their terms. Gordon got what he wanted without Isak’s bridge-burning, joining a club which is almost certain to be in the Champions League every season, which can pay big wages and which will compete for the game’s biggest prizes.

Newcastle know they are vulnerable to offers for Tonali. To put that a different way, while the Italian has not directly expressed a desire to leave, his representatives have been on manoeuvres for months, offering him to Arsenal in January and talking to Tottenham more recently. City’s interest is now firming up, all of which The Athletic has reported. There have been no talks between the clubs but if an offer comes, it will be considered.

Manchester City and Arsenal are Champions League teams that won silverware last season. Newcastle selling the 26-year-old to either of those clubs would hardly be ideal because they want to compete with them as equals rather than strengthen them, and while the likes of Brighton & Hove Albion, Brentford and Bournemouth have demonstrated it is possible to sell and improve, none of them are perennial challengers. It is a recognition of where, post-Isak, Newcastle are in the Premier League’s pecking order.

Big clubs routinely sell big players, but rarely jettison their best players at or just before their peak. Isak was a 20-goal-per-season forward and therefore almost priceless, while Gordon was Newcastle’s top scorer last season. On form — and he has not regularly shown it in 2026 — Tonali is a world-class footballer, a category which is increasingly in short supply on Tyneside. Him leaving for City or Arsenal might sting, but it would at least be understandable. They can make an almost tangible offer of success.

Spurs could not. After two 17th-placed seasons in the Premier League — and narrowly avoiding relegation — Tottenham are not in Europe (albeit they reached the last 16 of the Champions League). They are based in London, which can be a draw to players, their stadium is elite and they bring in more commercial revenue than Newcastle, but in a football sense, they have been shambolic, bouncing between managers and crises. They are the sole legacy ‘Big Six’ club Newcastle can feel they have overhauled. They are a direct rival.

None of this, by the way, is meant to disparage a great, historic club, but in the circumstances, Newcastle should not be offering them any succour.

Would their money not be as good as anybody else’s? No, not when it comes to optics and here there is an existential element about the club Newcastle now are and yearn to be. What is on the record is the desire expressed by David Hopkinson, their chief executive, for them “to be in the debate” about being “the top club in the world” by 2030 and similar expressions of ambition from Amanda Staveley, the former co-owner, and Yasir Al-Rumayyan, the club’s chairman.

Getting there by selling does not feel straightforward, particularly when the buying part will include targeting younger, less established players — in Premier League terms — like Ewen Jaouen, their new goalkeeper, and Osasuna’s Spain winger Victor Munoz. While Newcastle insist their model has not significantly changed, it is different to what they did a year ago and definitely different to not buying anybody, which has also been a theme.

Being clever and snapping up exciting talent before the Premier League’s big boys are prepared to do the same served Newcastle well in the early days post-takeover; it got them Bruno Guimaraes, Sven Botman, even Isak, amongst others, although the narrative then was that they were shooting for the top. There should be a level of excitement about having a forward-thinking sporting director in Ross Wilson working in tandem with Howe and Hopkinson, and the construction of a fresh, younger team.

Yet that policy, combined with selling, brings risks. Howe excels in making players better but there are no guarantees; Guimaraes was an instant hit, more or less, but it has taken Will Osula two years to look like a reliable Premier League striker. There is nothing wrong with effectively being Brighton on steroids or Bournemouth with a bigger chequebook, yet it does not quite marry with the image Newcastle have portrayed in public. As they look to progress, are they simply taking a breath or is it actually a step backwards?

Tonali to Manchester City (or Arsenal) would be one thing. Newcastle are not actively pushing for it to happen and there is a danger it entrenches the idea of talent-drain at a moment when Lewis Hall, the left-back, is also being linked with a move away, but they could make the case they are not at that level yet and a bit of pain now will get them closer to it. In any case, Isak shows they should not stand in the way of aspirational or disgruntled players.

Spurs would be another thing entirely. Like Tottenham, Newcastle had a draining season, but there is a difference between top-class players leaving clubs as a short-cut to the top and leaving full-stop, and the messaging it sends out. Perceptions are important, internally and externally, and Newcastle need to show they are a club where ambitions can still be fulfilled, if not quite yet at the highest possible level. Being smarter does actually mean sometimes saying no.

Manchester City pushing Tottenham for Sandro Tonali, still eyeing Elliot Anderson deal

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Manchester City are giving genuine consideration to signing Newcastle United midfielder Sandro Tonali as well as Elliot Anderson of Nottingham Forest.

The Athletic reported on Tuesday that Tottenham have held productive talks with Tonali’s camp and want to make the Italian their major signing this summer, but face serious competition from City, who have continued to track the player.

City’s interest in Tonali, 26, does not affect their plans to sign Anderson and they remain in talks with Nottingham Forest about a potential British record transfer.

Signing both midfielders, for what would likely be a combined cost of over £200million ($268m), comes with City seeking to build a side for Enzo Maresca, Pep Guardiola’s successor, that can challenge for next season’s Premier League title.

City have also seen Bernardo Silva depart for Real Madrid on a free transfer and are waiting to hear from fellow midfielder Rodri about whether he wants to stay at the club in the post-Guardiola era.

Rodri, who is in the last year of his contract, is at the World Cup with the Spain national team. The former Ballon d’Or winner has said he will wait until after the end of the tournament before announcing his decision.

Spurs head coach Roberto De Zerbi is an admirer of Tonali and Tottenham have made the strongest move this summer for a player whose representatives also spoke to Arsenal in February.

City, however, are very much in the reckoning and have not been deterred by the huge sums of money that would be involved.

Summer of change at City?

Analysis from Manchester City correspondent Sam Lee

City’s interest in Tonali sits alongside their interest in Anderson, 23, and suggests that big changes are afoot in the midfield at the Etihad Stadium.

City are in the market for reinforcements given Bernardo Silva’s exit, while Nico Gonzalez could also depart, and there is some uncertainty around Tijjani Reijnders.

But a serious push for Tonali, who would cost upwards of £80m, suggests that Rodri is on his way out, if not now then next summer. The 29-year-old Spaniard has been offered a new deal and City are desperate to keep him, but it does not currently appear that he will commit his future to the club.

That could mean a transfer this summer is best from a financial point of view, although Real Madrid, considered his most likely destination, appear to have no concrete interest in doing a deal.

City have been tracking Tonali for some time but would have a fight on their hands to sign him, given there is strong rival interest from others, including Tottenham, so there is a long way to go in this one.

But it does highlight that this will be a big summer of change at City.

Tottenham’s Luka Vuskovic dilemma: Brighton’s bid raises some big questions

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Tottenham Hotspur are stuck in a predicament.

Luka Vuskovic is one of the most exciting talents in world football. The centre-back scored six goals in 28 Bundesliga appearances on loan at Hamburg last season, including towering headers and clever backheel flicks. The 19-year-old’s stock will keep rising as he is set to star for Croatia at this summer’s World Cup, starting with their first group-stage game against England on Wednesday evening. Vuskovic will have no fear man-marking England’s captain Harry Kane because they have faced each other multiple times over the past year.

Vuskovic is yet to make his first official appearance for Spurs, three years after he agreed to join them from Hajduk Split. Transfer regulations meant he had to wait until after he turned 18 in February 2025 before he could complete the move. He scored in a pre-season friendly against Reading under then head coach Thomas Frank last summer, and travelled on tour to Hong Kong and South Korea but joined Hamburg in August.

Now his future with Spurs could be in doubt after The Athletic reported last week that Brighton & Hove Albion submitted a £30million bid for him. Vuskovic believes Brighton have shown themselves to be a good developing ground for young talent. In an ideal world, Spurs would dismiss this offer and do everything in their power to keep Vuskovic. However, the situation is not that simple.

Spurs’ squad is in dire need of investment after successive 17th-place finishes in the Premier League. They have already confirmed the signings of free agents Marcos Senesi and Andy Robertson, and have submitted two offers for Brighton centre-back Jan Paul van Hecke. Spurs are also in positive talks with the camp of Newcastle United midfielder Sandro Tonali and want to sign Manchester City winger Savinho.

Xavi Simons and Wilson Odobert are expected to miss the start of next season after they both suffered anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injuries earlier this year. Mohammed Kudus sustained a hamstring injury in January, which ruled him out for the rest of the campaign and the World Cup with Ghana. Dominic Solanke has struggled with ankle, knee and muscle injuries over the last 18 months. Richarlison was Tottenham’s top scorer in the league last season with 11 goals but only has a year left on his contract and there are question marks over whether he suits Roberto De Zerbi’s style of play. To put it bluntly, Spurs are low on numbers and quality in attack.

There is a misconception that Spurs do not spend heavily on transfer fees. Over the last seven seasons, they have spent £880.3m net on players, which is more than Liverpool (£649.7m) and Manchester City (£625.2m). Chelsea, Manchester United and Arsenal are the only English clubs who have spent more money in that period.

Spurs’ record transfer fee, £65m for Solanke, is significantly lower than their rivals and they traditionally held back on huge wages, but the brutal reality is that they have spent money badly and have to rectify their mistakes.

Earlier this week, they released Yves Bissouma four years after signing him from Brighton for £25m. The 29-year-old midfielder helped Spurs to win the Europa League in 2025 but did not come close to fulfilling his potential. Brennan Johnson was sold to Crystal Palace two and a half years after a £47.5m move from Nottingham Forest. Odobert has had a limited impact since he arrived from Burnley for £25m, while Mathys Tel has shown flashes of his promise since his loan from Bayern Munich was converted into a permanent €35m deal.

Those figures are relatively modest in isolation but grouped together underline Spurs’ inefficiency in the transfer market. All of this directly impacts Vuskovic because Spurs hold some of the highest transfer debt in football.

De Zerbi made it clear after the final day victory over Everton that this was going to be a summer of upheaval. “We have now to change too many players,” the Italian said. “We have 10, 11, 12 players good enough to stay… And then we have to complete the squad with the first level of players.”

Selling players and reinvesting the money will help Spurs give De Zerbi the squad he craves. There is a strong chance captain Cristian Romero will leave but the market for him will probably be smaller than Vuskovic due to his age and wage demands. Shipping out Romero could earn Spurs a lot of money, they just might have to wait until after his World Cup commitments with Argentina and that could impact their own plans.

Radu Dragusin missed the first half of last season with an ACL injury and when he returned only played 10 league games for a grand total of 515 minutes. It is unlikely the Romanian will command a higher fee than Vuskovic.

Spurs will be without European football next season and if Vuskovic is not going to be the first-choice right-sided centre-back, there is certainly an argument it would be more beneficial to temporarily send him away. Vuskovic has spent the last three seasons on loan, though, and might feel the time is right to settle.

The parallels with Arsenal’s William Saliba are obvious. Saliba went on loan to Saint-Etienne, Nice and Marseille before breaking into Arsenal’s starting XI under Mikel Arteta. The difference here is that Spurs’ financial situation might force them to let Vuskovic go.

The other awkward part of this dilemma is that Spurs have supported Vuskovic’s development, even if he has not played for them. They were consulted about his loan to Polish top-flight side Radomiak Radom in 2024 and encouraged him to join Westerlo the following season. Westerlo was seen as an ideal move because they play in the Belgian top flight but do not attract a lot of attention. Vuskovic could make mistakes and grow without intense pressure.

There was a huge emotional draw for Vuskovic to join Hamburg. His older brother Mario is contracted to them but is serving a doping ban until November, and it was also seen as a natural next step in a more competitive environment. Tottenham’s head of pathways and loans Andy Scoulding has remained in regular contact with Vuskovic throughout to keep a close eye on his progress. It would be a shame if he never plays for them — even if that blow would be softened by a healthy profit on the £12m they paid Hajduk Split.

It is understandable if Vuskovic has reservations about staying with Spurs. They have had four different head coaches since he initially agreed to join them. Brighton finished eighth and will be competing in the Europa Conference League next season while Spurs narrowly avoided relegation. Tel, Archie Gray and Lucas Bergvall’s stop-start development could be another concern.

If Vuskovic decides it is better for his career to leave Spurs, then they only have themselves to blame.

I made my Spurs debut before Harry Kane but I had no idea what ‘mentality’ meant. He did

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I made my Spurs debut before Harry Kane but I had no idea what ‘mentality’ meant. He did - The New York Times
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Cameron Lancaster played up front with Harry Kane for Tottenham’s academy from the age of 11 and made his Premier League debut before him. But his career in England was derailed by serious injuries. He retired earlier this year after spending a decade scoring goals in the U.S.

It was my first day at Tottenham Hotspur and this annoying kid was taking the p*** out of me.

He kept asking my name. I said, “Cameron Lancaster”. He said, “What?” I said, “Cameron Lancaster”. He said, “What?” I said, “Cameron Lancaster”. He said, “Are you a parrot?”

Another boy came over and said, “Shut up, George”.

Aged 11, I was a shy lad who had just come on trial at Spurs from my local Sunday league team and I didn’t want to be in the spotlight, so for someone to stick up for me at that moment meant a lot and I had instant respect for them.

That someone was Harry Kane.

I was in the same age group at Spurs as Harry and also played in the same position. Well, I say that but Harry played in midfield at times and there was even talk about him playing as a centre-back. Typically, though, it would be 4-4-2 with the two of us up top. We scored goals for fun.

Profile-wise, I was quicker, stronger and more powerful than Harry, who had issues with his size and weight when he was younger. He was underdeveloped physically and not the shining light that he was at an older age. Where I struggled, though, was with the mentality side, and that’s where Harry excelled.

I had other things outside of football that distracted me. I didn’t want to be in my digs in Chigwell the whole time. I wanted to go out with my friends, and I wanted to enjoy life. I didn’t necessarily get my enjoyment from the game and from training. That wasn’t it for me.

Alex Inglethorpe, who was my under-18 coach at Spurs, took me to the side one day and said, “Look, if you want to be a professional footballer, you have to eat, breathe, sleep, football. You have to be absolutely addicted to it.” I walked away thinking, “S***, I’m not going to be a professional footballer because I’m not like that.”

But Harry was like that. Harry would eat, breathe, sleep football, and he didn’t worry what anyone else thought.

I say that because with kids at that age, especially athletes, it can get a little bit toxic at times. For example, with Harry there was always the chatter of, “This busy guy, why’s he doing extra?”

I never felt any ill-will towards Harry for putting in that additional work, and that’s partly because of my first interaction when I arrived on trial. But it’s also because I always thought Harry was just being Harry — trying to be the best that he could be.

I remember when we had our body fat measured, and Harry, myself and another lad were on the higher side. I looked at Harry’s plate the following day and it was boiled chicken, tomatoes and cucumbers. The next thing you know he’s boxing in the gym to burn extra calories off.

Harry was obsessive — obsessed with his body composition, obsessed with his fitness, obsessed with his finishing, and that’s why he was so far ahead of everyone in our age group.

One day we had a shooting session with John McDermott, who is now technical director with the English FA, and everyone was leathering the hell out of the ball. John stopped the exercise and said, “Just whip it, like a firm pass, with precision.”

Harry would always be focusing on that kind of finish after training — striking it between the side of your foot and your laces. It’s an art, that.

I also remember Les Ferdinand, who was a coach at Spurs, saying, “Keep everything low and the keeper’s not gonna get there.” And if you look at how Harry finishes, rarely is anything above waist height.

Tim Sherwood and Chris Ramsey, two of the coaching staff, called me into their office during that time and said, “Here’s you, and here’s Harry”, and went through a list of categories.

“Finishing, who’s better?”

“About the same.”

“Speed, who’s faster?”

“Me.”

“Who’s stronger?”

“Me.”

“Who’s better at heading?”

“About the same.”

And then they talked about mentality and said, “Why is he up here and why are you down there?”

In truth, I had no idea what the word mentality meant back then. But I had talent, and I was still doing well enough to be in and around the first team at Spurs, and that led to me playing in the Premier League at the age of 19.

Tim Sherwood came up to me after one of the first-team strikers picked up an injury and said, “Someone might have just handed you your debut.” I said, “What are you talking about?” He said, “You’re gonna be on the bench later.”

I looked down at my boots and they were these crusty black Adidas F50s that I’d been wearing for the past year. I thought, “I can’t make my debut in these.” So I went to Sports Direct to buy a new pair.

The game was against Wigan Athletic at White Hart Lane. We were leading 3-1 with 15 minutes remaining when the manager Harry Redknapp gave me the signal to get ready. Emmanuel Adebayor came off, gave me a high five, and there was a massive cheer from the crowd when I ran on. For a split second — probably three seconds, actually — I thought, “Where the hell am I?!”

Looking back, it’s a great achievement to go from playing for the under-12s to representing the first team. Not many players get the chance to appear on that stage.

Harry congratulated me on making my debut when he returned from being on loan at Millwall. It didn’t cross my mind that I played for Spurs in the Premier League before him. I didn’t really have that competitive mindset, and there was never any animosity between the two of us, even though we were both strikers.

I remember playing reserve games together and in the warm-up it was a competition to see who could do the best knuckleball free-kick. But it was never a competition to be “better than you”.

In fact, the season before I made my debut for Spurs, Harry was on loan at Leyton Orient and I was at Dagenham & Redbridge, and we came up against each other in a League One game. Harry was starting and I was on the bench. As strange as this sounds, I wanted Harry to do well.

In the summer of 2012, after making my debut and signing a two-year contract, I felt a million dollars. But in a training game in pre-season I took a shot at Hugo Lloris and felt a pop in my groin. I had to walk off. Tim Sherwood was on the sidelines and said: “What are you doing? Get back on, this is your chance.” But that groin injury was a nightmare — it kept me out for a year.

At one stage Harry did a bit of rehabilitation with me, after breaking a metatarsal while on loan at Norwich City. He then spent the second half of the season on loan at Leicester City.

Not long after that I remember the two of us being on the exercise bikes one day and chatting about the future. Harry was asking about me, and I asked what he saw himself doing in the season ahead. He said he had been looking at the first team and thought he could get Clint Dempsey’s place. Dempsey was a United States international.

I was looking at Harry and thinking: “You’re deluded. You just had a failed loan spell in the Championship with Leicester and now you’re talking about taking Clint Dempsey’s place in the first-team squad?” But that was Harry’s mentality and the confidence that he had.

Harry went on to make nearly 20 first-team appearances for Spurs that season. The following season he finished as the second-highest goalscorer in the Premier League and played and scored for England too. Despite all the doubters — and there were plenty of them, even within Spurs — Harry had made it at the highest level.

His success hasn’t surprised me one bit. You see it throughout sport — Tom Brady wasn’t the quickest, wasn’t the most athletic, but he’s got that elite mentality, and Harry is on that same kind of level. He set his mind to do something and accomplished it. You can’t be jealous of that. You can only respect it. I feel proud to be associated with him and the fact that someone from our age group at Spurs has gone on to achieve so much.

As for my time at the club, that came to an end in 2014. After returning from the groin problem, I remember screaming in agony after getting clattered playing in an under-23 game away at Fulham. It was my anterior cruciate ligament.

After trials in the United States with Orlando and Chicago, and a brief spell back home with Stevenage Borough in League Two, I had an opportunity to go to Louisville City. They were playing in the United States League, effectively the third tier of football in the country, and wanted me to go on trial. I remember thinking, “I was playing in the Premier League two and a half years ago. What’s going on in my life?”

It was a bitter pill to swallow at the time, but the reality is that it was my last shot at trying to rebuild my career after injury. Thankfully, it worked. I retired from professional football a couple of months ago, after making 253 appearances and scoring 107 goals.

I can’t lie, there was a time during my playing days when I used to look at Harry and think, “That could have been me.” But, if I’m honest with myself, I can see why Harry has had the career that he’s had and why I’ve been on a different journey.

That said, I wouldn’t change what I’ve got now for the world. I’ve spent the best part of 11-12 years in the United States, I have a beautiful daughter and I’m happy and content.

It’s been a long time since I’ve seen or even spoken to Harry — probably going back to when we were on the exercise bikes next to one another at Spurs.

As the World Cup is taking place here, I thought about going along to watch him play for England — the only problem is that tickets cost an arm and a leg.

Still, I’m sure England will have a training facility somewhere nearby. Maybe I’ll just roll up there one day and say, “Alright, H. How’s it going?”

Tottenham agree £52million Jan Paul van Hecke transfer with Brighton

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Tottenham Hotspur have agreed a £52million deal with Brighton & Hove Albion to sign defender Jan Paul van Hecke.

Spurs defender Luka Vuskovic, for whom Brighton have had a £35m offer rejected, is not part of any move for the Netherlands international, which will include no add-ons or bonuses.

Personal terms are not expected to be an issue for the centre-back, who is close to Tottenham head coach Roberto De Zerbi having worked together at the south-coast club between 2022 and 2024.

Spurs had previously submitted an offer for Van Hecke which fell short of Brighton’s valuation, but an agreement between the clubs is now agreed.

Van Hecke’s contract expires in June 2027, and Brighton head coach Fabian Hurzeler said in April he expected to talk with the defender about his future.

The Athletic reported earlier this month that he had shown no interest in extending his terms, and along with goalkeeper Bart Verbruggen and midfielder Carlos Baleba, was among the main candidates to be sold this summer.

The centre-back first joined Brighton in 2020 from Dutch side NAC Breda and had loan spells at Heerenveen and Blackburn Rovers before beginning to establish himself in the Brighton first team in the 2022-23 season.

Van Hecke started 36 of Brighton’s 38 Premier League matches in the 2025-26 season as they qualified for the Conference League by finishing eighth. He is also in the Netherlands’ squad for the World Cup.

He has made 131 appearances for Brighton, with 106 of those coming in the Premier League.

A move would continue a busy start to the transfer window for Spurs, who have already signed centre-back Marcos Senesi and left-back Andy Robertson, following the expiration of their contracts at Bournemouth and Liverpool respectively.

A progressive defender and possible Romero replacement

Analysis by Seb Stafford-Bloor

Van Hecke is one of the better all-round defenders in the Premier League.

A tough, combative, right-footer who can also carry and pass the ball out of his own defensive area as well as anyone; Tottenham’s interest would indicate that they are searching for Romero’s replacement.

Given the season that Spurs have just endured, Van Hecke might be the prospect available to them in that position. During our recent Transfer Tiers series, during which The Athletic asked industry experts to rank players based on their likely destination — Champions League contender, Champions League qualifier and the rest — Van Hecke was right in the middle of Tier Two.

Quite rightly so; he has earned his reputation. He is at the World Cup with the Netherlands and started alongside Virgil van Dijk and Micky van de Ven (who often plays as a full-back for his country) in their opening game against Japan.

Given Van Hecke’s contract situation (due to expire in 2027), this summer was always going to bring significant interest — and from clubs currently operating above Tottenham’s station.

But here perhaps lies the value of De Zerbi, with whom Van Hecke worked highly successfully at Brighton and whose tactical imperatives so obviously suit the Dutch centre-half and his progressive style of play.

Why Newcastle value Sandro Tonali so highly – and what he offers Premier League suitors

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Why Newcastle value Sandro Tonali so highly – and what he offers Premier League suitors - The New York Times
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“I fell in love watching him play the game.”

Eddie Howe is not prone to hyperbole. Sandro Tonali had just played his first game in English football in August 2023 — an impressive goalscoring debut against Aston Villa — and his Newcastle United head coach did not attempt to hide the strength of his admiration for the Italy international midfielder.

During Newcastle’s six-month pursuit of Tonali, then of Milan, in the first half of that year, Howe repeatedly expressed that same sentiment in private.

And he is far from alone in being taken with him. That is the effect the 26-year-old can have on those who watch him closely over a sustained period.

As reported by The Athletic, as well as interest from Arsenal and Manchester City, Tottenham Hotspur are in positive talks with the player’s camp, with the transfer fee considered a bigger challenge for them than doing a deal with Tonali.

So why do Newcastle value him so highly? And what does he offer the Premier League clubs eyeing him?

At Brescia, where Tonali made his breakthrough and was part of a promotion-winning side, he was adored. At Milan, where his father, Giandomenico, is “one of the Curva”, he was cherished not only because he was one of their own, but due to the influential performances that helped deliver a Champions League semi-final appearance and a first Serie A title in 11 years.

On Tyneside, despite serving a 10-month suspension for betting offences and so missing most of his first season, Tonali swiftly struck up an enduring bond with supporters.

He is known as Newcastle’s “midfield maestro from Milano” and, following a positional change, was arguably the critical factor in the club qualifying for the Champions League in 2024-25 and in ending their 70-year domestic trophy drought by lifting the Carabao Cup — something Tonali had vowed to do as an attempt to make amends for the support he received during that lengthy ban.

Why he evokes such a strong emotional response is difficult to explain with words or visuals. What Tonali is, what he does and what he brings can only truly be appreciated by observing him in action over a prolonged period.

The Italian is a midfielder, but he is not an out-and-out defensive screener, nor is he a box-to-box type or a metronomic passer. Tonali is somewhere in between; he can do a bit of everything and, physically and aerobically, is ideally suited to the Premier League.

Newcastle insiders describe Tonali as boasting a distinctive profile as a midfielder and that uniqueness — alongside his quality — makes him almost impossible to replace like-for-like, especially in the markets the club can afford to go shopping in this summer.

While Howe would love to continue to build his team around the Tonali-Bruno Guimaraes axis, Newcastle have anticipated interest and the expectation is that the Italian would be open to exploring a move away (even if he has not personally communicated that to the St James’ hierarchy).

But with Tonali effectively contracted until 2030 — his deal runs to the end of the 2028-29 season, but the club can unilaterally extend it by another year — Newcastle will demand a sizeable fee, especially should Elliot Anderson, their former academy graduate, leave Nottingham Forest in this window for in excess of £120million, which would not be a shock.

Throw Tonali’s salary on top of whatever the transfer fee is likely to be and Newcastle believe there are only a handful of clubs in the world who can afford him, a situation which has all but ended any hopes he may have of returning to play in Serie A.

At his best, which he displayed throughout the second half of 2024-25, Tonali warrants such a lofty price tag due to his consistency and relentlessness — he puts the engine into engine room.

His athleticism and endurance — which Howe and his staff worked tirelessly to improve further during Tonali’s time out during his ban, increasing his speed, tweaking his running action and bolstering his tactical awareness — allied with his ability to sense (and snuff out) danger set him apart.

Tonali’s capacity for making great and often match-defining recovery runs, even in the final throes of games, is extraordinary. Some insiders at Newcastle refer to him as their “ultimate insurance policy” against counter-attacks, so proficient is he at thwarting them.

Remove those 10 months when Tonali was not allowed to play and his availability record is also exceptional. Only defender Malick Thiaw (4,643) played more minutes than his 4,009 across all competitions last season for Newcastle, and only the same player started a greater number of matches for the club (51 to 47).

In possession, Tonali is technically proficient, comfortable using both feet, strong at dead-ball delivery — even if he has not necessarily shown that yet at Newcastle — and tactically intelligent.

Tonali joined in 2023, the summer after Newcastle had qualified for the Champions League for the first time in 20 years. The Italian was a statement signing, prised away from one of European football’s giants for £55million by a nouveau-riche Premier League club with grand ambitions.

Andy Howe, a senior recruitment executive at Newcastle and Eddie’s nephew, had led a half-year courtship — one that had appeared forlorn, only for Milan’s economic requirements and the sales-pitch Newcastle presented to conspire to facilitate a deal. Eddie Howe praised Tonali but also shocked the midfielder by telling him where he could improve, with the head coach promising to turn him into one of Europe’s best midfielders.

Arguably, given any anticipated transfer fee and the calibre of club now chasing Tonali, he has helped to do just that.

Yet his three years on Tyneside have certainly not been straightforward.

Newcastle’s recruitment team believed Tonali could be a rare, dual-role midfielder; able to thrive in either a No 8 or a No 6 position. He was viewed as more of the former at first, and that is where he initially played for Newcastle — and, following that electrifying bow against Villa, he was fairly underwhelming during his first two months in England.

Then, in the October, Tonali was informed he was being investigated by prosecutors in Italy, accused of gambling on matches from the 2021-22 season through to 2023-24.

He admitted to betting and cooperated fully — his agent, Giuseppe Riso, claims his client suffered a “gambling illness” — and was handed an 18-month suspension by the Italian Football Federation, eight months of which were commuted. The following April, Tonali was given a two-month suspended ban by the English FA along with a warning about his future conduct, having gambled on football between August and October 2023.

As one senior Newcastle figure told The Athletic in 2024, “Sandro’s ban absolutely f**ked us.”

The Italian, though, is said to now be fully rehabilitated.

Newcastle stuck by Tonali during that suspension, offering him all the support he needed, something for which the player remains grateful. “They never judged me or made me feel burdened,” he said of Newcastle and their fans once he returned in August 2024.

Tonali did not initially thrive when he was back in the side. Deployed as a No 8, he struggled to influence matches and a midfield trio of him, Joelinton and Guimaraes did not blend smoothly.

It was only when Howe redeployed Tonali in the No 6 position, swapping roles with Guimaraes, that the head coach unearthed the Italian’s potential. Newcastle were transformed as a side, and Tonali was the main reason for that. Having won back possession, he would then send his colleagues forwards in attack; rarely was he the creator, but Tonali was almost always involved early on in moves.

Having inspired Newcastle to Carabao Cup final glory and Champions League qualification — he was adamant that, after lifting silverware in the March, the club had to kick on and return to Europe’s elite competition, rather than settle for having won a first major domestic trophy in 70 years — Tonali thrived throughout most of 2025.

Yet once he was asked about his future last November, stories began to emerge about prospective moves and his form suffered. Tonali was almost always available for the remainder of the season just gone, but he rarely defined matches in an off-the-ball capacity in the way he had done throughout the previous one.

There are still clear signs for improvement for a player who has yet to represent his country at a major tournament (due to Italy messing up qualification for the 2022 and 2026 World Cups and his suspension, which took in the European Championship in between).

Out of possession, Tonali has often excelled for Newcastle but, on the ball, he has yet to really fulfil his potential. He should score and assist far more than he does, with only 10 goals and another nine laid on across 110 appearances for the club. No Premier League player shot on more occasions (37) without scoring last season.

At Milan, Tonali often played in a double pivot in midfield, something he has rarely done at Newcastle, and perhaps he may prove even better suited to that type of formation, given he is neither an out-and-out No 6 nor an out-and-out No 8.

Howe may “love” Tonali, but whether Newcastle can prolong that love affair with clubs circling this summer remains to be seen.