The New York Times

Spurs are finally going all-in on a manager – but it comes with risk

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“I don’t think we are in a position to spend £100million on a player. That is not the case and I don’t think it will ever be the case for the club.”

So claimed former Tottenham Hotspur head coach Ange Postecoglou in October 2024, when pushed on whether Spurs might one day match Arsenal’s £105m outlay on Declan Rice.

Less than two years on, Spurs are about to prove Postecoglou wrong by signing their own £100m midfield general in Sandro Tonali, who is set to complete his move from Newcastle United on Friday.

Tonali will follow the arrival of Mateus Fernandes from West Ham United in an £85m deal to dispel any lingering doubts that Spurs are now an entirely different club to the one Postecoglou knew, far removed from a quarter of a century of financial caution and self-sufficiency under Daniel Levy.

In fairness to Postecoglou, what he probably meant was that Levy would never sanction that kind of spending on a single player, but the Lewis family appear to have upended the former executive chairman’s business model in favour of an ambitious, owner-backed approach since deposing him last September.

Fernandes and Tonali will both smash Tottenham’s previous transfer record — the £65m signing of Dominic Solanke in 2024 — and the club’s willingness to spend big proved too rich for even the market’s traditional heavy-hitters: Manchester United also pursued Fernandes, while Manchester City were interested in Tonali.

Spurs have made signings like Fernandes, 21, before (Michael Carrick, who also joined from relegated West Ham in 2004, was arguably the equivalent at the time) but Tonali is unlike any arrival in the club’s modern history: a world-class player in his prime — the Italian is 26 — who would expect to start in practically any team in the world.

This is a new era at Spurs, who are finally behaving like a ‘big six’, billionaire-backed club.

Levy deserves some credit for putting Spurs in a position to finally spend lavishly after building the stadium and years of balancing the books — including maintaining the Premier League’s lowest wages-to-turnover ratio — but Spurs’ decline since 2019 illustrated the diminishing returns of his strategy.

If his friend Simon Jordan, who paraphrased a message allegedly from the former Spurs chairman on Talksport earlier this month, is to be believed, Levy thinks Spurs had their “pants pulled down” over the £52m signing of Jan Paul van Hecke, who had a year remaining on his Brighton & Hove Albion contract — another telling insight into how dramatically things have changed.

It is natural for some supporters to share these concerns about the huge sums now being spent — Spurs’ record of big-money deals is dreadful and some, such as Tanguy Ndombele, have hamstrung the club for years — but most fans will feel they have earned this splurge after years of watching their rivals demonstrate more ambition in the market.

If there are genuine concerns or downsides to Spurs’ ambition, it comes in the sacrifices the club is also preparing to make this summer.

Brighton are set to send the Van Hecke money straight back to north London with the £50m signing of Spurs’ Luka Vuskovic, who is regarded as one of the best up-and-coming centre-halves in Europe.

The 19-year-old has not kicked a ball competitively for Tottenham and they have moved to insure the sale by including a 20 per cent sell-on clause as well as matching rights for any potential future transfer.

The deal is, on the face of it, a canny piece of business for a player who occasionally looked raw while on loan at Hamburg last season (and in Croatia’s 4-2 defeat to England in their World Cup opener) but it is also a gamble given Vuskovic’s obvious talent and potential.

Perhaps more worryingly for supporters is Lucas Bergvall’s determination to leave the club for a new challenge elsewhere. Bergvall, 20, has informed Spurs of his desire for a change, and will have no shortage of suitors across European football — including Nottingham Forest, who are seeking a replacement for Elliot Anderson after his £116m move to Manchester City.

If you had asked any Spurs fan midway through last season which players they would definitely keep at the club, it would have been a short list — but the chances are Bergvall would have been on it.

Supporters have invested a huge amount of emotional capital in the Sweden international, who has shown enough in two difficult seasons in England to suggest he is on course to fulfilling the massive potential that left Spurs vying with Barcelona for his signature in February 2024.

So too Archie Gray, who has reportedly been the subject of an enquiry from Newcastle this week. Spurs deny that Gray, also 20, is for sale but there is a growing sense that other clubs are eyeing their best prospects with optimism that they can be prised away from north London.

There are good reasons for Spurs apparent willingness to sell their crown jewels — books must be balanced, and the squad desperately needs a rebuild — but it is nonetheless a consequence of their new ambition and apparently willingness to hand control to a head coach like De Zerbi (Spurs insist their transfer business is a collaborative process, rather than led by the Italian).

De Zerbi has never stayed in a job for more than three seasons (Spurs is his ninth managerial post) and, understandably, wants proven players who can hit the ground running next season.

Much better for him to have a readymade Van Hecke than wait two to three years for Vuskovic to come of age. So too Bergvall, who is not yet at the level of Tonali or even Fernandes.

Should Bergvall follow Vuskovic out of the Spurs this summer — which remains a big ‘if’ — there really will be no way of knowing in the short term if Spurs have cannily sold two young players to transform a squad that has finished 17th in consecutive seasons or done the equivalent of Jose Mourinho’s Chelsea allowing Mohamed Salah and Kevin De Bruyne to depart.

Only time will tell if the risk of selling off the future to fund the present will pay off.

Clearly, however, Spurs are less likely to regret selling Vuskovic and possibly Bergvall if they remain ambitious in the market for the long term, and continue to make the kind of signings that Postecoglou and his predecessors believed were impossible.

How can USMNT win without Folarin Balogun? Look how Mauricio Pochettino replaced Harry Kane

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SAN JOSE, Calif. — The star striker is sidelined. The stakes are immense. And Mauricio Pochettino steps into a spotlight.

It sounds like 2026, like the challenge facing the United States World Cup team after Folarin Balogun’s red card Wednesday night in a 2-0 win over Bosnia-Herzegovina.

But it is not. It’s April 2019. And this, a seven-year-old scene that suddenly feels pertinent, is evidence that Pochettino, now the U.S. men’s national team coach, has been here before.

Pochettino, then at English club Tottenham Hotspur, was preparing for a Champions League quarterfinal decider, perhaps the biggest game he’d ever coached. And the week before, he’d lost his leading scorer, Harry Kane, to an ankle injury. “It’s very, very sad,” he’d said.

But when he walked into a news conference on the eve of this decisive second leg against Manchester City, he was calm, confident, even jovial.

“We have the belief,” he said, “and we will be strong.”

And sure enough, the following day, Tottenham stunned Man City. Kane’s backup, Fernando Llorente, scored the pivotal goal off the bench. A second forward, Son Heung-min, scored two as Spurs triumphed on an unforgettable night in Manchester.

“Of course, (it’s) better to play with all the players fit and available,” Pochettino said afterward. “(But) you know, football is about the squad, it’s about the collective effort. It’s a collective sport.”

A few weeks later, in the semifinals, that collective also stunned Ajax. Pochettino started Son and Lucas Moura, both natural wingers, as a makeshift front two. Moura scored a second-half hat trick to complete a three-goal comeback and send Tottenham, an oft-overshadowed club with a decade-long trophy drought, to its first Champions League final.

Pochettino leapt and ran euphorically onto the field. He eventually fell to his knees, overcome with emotion. And he proved the point he’ll surely try to make this week.

Yes, the USMNT will miss Balogun when it faces Belgium in the World Cup’s round of 16 on Monday. But it will adapt and can still rise to the occasion.

His U.S. players were already sending that message Wednesday night, because it’s one that Pochettino has been preaching for more than a year.

“We’re definitely a team, we’re more than just one player, we’re more than just 11 players,” defender Chris Richards said Wednesday night.

It’s the message Pochettino sent during the second-half hydration break, minutes after Balogun was shown the controversial red card. “We need to show we are a team, that we are united,” Pochettino said. “That was the moment to show to everyone, to show ourselves, that it’s not only empty words when we say we are a family.”

When asked who would replace Balogun in Monday’s starting lineup, Pochettino gave nothing away.

And in this sense, the 2019 precedent offers few, if any, hints. Circumstances, personnel, tactics and opponents are distinct. Back then, Pochettino had one set of options to replace Kane; now he has another set. He has Ricardo Pepi or Haji Wright as something resembling like-for-like replacements. He has Christian Pulisic and Weston McKennie, two attacking midfielders who’ve played up front for their clubs. Moura doesn’t really help us guess which one he will pick — although a setup with Pulisic and McKennie up top, and an extra midfielder beneath them, similar to the team’s alignment against Portugal in March, feels most analogous.

It’s the concept, however, that is most relevant. The Spurs example helps explain his mindset and approach — one that’s been at the heart of his USMNT rebuild.

He has preached to his players that individual names get dwarfed by the collective, that “culture eats strategy for breakfast,” as he told them back in October, relaying a quote first shared with him by Chick-Fil-A chairman Dan Cathy.

“This is one of his biggest things — the team culture, the team togetherness, is stronger than any individual,” U.S. midfielder Brenden Aaronson told The Athletic at the time. “If we’re a team, and we can play like a team, then we can beat anybody.”

That’s why Pochettino took offense some nine years ago when Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola referred to Tottenham as “the Harry Kane team.”

“It’s a sad comment,” Pochettino said at the time. “It was very disrespectful for many people.”

He’d later say that it “didn’t sit well with us because it seemed to diminish the work of the group,” which is part of why there was “enormous value” in Tottenham’s upset of City in the 2019 Champions League.

Seven years later, to be clear, no one is describing the USMNT as “the Folarin Balogun team.”

But similar questions are coming. Balogun has elevated the U.S. with his off-ball movement and goalscoring. None of his backups can stretch and threaten Belgium as he could.

Within the team, though, there is a confidence instilled over many months. It has become almost automatic. It was evident when Pulisic missed time during the World Cup group stage with a calf injury. It reappeared instantly on Wednesday night.

“I mean, of course he’s a great player, he’s our top scorer so far, we’re gonna miss him,” midfielder Malik Tillman said of Balogun. “But I think we have great players who can replace him, give the best they can, and hopefully score some goals for us.”

Richards added: “We’re a team of 26, not just one. Ultimately, we’re gonna miss him for the next game, but we know that if it’s Pepi, or Haji, or whoever (else), they’re gonna do their job just as well as he did.”

And even with Balogun suspended, without any mechanism to appeal, Pochettino reiterated his message to players in a postgame locker-room speech.

Sandro Tonali travelling to London for Tottenham medical, to sign six-year deal

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Sandro Tonali is set to undergo a medical with Tottenham Hotspur on Thursday ahead of signing a six-year contract to 2032.

The Italian is scheduled to arrive in London from Milan on Thursday afternoon before travelling to Tottenham to complete his club-record transfer from Newcastle United.

The Athletic reported on July 1 that Spurs had agreed a deal that could reach £100million ($133m) for the midfielder. The north London side will pay a £92.5m for Tonali with an additional £7.5m in potential add-ons based on multiple Champions League qualifications. Manchester City had also pushed to sign the 26-year-old.

Spurs have also agreed a deal to sign Mateus Fernandes from West Ham United for £85m – which would also break their transfer record if it is announced before Tonali.

Tottenham are set to add both players to a deep pool of midfielders that includes Conor Gallagher, Rodrigo Bentancur, Pape Matar Sarr, Archie Gray and Lucas Bergvall. However, Bergvall has informed the club of his desire to seek a new challenge elsewhere.

Tonali and Fernandes are set to join Spurs’ other summer additions of Andy Robertson, Marco Senesi, Jan Paul van Hecke, Martin Dubravka in a rapidly-improving squad under head coach Roberto De Zerbi.

Tonali recorded three goals and seven assists in all competitions last seasons for Newcastle, helping the side the round of 16 of the Champions League

The Italy international came through the academy at Italian side Brescia before joining AC Milan in 2020, initially on loan before the deal was made permanent the following year. He appeared 130 times for the side before signing for Newcastle for a fee in the region of £60.5m in July 2023, though he received an 10-month ban from football after being found guilty of breaching rules on gambling by the Italian Football Federation.

Tonali appeared 110 times for Newcastle in all competitions, scoring 10 goals and providing 10 assists.

Tottenham reach Sandro Tonali agreement with Newcastle in potential £100m deal

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Tottenham Hotspur have reached an agreement to sign Sandro Tonali from Newcastle United in a deal that could reach £100million ($133m).

The north London club stepped up their pursuit of the Italy international late last month by initiating club-to-club contact with Newcastle.

They have now struck a deal which, if completed, would be a new club-record transfer eclipsing the potential £85m they have already agreed to pay West Ham United for fellow midfielder Mateus Fernandes.

Tottenham will pay an initial £92.5m for Tonali, 26, with an additional £7.5m in proposed add-ons based on multiple Champions League qualifications.

Spurs have already enjoyed a busy summer with Andy Robertson and Marco Senesi arriving as free agents and Jan Paul van Hecke joining from Brighton & Hove Albion for £52m.

Tonali and Fernandes will join a deep Tottenham midfield that currently includes Conor Gallagher, Rodrigo Bentancur, Pape Matar Sarr, Archie Gray and Lucas Bergvall, though the Sweden international has informed the club of his desire to seek a new challenge elsewhere.

Tonali made 53 appearances for Newcastle in all competitions last season, scoring three times, as they finished 12th in the Premier League and reached the last-16 of the Champions League.

He moved to the club from Milan in July 2023 for a fee in the region of £60.5m, but received an immediate 10-month suspension in October of that year after being found guilty of breaching rules on gambling by the Italian Football Federation.

Tonali subsequently missed the remainder of the season and Italy’s 2024 European Championship campaign.

Since his return in August 2024, he has made 110 appearances for Newcastle, scoring 10 goals and proving 10 assists, forming a strong partnership with club captain Bruno Guimaraes in midfield.

Guimaraes was the subject of a verbal offer from Arsenal worth less than £60m earlier this week which was rejected.

Tonali is not featuring at this summer’s World Cup in the United States, Canada and Mexico after Italy failed to qualify.

Statement signing for Spurs

Analysis by Tottenham Hotspur correspondent Elias Burke

Tonali is among the very best central midfielders in the Premier League. Having finished 17th in successive seasons, Tottenham beating competitors, including Manchester City, to sign him at a club-record fee is another strong signal of intent that the Lewis family is serious about contending next season and beyond after agreeing another club-record deal to sign Fernandes yesterday.

Having shone for Newcastle last term in various roles in central midfield, Tonali appears a strong fit for Roberto De Zerbi as he looks to revamp Tottenham’s squad in his image. He is technically secure, an impressive athlete and an ambitious passer, which should help Tottenham’s protracted issues with central progression.

He also shares a strong personal connection with De Zerbi, having progressed through the Brescia academy, the town where the Spurs head coach was born and raised.

With four signings in defensive areas, Fernandes and Tonali provide steel and plenty of technical quality to their midfield. With attacking reinforcements still on the agenda, indications suggest that their business is far from done as the club looks to return to contending for Champions League qualification.

Optics bad, but this is Newcastle’s financial reality

Analysis by Newcastle United correspondent Chris Waugh

When it comes to the pure optics of Newcastle agreeing to sell Tonali to Spurs, having already sold Anthony Gordon to Barcelona in May and having lost Alexander Isak to Liverpool last summer, then they are really not good.

Spurs finished 17th in each of the past two seasons and, while Gordon and Isak leaving was frustrating, that was also understandable. Tonali opting to move to a rival, who finished lower in the table and are completely rebuilding, does not send out encouraging noises.

However, this is the financial reality Newcastle are operating within. Gordon had to be sold for Newcastle to try and comply with UEFA’s financial rules, having already accepted a fine for breaching them previously.

Tonali’s sale will allow Newcastle to reinvest, with a goalkeeper, at least one full-back, two midfielders and an attacker on the agenda for head coach Eddie Howe.

Losing Tonali and Gordon before a first-XI signing has arrived is not great. But Newcastle are confident this gives them the capacity to significantly strengthen the squad now.

Time will tell. They need incomings and quickly to turn the mood.

Brighton agree £50m Luka Vuskovic deal with Tottenham

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Brighton & Hove Albion have agreed a deal to sign Luka Vuskovic from Tottenham Hotspur in a deal worth up to £50million.

Tottenham will receive an initial fee of £46m, with add-ons potentially taking it to £50m. They will also retain a 20 per cent sell-on clause as well as matching rights for any potential future sale.

Vuksovic, 19, is currently at the World Cup with Croatia who play Portugal on Wednesday. The centre-back will undergo a medical after Croatia’s World Cup campaign is over.

The Athletic reported on June 19 that Brighton had made an improved offer for Vuskovic after previously making a £30million ($39.7m) bid.

Spurs and Brighton have already done business this summer, with fellow centre-back Jan Paul van Hecke swapping the south coast for north London in a £52m deal.

Van Hecke has joined a Spurs centre-back contingent which includes Micky van de Ven, Kevin Danso, Marco Senesi, Cristian Romero and Radu Dragusin. Spurs felt they could not offer Vuskovic the first-team minutes he would desire.

Vuskovic spent last season on loan at Bundesliga club Hamburg, where he made 30 appearances in all competitions and scored six goals. He has five years remaining on his Tottenham deal, which he signed after officially joining the club last summer. Vuskovic, who has not yet appeared for Spurs, agreed to join the north London club from Hajduk Split for £12m ($16m) in September 2023, though the move did become official until he turned 18.

Brighton, meanwhile, have already completed a deal for one centre-back, with Pascal Struijk joining from Leeds earlier this week.

Explaining Spurs’ sale

Analysis from football writer Seb Stafford-Bloor

It’s natural to ask why. Tottenham pulled off a coup in signing one of the great centre-back prospects of the coming generation, only to see him leave within 18 months, before he has even played a game for them.

But there is some sense here. It’s clear from Spurs’ summer transfer activity so far, which has included two incoming centre-backs in Jan Paul van Hecke and Marcos Senesi, that playing time would be scarce for Vuskovic. And with the player keen on remaining a starter — as he was in Hamburg — and not eager for a further loan, a move to a club of Brighton’s standing where there is a defensive vacancy is far from illogical.

Having agreed to sign Mateus Fernandes from West Ham for roughly £85m and with further additions planned, this is also a valuable sale for Spurs.

But there are some questions. Vuskovic has so far proven most comfortable in a back-three, whereas Fabian Hurzeler’s Brighton almost exclusively played with a back-four last season. How will that work? Similarly, Vuskovic’s lack of acceleration was noted in the Bundesliga and while he has worked on that flaw and is still very young, the speed of the Premier League will demand a further adjustment.

But what a prospect. He might be among the most physical dominant teenage defenders the modern game has seen and will not struggle at all with that aspect of English football. It’s also not difficult to imagine him heading towards the very top of the game in the next few years, for considerably more money than Brighton are paying now.

Tottenham’s Mateus Fernandes coup is a big-club move. At last, they are serious

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It is time, at last, for Tottenham to be serious.

The club will have broken their transfer record if they go on to complete the signing of Mateus Fernandes from West Ham United. The Portuguese midfielder has a progressive profile that Spurs have been lacking for several seasons and so Fernandes’ arrival, for a fee of £85million ($112.7m), would hopefully cure a range of technical problems and make Roberto De Zerbi’s side more potent, more dangerous and — ultimately — more equipped to compete in the Premier League.

But the abstract worth of this moment is more valuable.

The club’s fans have been here before, refreshing social media and begging for updates about a transfer saga that, deep down, they knew would swing in someone else’s direction. Think of Sadio Mane before he joined Liverpool. Eden Hazard before he left Lille and moved to Chelsea. Or, more recently, Eberechi Eze and Antoine Semenyo last summer. They eventually became Arsenal and Manchester City players.

Those situations were not all the same. But if there is a commonality, then it was in knowing — or at least suspecting — that during the hours that mattered most, when it was time pay up and mean business, Spurs would come up short.

They would always have a good reason for doing so. It could be rationalised as deference to the wage structure or another club’s financial advantage, but the result would be the same: no player, no improvement, no steps forward.

Well, not quite no player. One of Tottenham’s worst tendencies over the past few decades was to identify a player, be outmuscled in their attempt to sign him, and then settle for someone cheaper and worse. Less aiming for the moon and landing in the stars, more wanting Mateo Musacchio and instead signing Federico Fazio.

Or nearly signing Joao Moutinho, but actually buying Lewis Holtby six months later.

It was always fine, OK, better than nothing — acceptable because others had it much, much worse.

Deep down, though, those moments were accompanied by the knowledge that it was a corner cut and that, because modern football teams are so good at finding and exploiting each other’s weaknesses, it would come at a cost within one of those games that decides a season.

A botched clearance. A missed header. A pass not seen or a chance not taken.

The point is not to denigrate the players from Tottenham’s past, but to express frustration with the habit with which they are associated — of wanting to be seen as a big club, but without having to actually behave and spend like one. But this is a big-club move. At least in terms of being a deal proportionate to the grandeur of the stadium Tottenham call home and the prices they charge for admission. Those sums matter and on this occasion they add up.

And it’s still June. Spurs have long had the reputation of dalliers. They have always wanted the best deal and if that has come at the cost of a few weeks or even a month, then they were willing to accept that inconvenience. If it meant losing the player altogether then, at times, they would suffer that too.

There’s merit to such prudence and to sensible moves within an industry that does not always behave logically. But that mindset needs to incorporate the realities of Premier League football. It starts in August, not after the first international break in September. New signings always, always benefit from spending pre-season with their new team-mates. And, most importantly, the game is played on the pitch, where the good teams are those that take what they want, when they want it.

Sometimes the price is just the price. It’s not always possible to get the player and to win the deal. Spurs appear to understand that now.

This summer, they have already spent over £50m on Jan Paul van Hecke, who had one year left on his Brighton contract. They have probably overspent. But what is that perception of value actually worth? Is it more precious than an excellent centre-back?

No signing is ever a guaranteed success and Fernandes, like Van Hecke and anyone else moving this summer, will be subject to all sorts of variables that nobody can foresee.

But it is the trying that matters most here — the intent. Supporters are often accused of just wanting success. It’s not true. What they really want is the opportunity to feel as if they are on a journey towards something. That’s why people keep going back, buying tickets or getting up at stupid times in the morning to watch games. All they require in return is evidence that the club want that better tomorrow in the same way.

Tottenham have not always done that and they are not necessarily doing that now. Last season was very nearly an historic catastrophe and the arrival of a single midfielder does not guarantee a long-term change of thinking. But this is different enough to be welcome, and it’s a new way to feel at the end of a story which, with Manchester United lurking, seemed horribly familiar.

Tottenham win race for Mateus Fernandes in £85m deal

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Tottenham Hotspur have won the race for West Ham United for midfielder Mateus Fernandes.

Spurs have made the highest offer to West Ham — believed to be worth a £85million (€98m, $112m) guaranteed fee, according to multiple sources briefed on the deal — and the 21-year-old has decided to join them.

The Portugal international has attracted interest from multiple clubs, including Manchester United, but is now set to move to north London after West Ham stood firm on their valuation.

For United, the transfer fee and the player’s salary went higher than they were willing to pay, and they will now shift their focus to other targets after seeing success from remaining patient in the window last summer.

Fernandes was one of West Ham’s standout performers during a difficult 2025-26 campaign, making 36 league appearances, scoring three goals and providing four assists. His West Ham contract has another four years to run, having joined from Southampton for around £38m in August 2025.

If completed, Fernandes will become Spurs’ fourth signing of the summer, with Andy Robertson and Marco Senesi arriving as free agents and Jan Paul van Hecke joining from Brighton & Hove Albion for £52m.

He will join a deep Tottenham midfield that includes Conor Gallagher, Rodrigo Bentancur, Pape Matar Sarr, Archie Gray and Lucas Bergvall, though the Sweden international has informed the club of his desire to seek a new challenge elsewhere. Yves Bissouma will officially leave the club when is contract expires at the end of this month, while Joao Palhinha’s loan spell has concluded and a permanent deal has not yet been agreed.

Fernandes made his senior debut against the United States in April 2026, although he was subsequently left out of Roberto Martinez’s squad for the World Cup.

A move to Spurs will see Fernandes join his third English club in the last two years. He made 36 appearances for Southampton, scoring twice and providing four assists, after arriving from Sporting CP in the summer of 2024. Southampton were relegated at the end of that season, the same fate West Ham suffered a year later.

Fernandes move represents a new Spurs

Analysis by Tottenham correspondent Jay Harris

Spurs have made a few eye-catching moves this summer but signing Fernandes would truly signal they have entered a new era.

Tottenham’s current club-record signing is the £65million they paid Bournemouth for striker Dominic Solanke in August 2024. Throwing their weight around to sign Fernandes for £85m ahead of their rivals would never have happened during Daniel Levy’s 24-year spell as executive chairman. Spurs are showing a ruthlessness and efficiency in the transfer market which was rarely seen under Levy who preferred to wait until the end of the window to complete deals and was reluctant to overspend on fees and wages.

Spurs have retooled their defence over the last few weeks with the signings of Van Hecke, Senesi and Robertson. Now, their attention has turned to central midfield, which has caused them problems for several years. Conor Gallagher’s arrival in January provided them with much-needed experience and the capture of Fernandes would inject extra quality.

Spurs had a lot of creativity issues last season, partially with James Maddison and Dejan Kulusevski suffering serious knee injuries and missing most and the whole campaign respectively. Fernandes created 37 chances in the Premier League during 2025-26, which was more than any other Spurs player apart from full-back Pedro Porro (53). The 21-year-old has demonstrated over the last two seasons with Southampton and West Ham respectively that he is capable of influencing games at this level, and he should keep developing.

Apart from winning the Europa League in 2025, the last two seasons have been miserable for Spurs. Their bullish and ambitious activity in the transfer market so far suggests they are heading in a positive direction under De Zerbi.

Leeds agree £20m deal to sell Pascal Struijk to Brighton

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Leeds United have verbally agreed a deal worth £20million ($26.4m) with Brighton & Hove Albion for the sale of Pascal Struijk.

The terms of the transfer were agreed on Saturday, with Brighton set to send the offer formally to Leeds.

Multiple sources with knowledge of the deal, who spoke anonymously as they were not authorised to publicly, have confirmed the fee agreed is £20m. Struijk’s contract at Elland Road was due to expire in June 2027, which meant Leeds risked losing the 26-year-old for nothing in 12 months if he was neither sold nor tied down to new terms this summer.

Struijk departs after eight and a half years in West Yorkshire, during which time he has made 196 appearances for Leeds. The Ajax academy product played a part in each of the club’s Championship titles of 2019-20 and 2024-25.

Brighton, meanwhile, had been seeking defensive reinforcements after selling Jan Paul van Hecke to Tottenham Hotspur for £52m earlier this month. Fabian Hurzeler’s side have also made multiple bids for Spurs centre-back Luka Vuskovic, who is at the World Cup with Croatia.

What now for Leeds?

Daniel Farke’s side will now try to fill the void left in their squad by Struijk’s departure. The Dutchman was United’s only natural, senior, left-footed centre-back and they will now need to recruit someone in that mould.

United were very keen to retain Struijk. They pitched him a new contract, which would have kept him at the club through the peak years of his career, but sources close to the player made it clear he was ready for a fresh challenge.

Illan Meslier is the only other departure Leeds have confirmed this summer, while, earlier this week, The Athletic reported Harry Wilson has agreed the terms on a contract with the club, which starts on July 1.

Tottenham reach total agreement with Antonin Kinsky over improved contract

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Tottenham Hotspur have reached a total agreement with goalkeeper Antonin Kinsky over a new and improved contract.

The new deal will tie the Czech to Spurs for the next five years, with the option of a further 12 months. Kinsky’s existing contract, which he signed when he joined the club from Slavia Prague in January 2025, still had five years to run but his new deal recognises his importance to the club and new status as number one goalkeeper.

Kinsky, 23, was one of the integral players in Tottenham’s Premier League survival push last season, starting all seven games under Roberto De Zerbi and helping to keep Spurs in the top flight.

Spurs have signed free agent Martin Dubravka this summer as a new experienced understudy, with the future of long-standing number one Guglielmo Vicario in doubt.

After joining Spurs, Kinsky was initially the back-up to Vicario, playing sporadically in the 2024-25 season when the Italian was injured.

Last season Kinsky only started twice for former head coach Thomas Frank in the League Cup, and was thrown into the first team by the Dane’s successor Igor Tudor when Spurs went to Atletico Madrid in the Champions League last 16 first leg. But he repeatedly lost his footing and was taken off for Vicario after 17 minutes with Spurs already 3-0 down.

But when De Zerbi took over, and Vicario required hernia surgery, Kinsky became first choice for the run-in and produced a series of impressive performances to help Spurs leapfrog West Ham United to stay in the Premier League.

An incredible redemption story for Kinsky

Analysis by Tottenham correspondent Jay Harris

What a remarkable turnaround. Everybody winced when Igor Tudor dragged Kinsky off the pitch after 17 minutes of Tottenham’s embarrassing defeat to Atletico Madrid in the Champions League. Kinsky slipped on multiple occasions and was at fault for Atletico racing into a 3-0 lead. At the time, it felt like his career with Spurs was over.

Within three months, the former Czech Republic Under-21 international has changed the narrative. The 23-year-old was given an opportunity to redeem himself sooner than expected after Guglielmo Vicario’s hernia surgery. Kinsky started five games in a row under Roberto De Zerbi and then held into his place even when Vicario recovered in time for Spurs’ final two league fixtures.

Kinsky’s quality on the ball has never been in doubt but he stood out with some superb saves against Wolverhampton Wanderers and Leeds United. Kinsky’s right-handed stop to deny Sean Longstaff from scoring what would have been a stoppage-time winner for Leeds was crucial to Spurs eventually avoiding relegation by two points.

Kinsky told a group of reporters, including The Athletic, after the final day victory over Everton that the hardest part of the season was spending “six months on the bench”. A new contract is a deserved reward and suggests he might have permanently replaced Vicario as the No 1. The Italian has two years left on his contract and The Athletic has previously reported there is uncertainty over his long-term future. The best option for Spurs might be to sell the Italy international and put all their faith in Kinsky.

Tottenham’s owners inject a further £100m into club: What does this mean?

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Tottenham’s owners inject a further £100m into club: What does this mean? - The New York Times
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The Lewis family have injected another £100million ($132m) into Tottenham Hotspur.

The injection, via the purchase of new shares in ENIC Group Ltd., will provide fresh working capital for the club, rather than being specifically for the summer transfer market.

The investment is the fourth such equity injection in recent years, and is a similar mechanism to the investment of £100m in October last year.

The Athletic has approached representatives of former executive chairman Daniel Levy, who was deposed in September last year but still owns 29.88 per cent of ENIC via a family trust, whether he participated in the injection.

The news comes after Spurs finished the season with clear promises from the club hierarchy that there would be more investment in the summer following a second consecutive 17th-place finish in the top flight.

Peter Charrington, appointed as non-executive chairman by the Lewis family following Levy’s dismissal last year, wrote at the end of last season that the family “will provide the stability and investment needed at every level to move us forward.”

So far this summer, Tottenham have already been busy in the transfer market, signing Jan Paul van Hecke from Brighton and Hove Albion in a £52m deal, and capturing free agents Marcos Senesi, Andy Robertson and Martin Dubravka. Pedro Porro has also been given an improved new contract, while The Athletic has reported that Antonin Kinsky is in talks over an improved deal.

Spurs are also targeting big-money moves for West Ham United midfielder Mateus Fernandes and Newcastle United’s Sandro Tonali.

Explaining the latest cash injection

Analysis by football finance writer Chris Weatherspoon

What was an outlier is now a theme.

This latest £100m from ENIC is Spurs’ third cash injection from shareholders inside the past 18 months, and a fourth in four years. Since May 2022, £332.5m in owner funding has flowed into the club.

That is a stark departure from the two decades prior. Then, net funding from ENIC totalled just £24.6m, with Spurs being run, to all intents and purposes, off its own back. Huge debt was taken on board to build the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, but the club was — and still is — required to service the payments.

The sharp shift toward a benefactor-type funding model is one born of both circumstance and necessity.

Levy’s abrupt departure in September 2025 saw the Lewis family assume control in north London, and repeated nine-figure injections — £100m was also provided last October — reflect that changing of the guard. It will doubtless be held up as a sign of the family’s ambition, and their desire to move very far away from two consecutive 17th-place Premier League finishes.

Yet anyone paying attention will not be surprised at this development. It was inevitable. The Athletic has repeatedly detailed Spurs’ precarious cash position, a point only underlined when the club’s 2024-25 accounts were published in March.

Alongside the October injection, Spurs also pulled forward a reported £90m of its Premier League distributions in a factoring arrangement, whereby they received cash upfront from a lender in exchange for taking a haircut on the payments when the Premier League makes them. It is an arrangement employed fairly regularly elsewhere but never before at Spurs, and, alongside the ENIC money, spoke to a club in need of funds.

That stems from hefty operating costs and big recent transfer spending, which have in large part not translated to on-field success. Between the summer of 2019 and the end of last season, roughly £900m net has been spent on transfers.

At the end of June 2025, a net £243m was owed to other clubs even before £159m was spent last summer. Already this close season, £52m has gone on Van Hecke, and the free transfers of Robertson and Senesi were hardly small additions to a wage bill which has previously been held at a level south of England’s elite. Big money moves for Fernandes and Tonali have been mooted and would need to be funded.

With no Champions League football this coming season and Premier League earnings mired at the wrong end following two awful domestic showings, ENIC had a choice: invest to improve, or make do. The route selected should be of little surprise.