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Bryan Mbeumo informs Brentford, Tottenham of decision to join Manchester United

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Bryan Mbeumo informs Brentford, Tottenham of decision to join Manchester United - The Athletic - The New York Times
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Bryan Mbeumo has informed Brentford and Tottenham Hotspur of his decision to sign for Manchester United if he makes a transfer this summer.

Mbeumo is under contract at Brentford until June 2026 and they have an option to extend the deal by a further 12 months.

But the 26-year-old forward has attracted interest from likes of Arsenal, Manchester United, Newcastle United and Spurs.

The Athletic revealed that he wants to join Manchester United, subject to the clubs reaching an agreement, and they contacted Brentford to discuss a switch.

An opening offer worth £45million plus £10m in add-ons fell some way short of Brentford’s valuation.

A second proposal at £55m and £7.5m of bonuses was also rejected — but talks continue as the 20-time English champions attempt to find a compromise.

Admiration for Mbeumo at Spurs increased after Thomas Frank moved from Brentford to become their new head coach.

But the Cameroon international notified Frank and Brentford that should he depart the Gtech Community Stadium now, it will be for Old Trafford.

Reports of Spurs submitting a bid have been denied in north London and they are no longer pursuing the situation — a stance that might change only if Manchester United do not complete the acquisition.

Their boss Ruben Amorim has targeted Mbeumo after landing fellow attacker Matheus Cunha from Wolverhampton Wanderers for £62.5m — a figure Brentford aim to exceed.

Funds are said to be available for Manchester United to secure the former Troyes attacker without requiring sales in advance.

However, they plan to remain disciplined and avoid overpaying for players in the market.

(Photo: David Rogers/Getty Images)

Leeds striker Oliver Boast, 16, set to join Tottenham

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Leeds United’s highly-rated 16-year-old striker Oliver Boast is set to join Tottenham Hotspur.

Boast, one of Leeds’ prized academy assets, has chosen to continue his development with the north London club.

The player’s decision to move south meant Leeds could either negotiate a fee with Tottenham or allow a tribunal to decide compensation. They went with the former and sources, speaking on the condition of anonymity, indicated a seven-figure sum has been agreed for Boast’s switch.

Boast, who turned 16 last month, is only seven months younger than Harry Gray and has followed in his fellow striker’s footsteps through the academy. Leeds can normally show their best young players a pathway to the first team, but Boast is behind one of England’s best young strikers in the pecking order.

Gray made his senior debut last term and is expected to only increase his minutes in the coming campaign. Rather than compete with Gray over the coming years, Boast has opted to try his hand in the capital with Tottenham.

Those who have coached Boast at Thorp Arch describe him as a modern No 9, who can lead the line and can play as a lone striker. Boast’s speed has been described as one of his best attributes, as he runs off the shoulder of the last man and gets in behind opposition defences.

His rise through the academy has accelerated over the past two seasons. He made his debut for the club’s under-18s last August, at 15 years old. He was then named in England’s under-16 squad last December, scoring his first goal during that camp too.

Boast went on to make his debut for United’s under-21s in April, still aged only 15. That progression was the culmination of a goal-laden campaign with the under-18s, which included a maiden hat-trick in late April.

(Photo: Justin Setterfield/Getty Images)

What Spurs can expect from Kota Takai: ‘Emerging talent’ who proved himself against Ronaldo

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What Spurs can expect from Kota Takai: ‘Emerging talent’ who proved himself against Ronaldo - The New York Times
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Most Premier League fans won’t have heard of Kota Takai until this transfer window.

But the 20-year-old, who is set to join Tottenham Hotspur from Japanese side Kawasaki Frontale for a J1 League record £5million ($6.8m, 1billion Japanese yen), has quickly developed into a star in his home country.

Having missed the opening weeks of the 2023 season representing Japan at the Under-20 Asian Cup, upon his return Takai broke into Kawasaki’s first team aged just 18 and immediately established himself as a starter in central defence. He made 13 starts for Kawasaki in 2023, before being dropped to the bench towards the end of the season.

Although Kawasaki have been one of Japan’s most successful teams over the past decade, winning the J1 League four times between 2017 and 2021, the 2023 team was not vintage. They finished eighth in the then 18-team league, but Takai’s talent often shone through, earning him a place in Japan’s Under-20 World Cup squad that summer.

Since then, his career has taken off. He was part of the Japan team that won the Under-23 Asian Cup in 2024, playing every minute, apart from the second group game where he was rested. He then got his first cap for the senior national team in a 7-0 win over China later that year.

Though 2024 was another middling season for Kawasaki, finishing eighth for the second season running, Takai earned a call-up for the Paris Olympics to represent Japan, who were beaten 3-0 by Spain in the quarter-finals. For his performances across 2024, he won the J1 League’s Best Young Player award.

Now he’s a household name in Japanese football, with four caps for the national team. He also played for Kawasaki in the Asian Champions League final. They lost 2-0 in the showpiece game against Saudi Pro League side Al Hilal, but beat Cristiano Ronaldo’s Al Nassr en route to the final (pictured top).

“I would put him at the top of the young, emerging talents in Japan,” says Dan Orlowitz, a Japanese football journalist. “There was no question that he was going to Europe. He is definitely on track to become a star, relatively speaking, for the national team.”

Takai, who has been taking English lessons and models himself after Liverpool centre-back Virgil van Dijk, was reportedly attracting interest from around Europe before he agreed terms with Tottenham. While the jump from J1 League (ranked 14th in the world by Opta Analyst) to Premier League (first) is significant, he has the attributes of a modern centre-back.

First, he’s comfortable in possession, a prerequisite for any emerging centre-back playing for a Premier League and Champions League side.

“In terms of building up and contributing to the attack, he’s a reliable short passer,” says Orlowitz. “He’s not really going to contribute when you’re in the final third, but he’ll be able to move the ball forward.”

Kawasaki build from the back, and Takai or centre-back partner Yuichi Maruyama frequently finish games with the highest number of touches. Takai also has the ability to play line-breaking passes when given time and space.

Still, it’s an area of his game not entirely refined yet. In Kawasaki’s defeat by Vissel Kobe this month, Takai attempted 69 passes, completing just 56 (81 per cent). In their 1-0 win against Yokohama FC the week earlier, it declined to 20 from 27 (74 per cent). In their 2-1 away win over Sanfrecce Hiroshima on May 31, he completed 45 of his 49 passes (92 per cent).

Fluctuation in this area is understandable given his age, but his tendency to rush passes when under intense pressure was displayed against higher-quality opposition in the latter stages of the AFC Champions League.

Here, Al Ahli’s Ezgjan Alioski is chasing down Takai, who is receiving a pass from midfield.

Alioski quickly closes the distance, prompting Takai to take the ball wide, isolating him against his opponent. Under pressure, Takai attempts a tricky pass over Al Ahli winger Galeno and into the path of team-mate Asahi Sasaki, but mishits the pass and puts it out of play.

However, in the semi-final, he showed he can be composed and skilful in these situations. In this grab, Al Nassr attacker Jhon Duran tries to sneak up on Takai on his blind side to win the ball.

Takai casually feints backwards — deceiving Duran, who then changes the direction of his run — before bringing the ball forwards and away from the Colombia international’s pressure. He follows it up with a stylish chipped pass through the Al Nassr midfield block, setting his team away on an attack.

Takai has a high ceiling as a distributor, provided he improves under pressure and continues developing his touch and feel for medium to long-distance passes.

An area that we may not be able to assess properly before he plays in England is his ability to adapt from a physical perspective, but there are encouraging indicators that he has the qualities to adjust.

“One of the biggest challenges for him is adjusting to the physicality and speed of the Premier League,” says Orlowitz. “On any given Saturday, he can deliver a monster performance, but in the Premier League, he has to be able to do that week in and week out. It’s going to be an adjustment, but he’s got the physique.”

Takai stands at 6ft 3in (190cm), and he’s not afraid to put his body in the way to dispossess opponents. In this grab, he wins the ball after a shoulder-to-shoulder battle with Duran, whose physicality caused problems for Premier League defenders while at Aston Villa, before bringing the ball out of defence into midfield.

He’s also improving as an aerial presence and has found the net twice with headers from set pieces this season.

However, his primary strength as a defender is his anticipation and timing, particularly in recovery situations. He does not have the electric pace of Micky van de Ven, but he can close distances quickly for a player of his size and win the ball cleanly with impressive slide tackles. Here is one example of this in action.

Here’s another instance:

He can also read the game and step ahead of attackers, using his strength and power to win the ball, as shown in this grab:

Again, after dispossessing his opponent, he shows the vision and composure to move the ball on quickly to a team-mate, relieving opposition pressure.

Here, he calmly wins possession from Ronaldo, who had tried to break past Takai with a stepover move.

Having kept Ronaldo and Sadio Mane relatively quiet in the Asian Champions League semi-final, Tottenham have a barometer of Takai’s quality. It should provide some confidence that he can find his way in the Premier League, where his physical and technical attributes will be tested.

Emerging ahead of Cristian Romero and Van de Ven will not be easy, not to mention the group of international centre-backs waiting behind them in Kevin Danso, Radu Dragusin, Ben Davies and Luka Vuskovic, who made his Croatia debut earlier this month and can now play in England after turning 18 in February.

Still, Takai is a special talent, and Thomas Frank may be the perfect coach to maximise his abilities.

(Top photo: Takai and Cristiano Ronaldo by Yasser Bakhsh via Getty Images)

Tottenham Hotspur and another summer of change at the top. Is there more to come?

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Tottenham Hotspur and another summer of change at the top. Is there more to come? - The New York Times
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It has already been a summer of profound change at Tottenham Hotspur and we are not even yet in July.

The Europa League final in Bilbao was only five weeks ago. The man who delivered that, Ange Postecoglou, has already been dismissed. He has been replaced by Thomas Frank, from Brentford, who arrives with the hope that he can build a more robust, consistent Spurs team next season.

But there has also been a change in the club’s executive roles too. Long-standing board member Donna-Maria Cullen announced her departure at the end of the season. Vinai Venkatesham, formerly of Arsenal, has come in as the new chief executive officer. And last week, the club finalised the exit of chief football officer Scott Munn, who is now on gardening leave.

In a sense, Munn’s departure is no surprise. The Athletic reported in April that Munn’s future at the club was in “severe doubt”. And he has ultimately gone the same way as his compatriot Postecoglou. Churn in these roles is nothing new. Tottenham seem to embark on a new organisational overhaul most summers. Munn’s two-year spell at Spurs owes to the last such overhaul, back in 2023.

During the 2022-23 season, the club commissioned an external review into all their footballing activities. Daniel Levy was quoted on the club website as saying that this was “to ensure we apply our values of innovation, drive and excellence”. And it led to the opening of a new role of chief football officer, who would coordinate all football departments. In April 2023, Munn was appointed, officially starting his work in September.

After the appointment of Postecoglou, Munn’s main work involved a thorough review of the club’s football departments. This led to an overhaul, with plenty of staff leaving the club. The work on the medical department remains ongoing, as shown by last season. But the improvement in Spurs’ scouting in recent years — as shown by signings like Wilson Odobert, Antonin Kinsky and Lucas Bergvall — suggests that they are better at identifying young signings than they used to be.

Munn ruffled some feathers during his two years at Tottenham, but that may be inevitable in a role that requires firing and hiring.

Munn’s second season at Tottenham ended on a high, with Spurs winning the Europa League final in Bilbao, an achievement that will mark the careers of everyone involved in it. But now there is a new structure at Spurs and they will not be looking for a new chief football officer to replace Munn.

The key person in the new structure is Venkatesham, for whom the new job of CEO has been created. Frank, the new head coach, will report into Venkatesham, as will Johan Lange, the technical director, and Rebecca Caplehorn, who oversees football administration and governance. So will Andy Rogers, who is managing director of Tottenham Hotspur Women, and Paul May, in charge of training centre operations.

In Frank’s first interview as Spurs head coach, he talked about the importance of the structure behind the scenes and what they can achieve if everyone works together. “You can’t do anything alone, in my opinion,” Frank said. “The alignment is key, from top to bottom. Of course, it starts from Daniel (Levy), and Vinai and Johan and me. The more the four of us can be aligned, just like a unit, an unbreakable unit, the stronger we will be.”

Venkatesham also spoke of the importance of alignment during a joint interview he did with Levy, published by the club last week.

“I think we’re going to form a really powerful partnership,” Venkatesham said of his relationship with Levy. “I’ll be taking more of the lead day-to-day on operational matters on the pitch and off the pitch. But we’ll be working on everything together, certainly there won’t be any decisions of any significance that happen at the club that we’re not completely joined at the hip on.”

Venkatesham has only just started at the club but this is already one of the most significant ever changes in how Tottenham are run. His arrival in such a powerful CEO role means a more modern management organisation, rather than Tottenham’s distinctive streamlined feel. For years, there has been a hope at Spurs to strengthen the executive side of the club. Venkatesham’s arrival marks a meaningful step in that direction.

Staff have already been impressed with Venkatesham’s openness and transparency behind the scenes, and his willingness to trust and empower colleagues. Even his six-minute video with Levy on YouTube felt like a new step towards open communication for the club, given how little is traditionally heard from Spurs’ long-standing chairman.

This is already a very different club than it was two cycles ago, back when Fabio Paratici was brought in as managing director of football at the end of the 2020-21 season, with the hope that he could drive up standards around the whole club, as well as taking charge of recruitment. The initial plan was that Paratici would bring Antonio Conte with him, although in reality Conte eventually arrived five months after Spurs first approached him, with Nuno Espirito Santo taking the first 10 league games of the 2021-22 season.

Even though Paratici was forced to resign from his official role in April 2023, he has never truly gone away. Munn’s two years as chief football officer occurred to an extent in Paratici’s shadow. Because Paratici has continued to work as a consultant for the club, advising largely on recruitment, while he serves a 30-month ban from official football activity. (The work that he has been doing is consistent with the limited scope of his ban).

But Paratici’s ban ends next month, meaning that he would, in theory, be allowed to return to the type of work that he did for Spurs between 2021 and 2023.

As Paratici reaches the end of his ban, there has been constant speculation as to whether he may be restored to a role like the one he used to occupy at the club. He spoke to Milan about taking on a big new role there this summer but it came to nothing. The question is whether there is space for someone like Paratici, with his unique skills and persona, inside Tottenham’s new modern structure.

After taking a big step forward, does it still make sense to take another step back?

(Top photos: Getty Images)

Gareth Bale: Buying Cardiff City would be a ‘dream come true’

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Gareth Bale says owning his hometown club Cardiff City would be a “dream come true” and has targeted leading them back into the Premier League.

The former Real Madrid and Tottenham Hotspur forward has confirmed he is part of a group aiming to buy Cardiff and is hopeful a deal can be agreed.

The Athletic reported on June 20 that Bale’s consortium made an initial approach to current Cardiff owner Vincent Tan. The offer was rejected, but Bale’s interest in purchasing the League One outfit remains strong.

“We are interested in getting Cardiff,” Bale told Sky Sports on Monday. “It’s my home club, it’s where I grew up and my uncle (Chris Pike) used to play for them. To be involved with an ownership group would be a dream come true.

“It’s a club close to my heart. It’s where I grew up and I would love to be able to be a part of growing Cardiff and taking it to the Premier League where it belongs.

“I know how amazing the Welsh fans and Cardiff fans are. It would be amazing to try and do something together.

“We are trying to engage with Cardiff and more news will come out on that in the future but hopefully we can get something done.”

The former Wales captain has also confirmed that he is not in the frame to take over Plymouth Argyle, contrary to reports.

Cardiff were competing in the Premier League as recently as 2019 but finished bottom of the Championship in the 2024-25 season, the 2008 FA Cup finalists now set to play third-tier football for the first time since 2003.

The possibility of a move to the Welsh capital was mooted for Bale upon his Real Madrid exit in 2022. The forward instead signed for MLS club Los Angeles FC and retired after representing his nation for the final time at the Qatar World Cup in 2022.

Should the move to buy Cardiff proceed, Bale would become the latest high-profile name to be involved with club ownership in British football. His former Real Madrid and Spurs team-mate Luka Modric became a co-owner of their south Wales rivals Swansea City earlier this month.

The takeover of Wrexham by Hollywood’s Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney in 2021 has also seen more U.S. celebrities involve themselves with football clubs in recent years.

NFL legends JJ Watt and Tom Brady became minority owners of Burnley and Birmingham City respectively, while American golfers Jordan Spieth and Justin Thomas bought shares in Leeds United before their promotion to the Premier League in May.

Former Manchester City academy coach Brian Barry-Murphy will lead Cardiff into their 2025-26 League One campaign, succeeding Omer Riza who was sacked in April with three games of the season remaining.

Former Arsenal midfielder Aaron Ramsey, who inherited the captain’s armband for Wales following Bale’s retirement in January 2023, was appointed as the club’s interim head coach but could not save them from relegation.

(Photo: Oli Scarff/AFP via Getty Images)

Tottenham set to sign Japan international defender Kota Takai

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Tottenham Hotspur are set to sign defender Kota Takai from Kawasaki Frontale.

Club sources indicate that an agreement for the 20-year-old Japan international has been reached for £5million ($6.8m, 1billion Japanese yen), which would represent a record fee for a player in the J League — the top division of Japanese football — moving overseas.

Takai, who is into the final six months of his contract at Kawasaki Frontale, has played 28 times at club level in 2025 and has also made four appearances for Japan.

Cristian Romero and Micky van de Ven established themselves as the first choice central defensive pairing at Spurs under previous head coach Ange Postecoglou, while Radu Dragusin and Kevin Danso are the other recognised centre-backs in the squad.

However, multiple injury setbacks in 2024- 25 meant Archie Gray, a midfielder by trade, was deployed in the centre of defence.

Danso and Mathys Tel, who both arrived on loan deals from Lens and Bayern Munich respectively in January, have each made their moves to Spurs permanent this summer, while teenage defender Luka Vuskovic will join Spurs from Hajduk Split after a deal was agreed in 2023.

(Masashi Hara/Getty Images)

The Business of Football: Why Tottenham have not been bought, and how much are Wrexham worth?

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The Business of Football: Why Tottenham have not been bought, and how much are Wrexham worth? - The New York Times
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Among the many things this column is waiting for — a result in the Manchester City vs Premier League cage fight, Fenway Sports Group to buy a Spanish team, Gianni Infantino to give a press conference — none has been imminent for quite as long as a takeover at Tottenham Hotspur.

Much like soccer has been the fastest-growing sport in the United States for half a century, Spurs have been the next big English club on the block for a decade.

In that time, Spurs have built the best multi-purpose stadium in Europe and sold lots of shirts, but won only one trophy. During the same period, the Premier League has become majority-owned by American billionaires and Tottenham’s billionaire former majority-owner, British businessman Joe Lewis, has put his shares into a family trust, pleaded guilty to insider trading, and celebrated his 88th birthday.

This is a fruit ripe for picking and every investor, private-equity firm and sovereign wealth fund looking for a prize asset in the world’s most popular domestic football league has kicked the tyres at Spurs, taken the tour and run the numbers.

So, why hasn’t anyone bought them yet?

Well, one big reason is that the club has been run by Lewis’ business partner, Daniel Levy, since 2001 and he owns just over a quarter of the club’s shares. Most experts believe Spurs are worth about £3billion ($4bn), or perhaps a bit more now that they are back in the Champions League and the likes of Beyonce are filling the stadium over the summer. But Levy wants £3.75billion, another $1billion at today’s exchange rate.

Quite the gap, then, but not so wide that you cannot start haggling, which is why the Spurs takeover story re-emerges every few months and will continue to do so until someone hits Levy’s number, which may have to come down a tad when Joe Lewis’ family decide they want their inheritances.

None of this is particularly shocking and has been widely reported, but The Athletic has been told by several potential suitors that there are two under-reported factors which may influence where this meeting of minds will come.

The first is that not everybody sees the same potential in Tottenham — the north London district, not the club — that Levy and Lewis did. Spurs are by far the biggest attraction in an area that has not seen much gentrification. It is also usually an hour’s taxi ride from the West End hotels and restaurants that the Premier League’s overseas ownership class enjoy.

And the second is the £775million in private placement notes that Levy used to refinance the cost of building the stadium. The size of that debt is not the problem, as the additional revenue from the club’s new home is more than meeting the interest payments. The issue is that Levy, thanks to his good timing and great salesmanship, got a sweet deal when those notes were sold to asset managers, investment firms and pension funds in 2021.

Spurs issued nine tranches of notes, with a range of repayment dates from 2035 to 2051 and interest rates between 2.49 per cent and 3.02 per cent. According to the club’s most recent accounts, Spurs had total borrowings of £851.5m at the end of June 2024, at an average rate of 2.79 per cent and average maturity of almost 19 years.

This means Spurs are paying an interest rate that is lower than inflation. So, in financial terms, they are not really paying any interest at all. This is great for Spurs but terrible for everyone who holds that debt, which is why they are all hoping for a takeover, too, so they can exercise their change-of-control clauses, get their money back and do something else with it.

The club’s new owners would have no problem finding other people — and perhaps even the same people — with whom to refinance the debt. It will just cost them about £20million a year more at the current rates, which adds up over 19 years.

However, neither of those two issues — Spurs’ location or Levy’s luck with the interest rate cycle — are permanent or insurmountable. London is a city of villages that have ebbed and flowed in appeal over the centuries, and any extra interest payments could be covered by a naming rights deal. Interest rates are also meant to be coming down.

So, sit tight, takeover watchers. Spurs will be bought by someone, at some point.

Not the boldest of predictions, maybe, but it is the best we can do.

The big Wrexham valuation debate

On the subject of valuation gaps, Spurs’ is a hairline fracture compared to the gaping chasm at Wrexham or, more accurately, the debate about Wrexham’s valuation on this column’s favourite social-media channel, LinkedIn.

It all started earlier this month with a Bloomberg report headlined “Wrexham AFC Weighs Raising Funds at £350 Million Valuation”. Citing unnamed sources, the report said the newly promoted Championship club were talking to advisers about selling a minority stake to boost the playing budget and pay for a new stand.

Sensible stuff, right? And entirely in keeping with what the club’s owners have said they would do and — in fact — have already done, as they sold a stake to the New York-based Allyn family last October.

But that deal was at a valuation of £100million ($135million). OK, Wrexham were still a League One side back then, but it was a record for a third-tier side. So are we really suggesting they have more than tripled in value in less than nine months?

The answer is of course not… or perhaps, because Wrexham are unlike any other club in the English football pyramid.

First, they are Welsh. Second, they are the subject of a very popular Disney-made docuseries. And third, and we feel this column deserves a pat on the back for not mentioning this sooner, they are owned by Rob McElhenney and Ryan Reynolds.

For those among you who only have time in their lives for football, McElhenney is an American TV actor, producer and writer, and Reynolds is one of the world’s best-paid actors and most recognisable faces. They bought the then-fifth-tier club for £2m in 2021, but three straight promotions, all charted in heart-warming fashion by Disney’s cameras, have brought them to the gates of the Premier League.

But come on, £350m?!? That’s not far off half a billion U.S. dollars. Most English Football League clubs are lucky to be valued at double their annual turnover. In Wrexham’s case, that would be £70m based on last season’s earnings or £100m on next season’s projected earnings.

The top Premier League clubs are valued at about five times their turnover, which reflects the league’s mega media-rights deals, as well as their huge stadiums, global fanbases and access to European football. For Wrexham’s touted price tag to make sense, you would need to apply a revenue multiple that only the most popular American franchises, in the biggest leagues, can command.

But Wrexham is not Los Angeles, and the Championship is not the National Football League. Hence the arguments on LinkedIn.

Of those, the most interesting has been between Alexander Jarvis, the founder of Abu Dhabi-based Blackbridge Sports LLC, and former Charlton manager and Southampton vice-chairman Les Reed.

Jarvis, who recently advised an American group on their purchase of a small stake in Portugal’s Benfica, among other deals, has written two posts about the Wrexham valuation, calling it “a total clown show”, “football’s most outrageous over-valuation”, and “a gamble on celebrity and hype that completely ignores the hard realities of running a football club in the Championship”.

Plenty of people have replied to him saying they agree, including William Storey, who is best known for a collapsed sponsorship deal with F1 team Haas and several failed bids for football teams. He might not be the best referee, then.

Reed, who has been Wrexham’s “football strategy consultant” since 2021, hit back with a post that pointed out Jarvis & Co “have never actually experienced running a club, let alone a club in the Championship”, before noting that Southampton’s former owners, the Liebherr family, eventually sold their shares in the club for close to 10 times their initial investment, which is impressive but not quite the point Jarvis was making about multiples of turnover.

Reed continued by raising the examples of Bournemouth, Brentford and Brighton, three clubs who have invested heavily to become “sustainable” Premier League clubs, and asked “why would serious investors not want a stake” in Wrexham’s “journey” towards the same destination.

So, who is right? The guy trying to earn his crust by advising on football takeovers, or the chap who works for Wrexham?

Well, according to this column’s panel of secret football finance experts, it depends on whether Wrexham should be valued as a regular football club or if they have transcended that status and are now a global entertainment brand. If it is the former, they are worth about £100m, which is the valuation the Allyns came in at. If it is the latter, well, why not?

However, even that more conservative valuation is highly vulnerable to what is known in business as “key person risk”. If Rob and Ryan are struck by lightning, get bored, fall out, get sick or lose a court case, will Wrexham look so transcendent?

It is a good debate and there is only one way to settle it: the price someone actually pays for a stake in the club.

Divide and… continue?

While very few clubs are as exposed to key person risk as Wrexham, all are vulnerable to any weakening in demand for the right to broadcast or stream their matches.

If you had to pick one reason valuations have kept rising in the big leagues on both sides of the Atlantic, it is that live sport has been a must-have for TV executives. This means their sports counterparts have only needed two rival broadcasters in any market to create an auction.

So, this month’s news that New York-based media giant Warner Bros Discovery (WBD) is splitting into two separate companies has prompted an outpouring of speculation about what it might mean for sport. So far, there is no real consensus.

For those who have missed this story, WBD was formed in 2022 by an expensive merger between two multinational media conglomerates, WarnerMedia and Discovery. But the company’s bosses have now decided to put all the cool, still-growing stuff in one company, Streaming & Studios, so it is not held back by the profitable-but-in-decline TV channels.

The latter are being boxed up in a company called Global Networks and, just in case you did not work out which one of these two entities is the sexy one, it will be run by WBD’s head beancounter, while the chief executive is getting the company that makes Batman, Harry Potter and Game of Thrones. And just to underline that message, all of WBD’s merger-related debt is being passed to the dowdier daughter.

If there is any agreement on what this means for the sports industry, it is that any impact will be felt first in the United States, where WBD’s streaming platform Max has struggled to find its place in a congested market, despite having a decent range of sports to offer. Does this mean that sport is no longer a must-have for any self-respecting media offering, or has WBD just packaged it badly?

The main sports brand is TNT Sports, which is joining the gang in managed decline at Global Networks. It has been part of the Max bundle but has recently lost its NBA rights after a 40-year connection with the league. It still has some baseball, college basketball, ice hockey and motorsport, but it does not have any NFL, so it is more of a nice-to-have than a must-have for most American sports fans.

The picture in the UK is a little different, as TNT Sports does have what most British armchair sports fans consider to be essential viewing, namely a package of Premier League rights and near-exclusive rights to UEFA’s club competitions. TNT Sports acquired the football when it formed a 50/50 joint venture with BT Sports in 2022, which united BT’s menu of football, rugby and assorted North American pastimes with Eurosport’s smorgasbord of cycling, tennis and the snowy stuff we watch once every four years in the Winter Olympics.

And then, just to confuse you even further, WBD’s streaming offer in the UK and Europe has been Discovery+, although it has started to turn that off and replace it with Max. Oh, and BT has also been trying, unsuccessfully, to sell its 50 per cent of TNT Sports, which really means that WBD has declined to pay BT’s price for the rest of the business.

To make some sense of all this, this column asked four media analysts for their takes on the WBD split.

Dan Harraghy of Ampere Analysis does not see any impact for WBD’s UK operations until HBO Max launches in early 2026. For him, the real lesson of this tale is the tension “between the high value placed on sports rights by linear TV players” and the negative outlook for traditional broadcasting, which would explain why so many leagues have stopped seeing growth in the value of their rights.

Even the mighty Premier League has had to throw in more content, spread out over the weekend, to get the same amount of money from its domestic partners.

Independent analyst Paolo Pescatore thinks the split will highlight something he has been saying for a while: TNT Sports is “an entity in slow, painful decline”. He thinks the joint venture was “poorly executed”, with subscriber numbers falling and losses rising, which is why nobody has bought that 50 per cent stake in the business. Pescatore also believes the rising cost of watching sport, coupled with confusion over where to watch it, has driven the rise in digital piracy.

Sports rights consultant Pierre Maes said he cannot see signs of any positive strategy for building an attractive streaming product in the UK and Europe, and dismisses the WBD split as a “desperate move to calm down the stock market”.

But the BBC’s former head of sports rights, David Murray, is a bit more optimistic.

“My initial view is that it’s probably a good thing for sport,” he said. “I never got their strategy of wanting to bundle the likes of HBO with TNT Sport. So, in theory, the Discovery+ proposition can be a lot more focused, which should keep the price lower and allow it to cut through more than it would have done as part of a broader bundle.”

Lower prices and more focus on providing a great sports product should be a benefit to consumers and sports rights-holders, as digital piracy is probably the number one threat to professional sport as we know it.

Missed deadline dashes Drogheda’s dream

Speaking of good times gone bad, we cannot have an edition of this column without a new cautionary tale about multi-club ownership (MCO).

This one concerns Irish club Drogheda United, who have just lost their appeal against a UEFA decision to prevent them taking part in next season’s Conference League, a prize they thought they had earned with their FAI Cup victory last November, because their American owners Trivela also have a stake in Danish side Silkeborg, who qualified for the same competition.

Under UEFA rules, two teams with common ownership cannot play in the same competition and any clash is avoided by removing the team that finished lowest in its league. In this case, UEFA looked at Drogheda United’s ninth-place finish in 2024 versus Silkeborg’s seventh-place finish this year.

Trivela took its case to the Court of Arbitration for Sport, claiming that neither the Football Association of Ireland nor UEFA told the Alabama-based group that European football’s governing body had moved forward the date for owners of MCO groups to create enough separation between their teams so they can potentially compete against each other.

Until this year, owners had until the start of June to dilute their shareholdings in one club or put all of their shares in a blind trust, but UEFA shifted that deadline to the start of March.

Drogheda United, of course, are not the only side to miss this memo, as FA Cup winners Crystal Palace are still waiting to find out if they will be allowed to take their place in the Europa League alongside their co-owner John Textor’s French side Lyon.

The two cases are not identical, as there is no dispute that Drogheda and Silkeborg are controlled by the same owner, whereas Textor has never had that much sway at Palace, but Trivela’s travails demonstrate that UEFA is getting increasingly strict with MCO groups.

“We are totally gutted by this outcome for the club, its players, its staff and its supporters,” Trivela co-founder Ben Boycott tells The Athletic.

“To all of them, I’m deeply sorry that we’re going through this. We genuinely felt we had a compelling case before CAS, a point somewhat reinforced in the observation that this appears to have been a split (2-1) decision among the arbitrators.”

Trivela has committed to filling the €500,000 (£425,000) hole in Drogheda United’s budget left by the removal of European football, but is still processing what Boycott believes was a “very harsh decision which ignored a number of mitigating factors and months of good-faith efforts on our part to come to a solution with UEFA”.

It has been a tough few weeks for Trivela as their English outfit, Walsall, were 12 points clear at the top of League Two with 11 games to go, only to lose form and end up in the play-offs, where they rallied to beat Chesterfield in the semi-finals, only to lose 1-0 at Wembley to AFC Wimbledon.

More clubs equal more opportunities for disappointment.

Regulator reaches final straight

And let us wrap up this edition of the Business of Football with another column staple: an update on the arrival of English football’s independent regulator.

We will keep this short and sweet — it really is coming now.

For the first time since this process started in 2021, something has happened ahead of schedule. On Tuesday, the Football Governance Bill passed through the committee stage of the legislative process, without requiring the three further days that had been scheduled for debate.

The next step is the report stage, then the third reading of the bill in the House of Commons, before moving to a final consideration of amendments and royal assent. But with the Conservative Party’s Premier League-backed rearguard action running out of puff, the bill’s supporters are confident it will become law before the politicians break up for their summer recess on July 22.

Which means we can all start moaning about the regulator’s shortcomings from next season.

(Top photo: Catherine Ivill – AMA/Getty Images)

Should Tottenham’s Lucas Bergvall have been nominated for PFA Young Player of the Year?

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Should Tottenham’s Lucas Bergvall have been nominated for PFA Young Player of the Year? - The New York Times
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Lucas Bergvall may be the Premier League’s best teenager.

A year on from joining Tottenham Hotspur from Djurgarden in his native Sweden for £8.5million ($10.8m), his reputation has increased to such a degree that should Spurs inconceivably consider moving him on, they could justifiably demand a tenfold increase.

The 19-year-old collected a clean sweep of the club’s player of the season awards, becoming the first teenager since Glenn Hoddle to do so, and is viewed as an essential part of the present and future. The arrival of Thomas Frank, a proven developer of young players, should only help Bergvall.

So, how has he not made the shortlist for the PFA’s Young Player of the Season award?

Before arguing Bergvall’s case, this is not in any way intended to diminish the excellent young players who are under consideration. Liam Delap and Dean Huijsen earned moves to Chelsea and Real Madrid, respectively, off the back of excellent debut Premier League seasons with Ipswich Town and Bournemouth. Milos Kerkez looks set to leave Bournemouth for Liverpool too.

Morgan Rogers is now a star player for Aston Villa and an established England international, and Myles Lewis-Skelly appears to be on his way to becoming Arsenal and England’s left-back for years to come. His team-mate Ethan Nwaneri lit up the Emirates Stadium with sparks of his exceptional talent, scoring nine goals from 37 appearances in all competitions.

They are all worthy candidates for an award won by Cristiano Ronaldo, Wayne Rooney, Gareth Bale, Harry Kane and Dele Alli (twice) — after all, it’s voted for by the players. Still, Bergvall’s omission indicates they have somehow overlooked his quality and potential.

His influence is not underrated in the stands at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium. As rumours circulated on social media of his ankle injury before the Europa League semi-final, fans panicked as if they were losing a key player. That’s because they were. As evidenced by his awards, Bergvall was Spurs’ outstanding player and a key part of their Europa League success.

Statistics can only go so far in quantifying the value of a player like Bergvall, for whom almost everything about playing in midfield at Premier League level comes naturally. He had a pass completion rate of 89 per cent in his debut season, only marginally beaten by Yves Bissouma (89.3) among Spurs midfielders to have started 10 games or more.

Compared to players in Europe’s top five leagues and the Champions League, Bergvall ranks within the 85th percentile or higher for progressive carries (2.12), successful take-ons (1.62) and interceptions (1.62) per 90 minutes.

While unfamiliar to most English fans on his arrival, Tottenham had to fight off significant interest from Newcastle United and Eintracht Frankfurt. Barcelona sporting director Deco even had lunch with him and his family to convince him to leave Sweden for the Camp Nou.

His season really kicked into gear in early January during the 1-0 win over Liverpool in the first leg of the Carabao Cup semi-final, with Bergvall scoring a late winner shortly after escaping a second yellow card.

From that point, the gifted, physically imposing (affectionately described as a “lump” by team-mate James Maddison) teenager became Ange Postecoglou’s most reliable midfielder.

At his technical best, he’s a dribbler who can skip past challenges and weave through midfield. When needed, he can lean on his physical qualities and be destructive between both boxes and has the quality to be a match-winner in the final third. He may end up as the deep-lying controller that was seen sparingly, where he demonstrated an ability to control matches from deep and navigate the opposition press with composure and vision.

“I don’t think he’s left (Dejan Kulusevski’s) side since he’s been here, and Deki (Kulusevski) is in the gym all the time,” former head coach Postecoglou said in March. “He’s a great role model for him, and if nothing else, Deki has forced him to get in there and work hard on his game.

“He’s also an outstanding technical player. His technical proficiency is still his greatest asset. He’s growing; you’ve got to remember he’s only just turned 19. He’s still a very young man, and if he keeps building up physically as well, to the standard you need in the Premier League, particularly in that midfield position, if you have that physical ability and that technical proficiency, then you’ve got a decent player on your hands.”

It is testament to his progress that he is already capable of fulfilling these roles to a high standard with so much to come too.

That he only made 11 starts in the Premier League (Nwaneri made 11) is perhaps justification enough to overlook him. Bergvall was sidelined at the end of the season and had he taken the Europa League final by the scruff of the neck in the manner that he did in the quarter-finals against Frankfurt, his peers may have included him.

Next season and with such a high ceiling, it is not implausible that we will be talking about him as a contender for the main award after a second-season leap.

(Top photo: Ryan Pierse/Getty Images)

Justin Cochrane’s return to Spurs: He’ll plan training, but do more than just put the cones out

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Justin Cochrane’s return to Spurs: He’ll plan training, but do more than just put the cones out - The New York Times
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The main reason nearly a week passed between Tottenham Hotspur sacking Ange Postecoglou and announcing Thomas Frank as his successor was because negotiations with Brentford over the Dane’s backroom staff had dragged on.

Everybody had assumed Claus Norgaard would accompany Frank across London. After Brian Riemer left Brentford in December 2022 to become Anderlecht’s head coach, Norgaard arrived as Frank’s second in command. The pair had known each other since 2007 when Frank taught Norgaard on a coaching course run by Danish football’s governing body (DBU). They worked together with Denmark’s youth teams before Norgaard supported Frank during his three years in charge of Brondby.

Frank could not take all of his assistant coaches with him to Tottenham, and he prioritised poaching someone else.

Justin Cochrane joined Brentford’s first-team set-up in June 2022 after leaving his role as head of player development and coaching in Manchester United’s academy.

Senior figures at Brentford liked the idea of grooming Cochrane to be Frank’s long-term successor. What they did not anticipate was the 43-year-old following Frank to Spurs, along with head of athletic performance Chris Haslam and analyst Joe Newton.

The fact Brentford were so disappointed to have lost Cochrane is an indication of exactly how good a coach Spurs have just added to their staff…

Brentford were one of only four teams in the Premier League last season to have three players reach double figures for goals. Bryan Mbeumo led the way with 20, Yoane Wissa was close behind on 19, while Kevin Schade scored 11 times.

Mbeumo’s haul came from an expected goals (xG) total of 12.3, which means he massively overperformed. During the 2021-22 season, Brentford’s first in the top flight, the Cameroon international only scored four goals from an xG of 9.3. Cochrane can take some credit for helping him to become more clinical.

Cochrane planned training sessions at Brentford. He would design drills around the tactical set-up of their next opponent or based on what skills he felt individuals needed to improve. Along with Frank, he mainly focused on the attacking unit. It was their duty to push Mbeumo, Wissa and Schade to a higher level with regular finishing drills.

Frank assigns each of his assistants with around six players to look after. They are responsible for analysing that individual’s performances and discussing areas of improvement. They are encouraged to have conversations about their personal lives, too. It was Norgaard’s idea to convert Keane Lewis-Potter from a winger into a left-back. Despite playing in an unfamiliar position, Lewis-Potter was one of Brentford’s most consistent performers last season. Lewis-Potter was one of the players Cochrane looked after and he helped the 24-year-old to adapt.

“Justin has done very well for us here,” Frank said at a press conference in April. “He came in with responsibility for the offensive part of the game, giving input to myself, the coaching staff and the players around everything from build-up to phase two to phase three and the breakthroughs. He’s been a big part of that, planning the training week, and developing individual players. He’s developed very well the last couple of years.”

There are loads of other examples of Cochrane making small adjustments which have a positive impact. When Brentford beat Nottingham Forest 2-1 in April 2023, Josh Dasilva came off the bench to score a stoppage-time winner. Dasilva’s trademark finish was a curling left-footed shot towards the far corner but he surprised goalkeeper Keylor Navas by aiming for the near post. Cochrane pushed Dasilva to add variety to his strikes.

“I was just saying to Justin, we worked on that (finish) yesterday (in training),” Dasilva told Brentford’s website. “I always go far post and yesterday the mannequin was set in a way where I couldn’t go far post and I had to go near post.”

During his time with Manchester United, Cochrane crossed paths with future England international Kobbie Mainoo and Argentina’s Alejandro Garnacho. They both started United’s 3-1 victory over Nottingham Forest in the 2022 FA Youth Cup final and Garnacho scored twice. Cochrane encouraged Garnacho to avoid constantly chopping inside onto his stronger right foot to shoot. The winger scored United’s third goal in stoppage time by cutting onto his right before going back towards the left to trick the defender. Garnacho’s left-footed shot took a deflection and ricocheted past Forest’s goalkeeper Aaron Bott. One small piece of advice from Cochrane helped him to become less predictable.

Brennan Johnson was the only player to reach double digits for Spurs in the top flight last season, with 11. It feels likely that Cochrane will try and help Tottenham’s attackers to become more efficient in the opposition box.

Cochrane started his coaching career as a teenager in Queens Park Rangers’ academy when he set up a grassroots team for local children under the age of 10. Cochrane only made one appearance for QPR before he went on to represent Crewe Alexandra and a variety of non-League sides including Boreham Wood, Aldershot Town and Hayes & Yeading United. He grew up in north London but played internationally for Antigua & Barbuda.

Before he retired, Cochrane started volunteering in Tottenham’s academy at 27. He worked under Chris Ramsey and John McDermott, alongside Matt Wells and two future Premier League managers in Kieran McKenna and Scott Parker. He crossed paths and learned from Mauricio Pochettino too.

McDermott spent over a decade with Spurs before he joined the Football Association in March 2020 and he played a role in Cochrane becoming part of Thomas Tuchel’s backroom staff with England earlier this year. Cochrane will continue to help Tuchel in the build-up to and at next summer’s World Cup in the United States, Mexico and Canada alongside his duties with Spurs.

Cochrane oversaw the development of future England internationals Kyle Walker-Peters and Noni Madueke in his first spell at Spurs, as well as Dane Scarlett, Oliver Skipp and Marcus Edwards. Scarlett made 22 appearances on loan at Oxford United in the first half of last season before he returned to Spurs. The 21-year-old scored in a 3-0 victory over Elfsborg in the Europa League but only played five times in total. Perhaps Cochrane’s influence could help him to become more established in the first-team squad.

Cochrane has spoken in interviews about the importance of the ‘Vibe Scale’ which, despite sounding like an R&B song from the 1990s, is actually his way of recognising what the squad needs at the beginning of each day and reacting accordingly to their emotional, physical and mental states. Cochrane has worked in academies, in first-team environments and at international level so he understands how to connect with players who have different levels of experience.

Luke Amos, who now plays for Perth Glory in Australia, spent 14 years at Tottenham and worked under Cochrane. The midfielder praised his former coach’s vibrant “energy” and enthusiasm.

“He reminded us that football is about fun, but you need to train properly,” Amos told The Athletic in 2022. “I’ve never seen him lose his head, but if training wasn’t right or someone was being sloppy, he would definitely tell them. He sets high demands. That’s what the best coaches do.

“He is so good to work with and you can always approach him. Everyone connected with him easily. He was my coach at different age groups. He is not going to be the same with me when I was 14 and when I’m 20 — he adapts. When I was going through a few things, Justin would help out — like my mentality and not getting too frustrated — because that is something I definitely struggled with when I was younger.”

Cochrane used to watch Barcelona and Real Madrid in the Champions League and design training sessions for Spurs’ academy prospects based on what he had seen. Now he needs to prepare for the possibility of facing teams of that magnitude in that competition next season.

In 2017, Cochrane graduated from The Open University with a degree in business, leadership and management. After nine years with Spurs, he became the England Under-15s head coach after seeing an advert online. He worked with then England first-team manager Gareth Southgate, his assistant, Steve Holland, and other age-group coaches including Steve Cooper and Kevin Betsy. Cochrane had played for Crewe when Holland was a member of the backroom staff.

In 2019, he completed his UEFA Pro Licence, was promoted to under-16s head coach and helped England win the UEFA Under-16 Development Tournament. The following year, he was appointed as the under-17s head coach and youth development phase lead. He helped to nurture lots of different players, including Newcastle United full-back Lewis Hall and Manchester City’s Rico Lewis.

He supported then head coach Aidy Boothroyd at the Under-21 Euros in 2019. England were eliminated at the group stage after losing twice and their squad included Dominic Solanke and James Maddison. Like Frank, Cochrane’s track record of developing talent would have appealed to Spurs.

The other members of staff Frank is bringing to Spurs are Haslam, Newton and Andreas Georgson. They will join forces with Wells and Rob Burch who, like Cochrane, both have a long association with Spurs. Ironically, Wells was Fulham’s assistant manager when they beat Frank’s Brentford in the 2020 Championship play-off final.

Haslam is one of Frank’s most trusted allies. He spent over a decade at Brentford across two different spells and was there for the entirety of Frank’s reign. Haslam’s role covered physical performance and sports science. He would be in constant communication with Frank on a match day and suggested substitutions. He often acted as a liaison between Frank and the fourth official. He also worked with Denmark at last summer’s European Championship.

Newton was in Tranmere Rovers’ academy before being released and studying for a sports science degree at Wrexham University. During his time at university, he was registered in Wrexham’s squad but spent time out on loan with non-League sides Colwyn Bay, Witton Albion and Newtown AFC. He completed a Master’s degree in performance analysis at the University of Chester and worked for Welsh top-flight side The New Saints.

He joined Brentford as a first-team analyst in September 2019, early in Frank’s first full season in charge. He sits in the stands on a matchday and will debrief on how the team performed afterwards. He would sometimes be accompanied in the stands by Cochrane. They would be tasked with spotting anything the opposition team are doing which is different to what they expected.

Georgson spent last year as Manchester United’s set-piece coach, a role he previously held at Southampton, Arsenal and Brentford. He worked at Brentford during the 2019-20 season when they finished third in the Championship and lost the play-off final, before he was recruited by Arsenal. He also spent a year as technical director of Swedish side Malmo.

Spurs did not have a specialist set-piece coach last season but Nick Montgomery could often be seen giving players instructions from the touchline at corners and free kicks.

Frank refers to his coaching staff as his ‘SWAT team’. It is a bonus that he has been able to bring three people with him from Brentford and another former colleague in Georgson. He faces a huge challenge at Spurs but has surrounded himself with a strong group of assistants.

Top photo: Eddie Keogh/Getty Images

Tottenham’s Premier League fixtures: Full 2025-26 schedule and key dates

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Tottenham Hotspur and Thomas Frank kick off the 2025-26 season at home to newly-promoted Burnley and face a visit to Manchester City on matchday two.

Frank will be at the helm after replacing Ange Postecoglou as head coach earlier this month. That came despite Postecoglou having led the club to their first silverware — the Europa League — in 17 years.

Frank’s first competitive north London derby in charge takes place at the Emirates Stadium on November 22, with the reverse fixture at Spurs scheduled for February 21.

The Dane will face former club Brentford twice in December – at home on the 6th and in west London on the 30th.

Tottenham’s final game of the campaign is the trip to Everton’s new stadium.

Their Europa league win last season ended their trophy drought of 17 years but could not cover up their worst ever Premier League finish of 17th. Spurs will hope to move further away from the relegation zone in 2025-26 with their new manager.

Tottenham Hotspur’s 2025-26 Premier League fixtures

All times in BST/GMT

Analysis

Thomas Frank gets underway at Tottenham Hotspur in front of a home crowd against newly promoted Burnley on August 16.

The following week, Spurs travel to Manchester City (23/08) in what promises to be the Dane’s first major test.

November looks set to be a particularly tricky month for Tottenham, with a two-game home stand against Chelsea (1/11) and Manchester United (8/11) followed by a trip to local rivals Arsenal (22/11).

Spurs’ last game before Christmas will be against the champions Liverpool, while their new-year celebrations will (hopefully) kick off early against Brentford at the Gtech Community Stadium on December 30.

Perhaps Spurs’ most challenging stretch of the season will come at the end of January and into February, where they are scheduled to face City (31/01), United (07/02), Newcastle United (11/02), and Arsenal (21/02).

All four of those sides will harbour ambitions to challenge for European places next season, so this four-game stretch may prove defining in Tottenham’s drive to significantly improve on their 17th-placed finish last season and join them in the race.

For the second successive term, Spurs will finish their league season at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium. Frank will no doubt be keen to end the 2025/26 season in style against Everton (24/05).

Key dates for the 2025-26 season

The exceptional pre-Club World Cup transfer window opened on June 1 and closed nine days later on June 10.

The summer window re-opened on June 16, while the cut-off date for the 2024-25 profitability and sustainability rules (PSR) reporting period coming at the end of the month on June 30. The window closes on Monday, September 1, at 11pm BST (6pm ET).

The winter transfer window opens on Thursday, January 1, and closes on Monday, February 2.

The new Premier League season gets underway on the weekend of August 15-17, a week after the Community Shield on August 8, when league champions Liverpool face FA Cup winners Crystal Palace.

The final match round will be played on Sunday, May 24, 2026, when all 10 matches will kick off simultaneously as usual.

Premier League clubs will enter the FA Cup at the third round, which begins on Saturday, January 10. The Carabao Cup will begin in mid-August, with Premier League teams not playing in Europe entering in the second round, which starts in the week commencing August 25, and the remaining seven clubs receiving a bye to the third round, which takes place in the weeks commencing September 15 and 22.

What about the Champions League?

Spurs qualified for the Champions League after winning the Europa League last season. The 2025-26 Champions League marks the second season of the expanded format, with the 36-team competition again beginning with a league phase consisting of eight fixtures against eight different teams before the knockout stages.

The Champions League final takes place at the Puskas Arena in Budapest.

League phase draw: August 28

Matchday 1: September 16/18

Matchday 2: September 30–October 1

Matchday 3: October 21/22

Matchday 4: November 4/5

Matchday 5: November 25/26

Matchday 6: December 9/10

Matchday 7: January 20/21

Matchday 8: January 28

Knockout round play-off: February 17/18 & 24/25

Last 16: March 10/11 & 17/18

Quarter-final: April 7/8 & 14/15

Semi-final: April 28/28 & May 4/5

Final: May 30

(Photo: Justin Setterfield/Getty Images)