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Liverpool PULL THE PLUG on Andy Robertson's Tottenham transfer: Reds send message to Spurs amid fears over their options in defence

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Liverpool PULL THE PLUG on Andy Robertson's Tottenham transfer: Reds send message to Spurs amid fears over their options in defence - Daily Mail
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Liverpool have decided against selling Andy Robertson this month due to their defensive injury crisis.

Tottenham were in advanced talks to buy the Scotland captain for around £5million but the Premier League champions have pulled the plug on the deal.

As of Friday, any move would have been sanctioned in the best interests of both player and club.

Given more injuries occurred in Saturday’s 3-2 defeat at Bournemouth, with Joe Gomez limping off in the first half, the Reds thought it was no longer a sensible move to allow their vice-captain to depart this month.

Robertson, it is believed, acted with the utmost professionalism throughout. His contract expires in the summer and a future move to Tottenham cannot be ruled out as he liked the project they were offering.

AS Roma director Ricky Massara said on Sunday that they had held talks with Liverpool over the English side recalling Kostas Tsimikas from a loan in Italy.

It remains to be seen whether that is completely ruled out now but, having taken stock of all options, Robertson is set to stay on Merseyside this month.

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Tottenham 2-0 Borussia Dortmund: Spurs fizz with energy and finally cut loose in attack to see off 10-man visitors and offer beleaguered Thomas Frank lifeline

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Tottenham 2-0 Borussia Dortmund: Spurs fizz with energy and finally cut loose in attack to see off 10-man visitors and offer beleaguered Thomas Frank lifeline - Daily Mail
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After the toxic meltdown of Saturday’s defeat at the hands of West Ham, there were very few who descended upon Tottenham’s home expecting to feast upon these heady thrills.

Most had come to issue Thomas Frank his last rites. Not the smelling salts of an exhilarating first-half display of attacking freedom against the second-best team in Germany.

But Spurs finally cut loose, threw caution to the wind. They even dared to a do a little. And they were rewarded with a huge swing of good fortune with a soft red card leaving Borussia Dortmund to play with 10 men for more than an hour and a flukey finish by Dominic Solanke for the second goal.

It may transpire that victory proves too little too late for the beleaguered Dane.

Perhaps his daring act of escapology should have begun before his safety net was removed.

Here though, belatedly, was an occasion for him to savour as Spurs boss and his team are well set for the top eight and a place in the last 16 of the Champions League with only one tie remaining in the league phase, at Eintracht Frankfurt next week.

Based on Ange Postecoglou’s triumph in the Europa League last season, Frank can argue that he deserves the chance to see this campaign through to its end.

Although this will depend on domestic form. Spurs will have to pick up this performance and transplant it into the Premier League, starting at Burnley on Saturday.

In accordance with the post West Ham defeat end-of-days atmosphere, Frank filled in a team sheet featuring his last 11 fit and available senior outfield players.

The pinch point of years of terrible recruitment, lost continuity and poor planning, together on one team sheet, with 13 players unavailable. Some injured and Micky van de Ven suspended but with fit players ineligible including Mathys Tel, who the Spurs boss admitted he would have liked to have started.

It came down to a straight choice between Tel and Dominic Solanke, and he went with the England centre forward who has played a total of 84 minutes this season and has not started a game since May.

Also back in the starting line-up was Destiny Udogie, playing his first football for six weeks, and Xavi Simons, who suffered a heavy knock in the defeat against West Ham on Saturday, when the mood turned toxic inside the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium.

Frank patched up his team with Djed Spence at left wing back, with freedom to pour forward and leave Udogie to slide over from the left side of the back three and convert to an orthodox back four.

Spence caused all manner of early problems for the visitors and Romero’s opener in the 14th minute came via a corner forced by one of his raids down the left.

Pedro Porro took it and Serhou Guirassy failed to clear. Wilson Odobert collected the high ball at the second attempt and crossed for Romero to cut a shot low into the net from seven yards.

Irrespective of the formation, it was the urgency and bristling sense of purpose that made this opening spell so distinct from anything else seen recently from Frank’s team, chances from open play galore.

Spurs fizzed with energy. Spence, Simons and Odobert were inspired, demanding the ball and driving forward. There were Ange Ball flashbacks with defenders appearing in the front line, seemingly at random.

Dortmund wobbled as if it was the last thing they had anticipated and fortune favoured the brave.

First, Gugliemlo Vicario escaped a clumsy turn in his own goal area, before the team second in the German Bundesliga suffered a further set back with Daniel Svensson sent off before the half hour.

It was a soft red card. Svensson landed in trouble with a heavy touch, stretched for the ball, toed and caught Odobert as the Spurs winger raced in to try and nick possession. There was no force in the tackle.

If anything, Odobert sprinted into Svensson’s extended leg, but the still image looked worse than it was, as it always does. Referee Glenn Nyberg was sent to his monitor by the VAR and returned to flash a red card at his fellow Swede.

Frank used the numerical advantage to let Spence focus on his forward duties. The second Spurs goal summed up the first half. Odobert made another brilliant dart down the right and Solanke misjudged his low cross.

Somehow the ball ricocheted from his right foot onto the heel of his left, back onto his right foot and spun across the line via a post. Untidy to say the least but Solanke’s first goal of the season and he did not care about aesthetics.

Two half-time changes by Niko Kovac improved Dortmund and Spurs lost the impetus they had after the restart. Frank, an unobtrusive figure in the first 45 minutes, tried to cajole and bring them back to the boil.

Nerves crept into the occasion. Lucas Bergvall succumbed to injury, replaced by 17-year-old Jun’Ai Byfield making his debut at right wing back with Porro shuffling into midfield.

Spurs had enough and might have scored more in the closing phase, when Randal Kolo Muani was clean through and failed to beat the goalkeeper, but they had enough to win the game. Enough to change the mood. To save the boss? That remains to be seen.

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Tottenham vs Borussia Dortmund - Champions League LIVE: Latest score and updates on big night for Thomas Frank as Inter face Arsenal after Man City's shock defeat

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Tottenham vs Borussia Dortmund - Champions League LIVE: Latest score and updates on big night for Thomas... - Daily Mail
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And Gabriel Jesus has put Arsenal ahead again!

Remarkably, it's their 19th goal from a corner this season. Trossard was at the back post and headed it back across goal, where Jesus was waiting unmarked to butt it in.

He hasn't lost any of his instinct, has he?

If Diogo Dalot’s challenge on Antoine Semenyo was not a red card offence on Saturday in the Manchester derby then neither was this.

Daniel Svensson dangles his foot in the air here and Wilson Odobert kind of runs on to it.

No force, no danger, no intent. It’s just never a red card tacke.

Once again we come back to that maddening word when it comes to referees. Consistency.

A huge chance for Inter. Thuram was off balance and leaning back and swung a shot over the bar. He was only a few yards out!

In the other game, Porro is close at the back post and leans out to try and kick it! It would have been a tricky one to reach. it saisl beyond him.

Dortmund wing-back Svensson has been sent off for a high challenge on Odobert.

Studs up, straight leg, above ankle height (though on the inside of the leg), very little effort to bring it down. He was initially given a yellow but now he's off.

The 23-year-old isn't even complaining.

What was Vicario doing there? The Spurs goalie panicked after receiving a back pass and booted it out for a throw.

That all came from a ridiculous situation where Spurs almost let Adeyemi get one-on-one after a long goal kick. Too easy to carve them open.

There was some conjecture before kick-off as to where Djed Spence would play.

To me he is playing as a quite obvious left wing back and has been his team’s most dangerous player so far.

Twice he has caused trouble dashing down the flank and it was from his second foray that Spurs won the corner from which they scored.

And Inter are already level!

It was a bit of a defensive caalmity for Arsenal as they failed to get the ball clear and Sucic just smashed it into the roof of the net. No chance for Raya.

A rapid counter from Tottenham, but the cross was a bit weak and Svensson puts it out for a corner ahead of Xavi Simons.

Spurs have the pace about them but need the end product. So far, though, it has been an encouraging start.

Spence has done brilliantly so far, playing on either side, and just bulldozed through two men before falling.

Tottenham have been looking to pick apart Dortmund with long balls, either down the flank or across the field, and it's had mixed success so far.

Destiny Udogie is playing left-wing and had the chance to run at his opposite nuber after receiving a cross-field ball but went backwards instead.

The travelling fans are very loud - you'd think they had brought the entire yellow wall with them!

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Why Thomas Frank lives to fight another day: Spurs chiefs desperate not to repeat past errors, the power lunch that reassured the boss and the one thing he's asking supporters to do

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Why Thomas Frank lives to fight another day at Tottenham - Daily Mail
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Not sacked in the morning as the South Stand choir had recommended. Nor the morning after as it turned out and Thomas Frank summoned his brightest demeanour as he led a depleted squad from Tottenham’s training centre.

'Very good, actually,' he said in response to enquiries about his wellbeing as he stepped onto the grass. 'The sun is shining and we’re playing football.'

To be honest, the sunshine was scarce. And there has been very little football to savour in these parts of late. But the morning drizzle had finally ceased. And the beleaguered Dane was clinging to his job despite swirling uncertainty since the latest defeat.

The Spurs board have taken a determined stance this season to stand by Frank, conscious that problems run far deeper than the identity of the head coach and will only be overcome by an extended period of stability.

'At some point, the club needs to stick to something,' as Ange Postecoglou said last year while fighting in vain to keep the job Frank is now fighting to keep.

Spurs supporters, however, turned the mood toxic inside the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium after the late winner scored by West Ham on Saturday and the club’s new regime spent the rest of the weekend wavering, considering options before three of them descended for lunch with the head coach yesterday.

There were no assurances on offer about Frank’s long-term job security from chief executive Vinai Venkatesham, sporting director Johan Lange or Nick Beucher, influential son-in-law of the club’s co-owner Vivienne Lewis. And he was not expecting any. But he lives to fight another day.

'I haven’t heard any situation like that in football where they say, "Hey, mate, if you win tomorrow, no problem, and if you lose tomorrow, no problem",' said Frank. 'We had a good conversation about life and football, the future of the club, everything normal, like you do.

'Of course, there’s a little bit of stormy weather out there. I just think it’s an extremely good sign, because normally people are running away if there’s bad news or bad weather coming, they’re normally not coming in and being friendly for lunch.'

Whether this turns out to be the ultimate show of faith from a board under fire or a club simply paralysed by fear remains to be seen.

There is a certainly a school of thought within Spurs that to sack Frank and his coaching staff would further destabilise a wildly unstable environment, making matters worse and potentially tipping them into a full-scale relegation crisis.

The chairman, the head coach and his coaching team, the captain, one of the two sporting directors, the head of football operations and more executive figures have all been changed in the last 12 months.

After years of poor recruitment, there is major surgery required on the squad and Frank claims small signs of progress he detected in recent weeks have been nullified by twists of ill fortune.

Ben Davies is the latest ruled out by serious injury. Davies has had surgery after breaking his left ankle against West Ham on Saturday. Others absent through injury against Borussia Dortmund are Joao Palhinha, Richarlison, Rodrigo Bentancur, Mohammed Kudus, Dejan Kulusevski and James Maddison.

Pape Matar Sarr is on his way back from international duty and Micky van de Ven is suspended from a yellow card in the previous Champions League outing against Slavia Prague.

Radu Dragusin, Yves Bissouma and Mathys Tel are omitted from the UEFA squad and new signing Conor Gallagher cannot be registered until the end of the league phase.

Archie Gray and Xavi Simons, who took knocks against West Ham, are among the 11 outfield players declared fit and playing despite pain. Dominic Solanke, who has not started a game since May, is another.

Frank hit out at the tackle by Jarrod Bowen on Simons which, he said, was far worse than the one by Simons on Virgil van Dijk, which earned him a red card and a three-match ban.

'That was a bad tackle from Bowen,' said the Spurs boss. 'Not that Bowen is a bad guy and would do anything intentional, but a bad tackle from behind that injured his ankle.

'He has a swollen ankle, but he is strong mentally and will play through pain so big credit to Xavi. I can’t understand why that isn’t a red card when a red card is given when he accidentally put his foot on Van Dijk.'

It all feeds into the notion that fate is conspiring against Frank, and he urged Spurs fans to get behind his team against Borussia Dortmund, currently second in the Bundesliga.

'We have 11 outfield players available and maybe three who need a massive push to get through 90 minutes,' he said. 'We need everyone to support us. We want them to support us from minute one. All of us. Especially the team. Especially the players. Especially if it’s not going too well.

'We need them to support us. Because if we do get that support everything can happen. Magic can happen.'

With 11 points from their six Champions League fixtures, Spurs are well set for the knock-out rounds. They could feasibly qualify without a point tonight or next week at Eintracht Frankfurt.

In the Premier League though, there is an awkward trip to Burnley looming on Saturday before a daunting quartet of games against Manchester City, Manchester United, Newcastle and Arsenal.

This is where Frank needs some magic because if his team cannot start winning the crescendo of dissent will reach the point where it is too loud to ignore.

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Tottenham AXE £30m signing from their Champions League squad for the SECOND time, just seven months after buying him, in brutal blow from under-fire Thomas Frank

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Tottenham AXE £30m signing from their Champions League squad for the SECOND time, just seven months after buying him, in brutal blow from under-fire Thomas Frank - Daily Mail
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Mathys Tel has been dropped from Tottenham's Champions League squad for a second time this season, Thomas Frank confirmed in a press conference on Monday.

The £30million summer signing from Bayern Munich just seven months ago, was informed that he will not be selected for European action in the second half of the season by his manager, in favour of Dominic Solanke.

The French international had previously been left out of the initial squad for Europe in September in a first blow.

But following an injury to Solanke, Spurs were able to exploit a loophole in Uefa's regulations to bring the player in.

During his brief stint in Champions League action, Tel played 32 minutes for his side during their 3-0 win versus Slavia Prague.

But Tel will have no place in either of Spurs' final two league phase games, against Borussia Dortmund and Eintracht Frankfurt, this season.

Solanke - who has battled issues with an ankle issue since the start of the campaign - managed minutes from the bench in defeats to Aston Villa and West Ham in the FA Cup and Premier League respectively this month.

Frank admitted that he was disappointed that Tel had to be let go to accomodate Solanke in his previous place, and stressed that the player might have been in with a chance of starting.

'It never rains but it pours,' Frank added of Spurs' injury issues, while confirming that Joao Palhinha will be unavailable to face Dortmund.

Tel first moved to Tottenham as a loanee player a year ago, but as his fortunes continue to dip at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, the forward may yet be allowed to go on loan this month.

Frank's own position at the club appears equally, if not more perilous than his players, with the manager speaking to the media ahead of his side's Dortmund clash amid roiling speculation of his departure.

Spurs' woeful defeat to Premier League strugglers West Ham came against the backdrop of a toxic atmosphere at home, with Frank and his players greeted by fan protests before kick-off, and a chorus of boos after the final whistle.

Daily Mail Sport reported on Sunday that the club's hierarchy were considering a change in manager, despite previous will for the Danish manager to reverse the club's fortunes, but an immediate announcement is not thought to be forthcoming.

Club bosses are thought to have concerns over the lack of possible candidates to replace Frank should he be given his marching orders this month, with the likes of Xabi Alonso, former manager Mauricio Pochettino and Bournemouth's Andoni Iraola unlikely to be on the market until the summer

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Chelsea vs Brentford - Premier League RECAP: Latest score, team news and updates as Callum Wilson's stoppage-time goal gives West Ham victory over Tottenham, while Chelsea beat Brentford and Liverpool

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Chelsea vs Brentford - Premier League RECAP: Latest score, team news and updates as Callum Wilson's... - Daily Mail
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And with that, I must bid you all adieu.

As ever, it was a pleasure to cover the Premier League's afternoon madness with the company of you all.

I suspect we'll discover the true repercussions for Thomas Frank in the coming days but, for all you West Ham fans out there, savour this moment!

There was no shortage of drama and talking points across all of the games, and the good news is - it's not over!

Not only can you join my colleague Harry Bamforth's coverage of Nottingham Forest vs Arsenal at the City Ground right now, there's also more to come tomorrow!

So, thank you very much for joining me and, until next time, take care!

I'd certainly be surprised if discussions around Thomas Frank's future aren't held by the Spurs hierarchy in the coming days.

They're out of the EFL Cup, the FA Cup, and are sitting in 14th place in the Premier League. It has been absolutely dire.

But who could replace Frank if he's given the bullet? TalkSPORT Bet, who offer the latest next manager odds, have sent over the latest favourites to take the Spurs job.

Here are the top 10:

Oliver Glasner 2/1

Mauricio Pochettino 4/1

Xabi Alonso 4/1

Marco Silva 6/1

Enzo Maresca 8/1

Ruben Amorim 10/1

Jurgen Klopp 12/1

Robert De Zerbi 12/1

Xavi Hernandez 14/1

Robbie Keane 14/1

West Ham striker Callum Wilson has been speaking after his winning goal against Spurs.

Just before we get into his comments, I do wonder how much that will affect his future. Perhaps it'll prove to be the best way he could've bowed out of the Hammers.

Anyway, here's what he had to say:

It's massive today, the boys played fantastic. I think we deserved to be in front on the whole, especially with the chances we had first half. It wasn't to be, but thankfully we ended up getting the three points.

On being brought on in the final exchanges to score a goal, he said:

You get put on to do a job, no matter if that's five minutes or 50. Throughout my career I've always tried to be professional, and I did that today.

On his goal and the shouts from Spurs 'keeper Vicario for a foul, he said:

"It was checked and cleared, harmless really. Sometimes goalkeepers get too much love and you can't touch them, but the other way round they can shove you. It's a contact sport.

My goodness, this season just doesn't stop throwing up absolute doozies, does it?

Spurs fans, I want to hear from you. Are we Thomas Frank out at this stage? It certainly sounded that way inside the stadium.

It was also another disappointing afternoon for Liverpool, who were expected to absolutely blow Burnley away today. Arne Slot may want to send Frank a thank you card for sparing his blushes.

For Liam Rosenior, too, it was a pretty interesting 90 minutes. Brentford should have possibly scored four or five today but at the end of the day... they didn't, and Rosenior has his first three league points on the board, putting them in sixth.

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What Spurs (and Thomas Frank) can expect from Johnny Heitinga: Why Liverpool players adored him and the crucial role he played in Premier League title, the lessons he learned from failing at Ajax and

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What Spurs can expect from 'super talented' Johnny Heitinga - Daily Mail
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'Aqui, aqui' came the order from the manager as he loudly summoned Darwin Nunez over in Spanish.

A kiss on the cheek, a pat on the bum and a tactical debrief later, the Uruguayan was back on his way with a beaming smile and soon he was charging around the Anfield pitch in his usual style – like a golden retriever chasing a bouncing ball.

The manager was Johnny Heitinga, leading Liverpool that day as Arne Slot and fellow assistant Sipke Hulshoff were both suspended for letting tempers get the better of them in a Merseyside derby that descended into chaos the week before.

And this episode was just one of many that highlight how Heitinga, who this week joined Thomas Frank’s backroom team at Tottenham on a two-and-a-half-year deal, quickly finds a friendly relationship with all players. Down with the kids, some may say.

Indeed, ask any Liverpool player and they only have good things to say about the 42-year-old coach, who worked under Slot and was credited with playing a major role in their Premier League title triumph last year.

‘John has been a really big help,’ said Ryan Gravenberch, perhaps his biggest success story. In an interview back in May, the Dutchman – who first met Heitinga at Ajax – detailed how the coach was his ‘mentor’ who helped him turn from a box-to-box midfielder into a No 6.

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Hours and hours were spent in the analysis room studying clips and improving, eventually moulding Gravenberch into the Premier League young player of the season. The campaign before, the midfielder barely had a sniff of a starting berth.

Young defender Jarell Quansah added: ‘I can always lean into him (Heitinga). He was a centre back with a great career so I can always pick his brains. He often comes to me too, maybe I am trying to do stuff by myself but he will come to me and show me clips, help me find a positive.’

Heitinga was excellent in the one-to-one tutoring of players and spent hours each week showing clips to stars to help them improve. Like a school teacher, he would always find things to work on – but sandwich that with positives to make the player grow in confidence.

His grasp of several languages helped Slot and Co get their message across, with Heitinga particularly influential in Luis Diaz’s transformation from a winger to a goal-scoring No 9.

Spurs, with just two league wins in their last 12, need all the help they can get right now but Heitinga could be just the tonic to help Frank rescue the situation in north London.

Despite Slot’s attempts to make him stay for one more year, the Reds head coach knew Heitinga simply could not turn down the chance to manage Ajax when the opportunity arose this summer – so the former Everton defender went to the Amsterdam club.

It did not work out, though. Dutch sources say that was because he is a top-class coach who thrives on the training ground but maybe struggles with the day-to-day stress of being the manager, with all the other duties it entails, such as dealing with the media.

‘His dismissal from Ajax was, of course, a huge blow for a club boy like him,’ Rob Jansen, his agent, explains. ‘But there are two types of coaches. The coach who is knocked out and stays down. And the coach who shakes his head twice, learns from the past and continues with extra baggage. John clearly belongs to the latter group. That doesn't take away from the pain, though.

‘It's old news that many others and I asked John whether it was wise to rejoin Ajax. But his love for Ajax is so great that he did it anyway. In hindsight, it was an almost impossible task, because the problems at that club run so deep that no one could have succeeded.'

Frank, who demonstrated he is a top-class manager at Brentford, may lack some traits that Heitinga brings, such as how he instantly commands respect with players. He also speaks fluent Spanish, owing to his stint playing at Atletico Madrid.

With 87 caps to his name, the 2010 World Cup runner-up has played under many top managers such as Louis van Gaal and alongside some Dutch greats. He believes in the typical Ajax style of play, with some modern tweaks.

After retiring from playing, he linked up with his former Everton boss David Moyes at West Ham and the Scottish manager has previously spoken extremely highly of his coaching style.

He is respected across Merseyside and, speaking on Friday, Slot said: 'Johnny, on a personal level, is a great human being with a lovely family. His input last season was very important for us.'

Heitinga married into a sporting family. His wife, Charlotte, is the sister of former Liverpool and Chelsea winger Bolo Zenden, while their father Pierre is a former judoka and is central to Dutch TV coverage of martial arts, covering nine Olympic Games for state broadcaster NOS.

Before Frank - who initally contacted Heitinga about the move in December - phoned him to ask him to join, he had been approached for several other jobs. Championship side West Brom held an interest in appointing him as first-team manager. Spurs and Frank believe Heitinga adds something they are lacking.

Given the Danish boss is under pressure at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, some wonder if Heitinga is making a move to be the eventual successor. But a well-placed source in the Netherlands insists: ‘No chance, he is not doing as we say here, “Sawing the legs from under the chair”.’

Heitinga had strong references from outside Spurs, like Frank’s good friend Moyes. It is understood Frank spoke to the Everton boss to gauge his opinion of Heitinga, and Moyes said yesterday: ‘He is very good. Johnny is a good coach and a good boy, I wish him well.’ Tottenham goalkeeper coach Fabian Otte has also worked with him before, at Liverpool.

Micky van de Ven, who shares an agent with Gravenberch, may have heard good things – while fellow Dutchman Xavi Simons will be well aware of Heitinga, too.

But the best reference probably comes from title-winning manager Slot, who said last season: ‘I couldn't have wished for more from John. If I say "very talented" I do not rate him high enough because he is more than that already.

‘He's still young but grew into our staff from the start in a very good manner. He has the same idea about football - that is also why I chose him to come to us. But the way he is with the boys is very positive. Almost all the things we do, we do together.’

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Forgotten Tottenham forward wanted by Brazilian club linked to Man City

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Forgotten Tottenham forward wanted by Brazilian club linked to Man City - Daily Mail
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Tottenham misfit Alejo Veliz is wanted by Manchester City’s Brazilian club Bahia.

Veliz is back in his native Argentina, on loan at Rosario Central, the club from which Spurs signed him in the summer of 2023.

The 22-year-old striker was among world football’s most in-demand teenagers at the time having caught the eye with three goals at the Under 20 World Cup finals in Argentina.

But his career has not progressed as hoped in London. He has scored once, in a defeat at Brighton in two years ago, one of only eight Premier League appearances, all made from the bench.

Ange Postecoglou and the technical staff decided to send him on loan to Seville for the second half of his first season in Europe and he returned to Spain for the whole of last season on loan at Espanyol.

The goals have started to flow for him once again since moving back to Rosario and attracted interest from Bahia, which has been part of the City Football Group for the last three years.

Spurs are interested in a deal. They are in the process of what is shaping up like a mid-season exodus as if clearing the decks for a recruitment drive.

Veliz has three more years on his contract but no future at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium.

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Tottenham sign Conor Gallagher in £34.6m deal - as he risks infuriating fans of his boyhood club Chelsea with unveiling comments

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Tottenham sign Conor Gallagher in £34.6m deal - as he risks infuriating fans of his boyhood club Chelsea with unveiling comments - Daily Mail
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Tottenham have completed the signing of Conor Gallagher from Atletico Madrid - with the Chelsea youth product today declaring picking Spurs was 'very easy'.

Gallagher, 25, arrives at Spurs in a £34.6million deal after they saw off rival interest from Aston Villa to capture the midfielder.

At one point Villa, 16 points ahead of Tottenham in the Premier League, had looked to be in pole position to sign Gallagher but he has instead signed for Chelsea's great rivals.

But despite his personal history in West London - and hero status as captain before he left for LaLiga - the English midfielder had little trouble picking Spurs for his January transfer.

'I'm so happy and excited to be here, taking the next step in my career at an amazing club,' Gallagher said.

'I wanted to be a Spurs player and thankfully the Club felt the same. It was very easy, it happened very quickly and I'm ready to get on the pitch.

'I know how great the fans are, I'm really happy to be a part of it here and want to create special moments and memories together.'

Gallagher, who posed with his beloved dog Freddy in a Spurs kit in his unveiling photos, made 95 senior appearances for Chelsea, scoring 10 times for the Blues.

He had taken the armband in much of his final season at the club due to injuries to Chelsea captain Reece James.

When Gallagher left for Atletico, Chelsea declared 'you will forever be a blue'.

Gallagher made 77 appearances for the LaLiga giants, scoring seven goals and providing seven assists.

Spurs boss Thomas Frank added: 'Conor is a top midfielder, who we have worked tirelessly to add to our squad.

'He is still young, so has plenty of room for improvement, but also has huge experience across the Premier League, La Liga and with the England national team.

'Conor has captained teams so will bring leadership, maturity, character and personality to our dressing room, while his running power, pressing ability and eye for goal will strengthen us in a key area of the pitch.

'I'm excited about working with him every day and I know the fans will love what he will bring to the team.'

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Conor Gallagher set to fly to England ahead of Tottenham medical TODAY after they steal march on Aston Villa in £34.7m move

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Conor Gallagher set to fly to England ahead of Tottenham medical TODAY after they steal march on Aston Villa in £34.7m move - Daily Mail
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Conor Gallagher is set to fly to England this morning ahead of a medical with Tottenham later today.

The midfielder is poised to complete a £34.7million move to Spurs from Atletico Madrid although he is yet to agree to formality of personal terms.

Tottenham have stolen a march on Aston Villa, who had proposed a loan with an obligation to buy.

Gallagher's camp are keen to have the deal done before Atletico's Copa del Rey last-16 clash at Deportivo La Coruna on Tuesday evening.

Spurs entered the market for a midfielder after it emerged that Rodrigo Bentancur will miss most of the season with a hamstring injury he sustained in last week's 3-2 Premier League loss at Bournemouth.

The 28-year-old's absence leaves Spurs very short in central midfield, with Lucas Bergvall also currently injured, and there is no timeframe on his return yet.

James Maddison ruptured his anterior cruciate ligament in pre-season and Dejan Kulusevski is another long-term absentee with a knee injury, which he suffered in April.

Manager Thomas Frank said last week that the club should know in three to four weeks when Kulusevski will be fit to return.

Tottenham did initially ask Atletico about a straight loan deal but were told that was not on the table.

Games are coming thick and fast for Spurs, who face midweek matches in three of the next four weeks in addition to a fixture each weekend.

They are back in action against West Ham United on Saturday in the Premier League before travelling to Dortmund for a Champions League clash a week on Tuesday.

Gallagher only joined Diego Simeone's side in August 2024 in a £34m deal, leaving behind Chelsea, where he had been since the age of eight.

He had a successful first season in the Spanish capital but has been more of a bit-part player this campaign, having to be content with coming off the bench more often.

Source