Tottenham will not sell Khan to a Premier League club

Tottenham will not sell Khan to a Premier League club

London based Tottenham striker and captain Harry Kane, despite rumors of a move to Manchester United, is unlikely to leave this summer, according to the BBC. If there is a transfer in the next transfer deadline, however, the Spurs should want to avoid selling to any of the rivals from the domestic championship.

“Tottenham Hotspur does not intend to allow striker Harry Khan, who would not sell it to any of its domestic rivals, this summer,” they wrote on the BBC’s BBC public website. Harry Kane has signed a new six-year contract with Tottenham in 2018, and in a few recent statements, the 26-year-old England national has at least a little doubt that he will stay so long in his native North London.

After saying he would not “stay at any cost” at the club, information has also emerged that club president Daniel Levy, who is known as one of the toughest negotiators in the football world, would be ready to sell for around £ 200 million (€ 228.6 million). Ever since his spurs in the Spurs, where he has established himself as one of the most efficient and desirable midfielders in the world, he has been linked with a move to Manchester United.

The compensation should be record

Levy was also among the first Premier League club presidents to speak publicly that people should “wake up” and “be aware of the magnitude of the crisis” caused by the pandemic of the new coronavirus. Tottenham sent more employees on hold shortly after all competitions ceased, and due to financial concerns (Spurs invested huge amounts of money in the construction of the new stadium), Khan’s transfer was at least a little more likely than before the crisis.

“Levy would turn the green light on Khan’s sale if the offer reached the world record of £ 200m paid by Paris Saint-Germain to Barcelona to buy Brazilian striker Neymar in 2017,” the BBC adds, but warns that before the leak opens Due to the current situation across Europe, it is difficult to predict what kind of “financial headache” awaits the biggest clubs of the old continent in the summer.