Manchester City
Tottenham Make Surprise Approach for Savinho as City Hold Out for High Fee
Tottenham have approached Manchester City for Savinho; City want above £50m, and refuse to sell now.

Tottenham Hotspur have approached Manchester City to enquire about a transfer for Savinho, sources say. The Brazilian winger emerged as one of Manchester City’s more effective performers during a campaign described in the draft as one of steep decline, registering eight Premier League assists in his debut season. Five of those assists were finished by Erling Haaland, with whom Savinho developed a strong on-pitch relationship.
Fabrizio Romano was the first to report Tottenham’s interest, with the club believing Savinho would be an “ideal player” for incoming manager Thomas Frank. Negotiations between the two clubs are reported to be under way. The Athletic claim a fee of around €50 million (£43.3 million, $58.2 million) is being discussed, but Manchester City are said to be opposed to a departure unless the figure climbs beyond £50 million.
The transfer context at City is a complicating factor. Pep Guardiola has overseen a summer transfer outlay in excess of £150 million, bringing in five first-team players, following on from the arrival of six new recruits in January. That recruitment has narrowed opportunities for some squad members and is described as creating a bloated squad. Guardiola’s public remarks this summer underline that view: “A lot of players should leave,” he said. He added, “New players, I don’t think so. We need a little bit less. I don’t like [lots] of players.”
There has already been movement elsewhere in the squad. Vitor Reis was offloaded to Girona six months after his mid-season arrival, while Kevin De Bruyne and Kyle Walker were both allowed to leave as they approach the winter of their careers. Against that background, Manchester City’s valuation and reluctance to sell Savinho remain central to whether Tottenham’s approach progresses to a completed deal.
Manchester City
Manchester City’s strongest XI after a busy 2025 summer window
City’s summer spend reshaped the XI around Donnarumma, Dias and Rodri’s return this season. Overview

Manchester City arrived at the September international break six points behind Liverpool despite a summer of heavy recruitment. The club completed seven signings and finished the window with a total spend of £179.5 million.
Goalkeeper depth increased markedly. Marcus Bettinelli joined as emergency cover, James Trafford returned to the Etihad, and Gianluigi Donnarumma arrived on deadline day. Donnarumma has immediately risen to the top of the pecking order. The former Paris Saint-Germain goalkeeper is not a trademark Guardiola stopper and certainly lacks the same quality of distribution as the recently departed Ederson, but he remains one of the world’s leading goalkeepers. For just £30.3 million ($40.9 million), he should easily prove one of the bargains of the summer anywhere in world football.
At right back Guardiola has alternated between Matheus Nunes and homegrown Rico Lewis. Nunes’ transformation into an all-action right back has not been particularly inspiring, and Lewis offers greater attacking support to City’s build-up play. Lewis is not yet an elite right back, but the 20-year-old’s potential makes him the favoured choice this season.
Rúben Dias signing a contract extension until 2029 was one of City’s best pieces of business. Dias’ quality and leadership remain unquestioned as he seeks to help re-energise a fragile defence. Joško Gvardiol, who has spent much of his City career at left back, is an orthodox central defender whose physical authority makes him a natural partner for Dias.
Rayan Aït-Nouri’s arrival plugs a longstanding left-back problem. The 24-year-old wing back brings attacking instincts honed at Wolverhampton Wanderers and should adapt to Guardiola’s methods.
In midfield Rodri has returned to full match fitness after his Club World Cup setback and made his first Premier League start in almost a year in the defeat to Brighton, immediately offering composure. Tijjani Reijnders impressed at the Club World Cup and on his Premier League debut at Molineux with a goal and an assist. Reijnders can set the tempo from deep and pop up in dangerous areas.
Phil Foden has shown flashes this season. Form is temporary, but class is permanent.
Rayan Cherki arrived from Lyon for £34 million ($41.1 million) and scored on his Premier League debut but will be sidelined for the next two months with a devastating injury. Omar Marmoush offers wide quality after filling in as a central striker last season. Up front Erling Haaland remains the focal point, having still found the net three times in the Premier League this term after a 34-goal return in all competitions last season.
International
Rodri names Dembélé and Vitinha as Ballon d’Or favourites, places Yamal behind them
Rodri says PSG pair Dembélé and Vitinha firmly deserve the Ballon d’Or on sporting merit over Yamal.

Manchester City midfielder Rodri has made a clear call on the Ballon d’Or discussion, identifying Paris Saint-Germain’s Ousmane Dembélé and Vitinha as his picks after a season in which PSG dominated.
Rodri’s view arrives amid a wider conversation about an open Ballon d’Or race, a contrast with years dominated by Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo. His preference, though, is unambiguous.
“The Ballon d’Or is difficult,” Rodri acknowledged. “PSG has been the team of the season, and it would be hard not to give it to someone from that team. I’m happy for [the club’s manager] Luis Enrique.
“I’d like to see it go to Lamine or Pedri, but on sporting merit, it’s Dembélé or Vitinha.”
Dembélé emerges in Rodri’s assessment as the leading candidate after a dramatic year in attack. The France international is credited with 35 goals and 16 assists across all competitions, having shifted from a career on the wing into a central striker role as PSG sought to maximise his goalscoring output.
Vitinha’s case is less about headline numbers and more about control and influence. He played a deeper, more understated role for PSG, pulling the strings in midfield, and he also contributed to Portugal’s international success by helping to steer his country to Nations League glory with what has been described as a sensational eye for a pass.
Barcelona’s Lamine Yamal is likely to attract plenty of attention and votes after establishing himself as the club’s talisman at just 18 years old, but Rodri suggested the teenager may have to wait a little longer before claiming football’s top individual prize.
Rodri’s comments underline a season in which PSG’s collective achievements have bolstered the personal cases of their standout performers.
Manchester City
Haaland Shrugs Off Bus-Door Cut and Teases Teammate After Snapchat Post
Haaland needed three stitches after a bus compartment door struck his lip; he then poked fun again.

Erling Haaland required three stitches to his lip after a luggage compartment door struck him as he left the Norway team coach, and he turned the incident into light-hearted social media banter. The Manchester City striker posted the extent of the damage on Snapchat and did not hide his amusement.
“Just got banged out by a bus door. 3 stitches,” Haaland laughed on Snapchat. The message prompted a stream of comments, including sceptical followers who questioned whether a bus door was truly at fault. Haaland encouraged responses by asking for “wrong answers only”, inviting playful speculation.
One user suggested Arsenal midfielder and Norway captain Martin Ødegaard. Haaland seized the opportunity to poke fun at his long-time teammate and replied: “Correct,” which drew more amusement from his followers.
Beyond the jokes, the factual context is straightforward. Norway sit top of their World Cup qualification group with four wins from as many games and travel to face a Moldova side still searching for their first point. Haaland scored in Norway’s 5–0 win over Moldova in March and arrives at Tuesday’s fixture in strong form, having netted four goals in four games across all competitions for club and country this season.
City and country remain the backdrop to the story: a brief, peculiar injury, a public grin on social media, and a reminder of Haaland’s ongoing scoring form. The incident drew attention because of the unusual cause and Haaland’s readiness to treat it as a moment of humour rather than a setback. On the field, his record this season suggests he will be central to Norway’s hopes as they seek to maintain their perfect qualifying record.