Premier League
Daniel Levy leaves Tottenham after 25 years: commerce, compromise and a conflicted legacy
Levy leaves Spurs after 25 years: built commercial power, won two trophies, left divided fans still.

Chick King. Beavertown. “We want Levy Out!” Those refrains and the rush for the train home were fixtures of matchday life in N17 as Daniel Levy’s near-25-year stewardship came to an end.
Levy arrived alongside the ENIC Group in 2001 when the club was valued at around £80 million. The chairman’s commercial acumen transformed that position. In May 2025 Spurs were rated the ninth most valuable club in the world at £2.6 billion by Forbes and were generating over £500 million in annual revenue. At 63, Levy departs having overseen a financial and infrastructural rebuild that altered the club’s scale.
Yet the record on the pitch divided opinion. During his tenure Tottenham lifted just two pieces of silverware, including last season’s Europa League, won in Bilbao with a 1–0 victory over Manchester United. There is a clear contrast between Levy the businessman and Levy the football operator.
Transfermarkt records that only six clubs have posted a greater net spend in European football since ENIC took over, but the chairman’s strict wage framework often steered recruitment toward emerging talent rather than established stars. That pattern showed in key moments. Midway through 2011–12, Harry Redknapp’s side were in title contention but transfer targets such as Álvaro Negredo, Fernando Llorente and Giuseppe Rossi did not materialise; instead Louis Saha arrived and Ryan Nelsen was signed to cover William Gallas’s injury. Spurs finished fourth but missed Champions League qualification after Chelsea’s triumph in Munich.
The Gareth Bale era yielded funds that produced Christian Eriksen and Erik Lamela among seven arrivals. Mauricio Pochettino later galvanised the squad, which finished the final season at White Hart Lane unbeaten and then endured almost two full campaigns at Wembley. The debt from the stadium project contributed to a summer of 2018 with no incoming players.
Post-Pochettino, José Mourinho and Antonio Conte brought brief highs but no trophies. Ange Postecoglou, the 13th manager under Levy, delivered the Europa League yet was dismissed two weeks after the 1–0 win over Manchester United. Levy’s exit came amid a wider ENIC restructure and questions about the club’s poorest league campaign in almost 50 years. Supporters largely celebrated his departure, even as the structures he put in place leave Spurs a supergiant waiting to explode, for better or worse.
Bayern Munich
Agent: Liverpool Called Ekitiké After Agreement Reached with Eintracht and Newcastle
Agent Ali Barat says Liverpool called Hugo Ekitiké after a deal with Eintracht and Newcastle Anfield.

An agent involved in the negotiations surrounding Hugo Ekitiké says the striker was set to join Newcastle United before Liverpool intervened.
Ali Barat, who says he worked on behalf of Eintracht Frankfurt, described a process he considered complete until a late contact from Liverpool changed the outcome. “I was working on behalf of Eintracht Frankfurt to bring him to Newcastle ,” Barat told Tuttosport . “I stayed in Germany for 10 days. We agreed everything with the German club and the player, then Liverpool called him and he chose Anfield.” Barat added that the Reds were only hours away from missing out on the French forward, and that Isak would ultimately end up at Anfield as well.
The Ekitiké story was not isolated. Florian Wirtz rejected an expected move to Bayern Munich and instead completed a £116 million ($156.6 million) transfer to Anfield, according to the report. Bayern honorary president Uli Hoeneß spoke on Doppelpass about his club’s business and took aim at rivals over several signings.
Hoeneß referenced Newcastle’s spending on Nick Woltemade, accusing them of using “Monopoly money” to secure that signature, and then turned his attention to the Wirtz deal. “We’re very satisfied at FC Bayern,”” Hoeneß began. “We are the real winners of the summer transfer window. We have a strong team and didn’t need to strengthen it much.
“Of course, we would have liked to have Florian Wirtz, but we’d never have bought him for €150 million.”
The account from Barat reinforces how quickly transfer situations can change when multiple clubs engage late in negotiations. In this case, what Barat describes as an almost-finalised agreement with Eintracht and Newcastle was overturned when Liverpool made a late approach and the player opted for Anfield.
Tottenham Hotspur
Tottenham and ENIC Dismiss Takeover Approaches After Levy Leaves
Tottenham and ENIC reject approaches after Daniel Levy’s departure, saying the club is not for sale.

Tottenham Hotspur have publicly rejected suggestions the club could be up for sale following the departure of chairman Daniel Levy. Levy’s exit prompted speculation over the club’s long-term ownership and several media reports of potential takeover interest.
Reports identified approaches from a group led by Amanda Staveley and from a Chinese consortium fronted by Dr Roger Kennedy and Wing-Fai Ng. Coverage also said ENIC, the majority owner, had been contacted about selling its 87% stake in the club. The Telegraph report the proposals were made after Levy’s exit was formalised.
The club and its majority shareholder responded with a firm denial of any intention to consider offers. The official statement was published in full and reads:
“The Board of Tottenham Hotspur Limited is aware of recent media speculation and confirms that its majority shareholder, ENIC Sports & Developments Holdings Ltd, has received, and unequivocally rejected, separate preliminary expressions of interest in relation to proposals to acquire the entire issued, and to be issued, share capital of ENIC from (i) PCP International Finance Limited; and (ii) a consortium of investors led by Dr. Roger Kennedy and Wing-Fai Ng through Firehawk Holdings Limited,” a statement read.
“As a consequence of ENIC’s majority ownership interest in Tottenham Hotspur, were any offer made to acquire ENIC and complete, a mandatory offer would be required under Rule 9 of the Code to acquire the shares of Tottenham Hotspur not already held by ENIC.
“The Board of the Club and ENIC confirm that Tottenham Hotspur is not for sale and ENIC has no intention to accept any such offer to acquire its interest in the Club.”
Having now been named as interested parties, Staveley’s group are expected to release a statement confirming they will not place a formal bid. The club’s response leaves ENIC as the confirmed long-term majority owner and closes the door on reported approaches that followed Levy’s departure.
Crystal Palace
Liverpool to Wait Until Summer for Marc Guéhi as Konaté Contract Talks Stall
Liverpool will not pursue Marc Guéhi in January amid Ibrahima Konaté contract uncertainty. They wait

Liverpool have decided not to reopen talks to sign Crystal Palace centre back Marc Guéhi in January, sources say, even as uncertainty surrounds Ibrahima Konaté’s future at Anfield. Guéhi is in the final year of his contract and is not expected to sign a new deal with Palace. His club’s decision to block a previous move to Liverpool is believed to have left him frustrated.
Overseas clubs can approach Guéhi over a free transfer from January, with Barcelona and Real Madrid among the clubs touted as potential suitors. If Liverpool were to pursue him in the winter window they would again need to agree a fee with Palace, but The Times report that Liverpool have ruled out paying a transfer fee for a player who wants to join and is approaching the end of his contract. The club are said to prefer waiting until the summer to try to sign Guéhi on a free transfer.
The Telegraph add that within Anfield there is a sense some of the external speculation is aimed at pressuring Liverpool into action in January. The club’s stance mirrors the situation they face with Ibrahima Konaté. Konaté is also in the final year of his contract and attempts to secure an extension have so far been unsuccessful.
Konaté is a known target for Real Madrid and was asked whether Kylian Mbappé had been speaking to him about a move to the Santiago Bernabéu. “He calls me every two hours!” Konaté joked in an interview with Téléfoot, in which he also insisted he does not speak Spanish. Madrid, like Liverpool over Guéhi, are thought to be willing to wait until next summer to pursue Konaté on a free transfer, while the Reds remain frustrated by the loss of Trent Alexander-Arnold to the 15-time Champions League winners a few months ago.