More stories

  • in

    Barcelona ‘very close to signing Ruben Neves’ with Mendes expected to push Prem star’s dream transfer through

    BARCELONA are close to signing Wolves star Ruben Neves, according to reports.His agent Jorge Mendes is ready to push through a deal that will see the midfielder secure his dream move.
    Wolves midfielder Ruben Neves is closing in on joining BarcelonaCredit: Getty
    Super agent Jorge Mendes is helping facilitate the transferCredit: Reuters
    Neves will replace Barca legend Sergio Busquets, who announced he will quit the club at the end of the season.
    Xavi reportedly prefers to bring in Real Sociedad’s Martin Zubimendi or Fiorentina’s Sofyan Amrabat, but they cannot afford either of them due to ongoing financial troubles.
    Neves is a more cost-effective option and his wages will fit in the club’s salary cap as they look to balance the books, claim Sport.
    Barcelona now await the all-clear from LaLiga after they effectively imposed a transfer ban on them.
    READ MORE IN FOOTBALL
    Yet the Catalan giants are believed to have a plan to work around it and still sign players should league chiefs agree.
    A number of swap deals are being considered this summer with Mendes proposing that Ansu Fati heads in the other direction and joins Wolves.
    The Premier League side are supposedly ready to hand Barca £30million plus Neves for the winger but that offer has not progressed due to Fati wanting to stay at the club.
    Neves sees his contract at Molinuex expire at the end of next season.
    Most read in Football
    FREE BETS AND SIGN UP DEALS – BEST NEW CUSTOMER OFFERS
    He has been at Wolves since 2017 after arriving from Porto and captained them regularly.
    The 26-year-old has also been linked with moves to Manchester United and Arsenal.
    Meanwhile, the report also suggests that Franck Kessie and Sergino Dest are set to leave Barca and could also be used in a swap deal. More

  • in

    I joined Aston Villa in a bizarre record transfer that included 2,000 spare stadium seats – it was a whirlwind for me

    IT’S surely only a matter of time before we see former defender Neil Cox back in football management . . . where he belongs.Since his departure as manager from his hometown club Scunthorpe in November 2021, the 51-year-old has attracted several offers, but admits the next move has to be right.
    Neil Cox is planning on returning to football managementCredit: Getty
    He most recently managed Scunthorpe UnitedCredit: Getty
    He said: “I have loved every moment of my football career as a player, coach and manager — and I still believe I have so much to give.
    “I’ve been touched that a few clubs have been in contact. But I want it to be the right fit for both parties.”
    Sadly, the last year has taken a tragic twist for the family, with Neil’s ex-wife taking her own life 12 months ago. Naturally, it has had a huge effect on his two daughters, who are 24 and 17.
    He said: “It’s been such a traumatic time for the girls. I understand I will never be able to replace their mum but if I can be a dad and more for them I always will be.
    READ MORE IN FOOTBALL
    “It’s almost a year to the day. I could not be prouder of them both.”
    Cox reflects on his football life with vivid first memories of his parents’ house overlooking Scunthorpe’s Old Showground Stadium.
    He said: “At the age of eight, and with a few of my mates, we’d all leap over the wall into the stadium and go and live our dream by actually playing on the main pitch at the ground!
    “The fact I got to play for my hometown team, and manage them too, is something very special for me.
    Most read in Football
    FREE BETS AND SIGN UP DEALS – BEST NEW CUSTOMER OFFERS
    “When I was offered the Iron job it was something I couldn’t turn down.”
    As a player, Cox’s rise up the league ladder was quite some jump.
    He made his debut for United in 1990 and played just 17 league games that season before attracting interest from several big clubs, with Spurs keen to set up a potential double transfer for Cox and Richard Hall.
    In the end, Cox moved to Aston Villa in 1991 in a bizarre deal that included a then-record £400,000 fee for Scunthorpe, plus 2,000 spare stadium seats for Scunny’s Glanford Park!
    Cox added: “Within days of signing I was suddenly playing over in Hong Kong with seasoned international players like David Platt and Paul McGrath. I had to pinch myself.
    “The club had been knocked out of the FA Cup, so took the opportunity to use the free weekend to play in Asia. It was a whirlwind for me.”
    After two years at Villa, Cox was called up for England Under-21s and made six appearances.
    He said: “It was a great  team with players like Andy Cole and Jamie Redknapp.”
    Cox played for Middlesbrough during his careerCredit: Getty
    Bryan Robson was his manager at BoroCredit: Alamy
    Cox spent three years at Villa and helped them to League Cup success over Manchester United in 1994, before moving to Middlesbrough and their revolution under manager Bryan Robson.
    The former right-back added: “I was a big Manchester United fan and Robbo was a hero of mine, so it didn’t take much persuading.
    “Playing between the transition from Ayresome Park to the Riverside was an incredible time and being able to share it with the fans, too.”
    After two years at Bolton, Cox’s next move was Watford for £500,000 where he thought he had found the perfect boss in Graham Taylor. It turned out to be anything but.
    He said: “I was born in Scunthorpe and he had grown up there. Graham’s dad was a local reporter in Scunthorpe and I had gone to school with his niece. It seemed perfect but he took an instant dislike to me.
    “Within two weeks he told me he didn’t feel I had a future at the club.  I was never involved in any first-team activity under Taylor.”
    Cox has been interviewed for a recent ‘Under the Cosh’ podcast where he talks animatedly about his horror times with Taylor but how it all turned around for him when Gianluca Vialli took over the Hornets.
    He became great friends with the Italian and, like so many,  was devastated by his passing last month.
    Cox hailed both Gianluca Vialli and Ray WilkinsCredit: Rex
    He worked with the pair at WatfordCredit: PA:Empics Sport
    And saw them as ‘humble’ peopleCredit: AFP
    Cox said: “I count myself lucky that I worked with both Gianluca and Ray Wilkins at Watford.
    “It’s hard to believe they are both no longer with us. They were absolute class acts in terms of their football but more importantly, wonderful, humble people.”
    From Watford, he moved to Cardiff and then Crewe, where he wanted to help old friend Steve Holland, who is now Gareth Southgate’s No 2 for England.
    But Cox always had plans to go into coaching, adding: “While I was at Watford, I was very fortunate that Ray Lewington became manager and allowed me access to all the coaching at the club. I would ask questions and he would do the same with me.
    “My footballing highlights would be Villa’s League Cup win in 1994 and the Boro revolution under Robbo.
    Read More on The Sun
    “But one of my real standout memories was being part of AFC Wimbledon’s rise after being unceremoniously dumped out of the league.
    “What those fans and that club have achieved is quite a story.” More

  • in

    Man Utd could have signed Erling Haaland for just £4m but they didn’t listen to me, Solskjaer reveals

    OLE GUNNAR SOLSKJAER has revealed for the first time that he told Manchester United to buy Erling Haaland for just £4million.Solskjaer was manager of 51-goal Manchester City scorer Haaland during his time in charge of Molde, before he went on to sign for RB Salzburg and Borussia Dortmund. 
    Erling Haaland played under Ole Gunnar Solskjaer five years agoCredit: Instagram @erling.haaland
    Haaland has blitzed 51 goals for Man City this season after his £50m arrival from Dortmund but Man Utd could have had him for a snipCredit: PA
    But he could have been at United if they had listened to their former striker Solskjaer just before he became manager at Old Trafford himself in 2018.
    Solskajer said: “I called United about six months before I took over and told them that I’d got this striker that we had but they didn’t listen.
    “I asked for £4million for Haaland but they didn’t sign him.”
    He ended up going to City for £50million and is now rated as the world’s most valuable striker at £200million.
    READ MORE MAN UTD NEWS
    United have been desperate for a decent number nine despite Marcus Rashford scoring 29 goals this season mainly from the left flank.
    Anthony Martial has flopped again and Wout Weghorst has not been up to it.
    Meanwhile at City they have seen a player rewriting the record books, as Solskjaer told them he would.
    Solskjaer was manager between 2018 and 2021 taking the club to five semi-finals, one final and a second place finish in the Premier League.
    Most read in Football
    FREE BETS AND SIGN UP DEALS – BEST NEW CUSTOMER OFFERS
    Yesterday, Haaland romped to the Football Writers’ Association’s Footballer of the Year award with 82% of the vote.
    That’s helped by him netting a landmark 35 Prem goals already.
    City are one point clear of Arsenal with one game in hand as both face Sunday matches.
    Pep Guardiola’s men go to Everton before the Gunners host Brighton.
    United legend Solskjaer was frustrated at club chiefs neglecting his advice to sign Haaland – before returning to Old Trafford himselfCredit: Getty More

  • in

    Jordan Pickford leads £250m of stars set to leave in transfer firesale if Everton go down, with six key men topping list

    SEAN DYCHE is planning for a worst-case scenario — selling £250MILLION worth of Everton players. Jordan Pickford, Dominic Calvert-Lewin, Dwight McNeil, Alex Iwobi and Amadou Onana would be flogged if they go down.
    Jordan Pickford could leave Everton if the Toffees go downCredit: Getty
    A number of Sean Dyche’s squad could be sold if the club are relegatedCredit: Reuters
    And midfielder Abdoulaye Doucoure warned he is likely to leave even if the club activate an extra one-year option on his deal.
    Everton lost £430m in five years and are now being investigated over an alleged breach of the Prem’s finance rules.
    Dyche’s side host Manchester City on Sunday while sitting just two points above the dreaded drop.
    Plans are being drawn up in case they end up in the Championship — costing £100m in revenue.
    READ MORE FOOTBALL NEWS
    Boss Dyche said: “We have outlines and will see what it all comes down to.
    “People were saying we were done a while ago but we are not done yet.
    “It is a fluid business, with us discussing contracts, talking to players — there’s a lot going on.
    “But, right now, it’s about getting the club past this situation and growing for the future.”
    Most read in Football
    HOW TO GET FREE BETS ON FOOTBALL
    Injured defender Seamus Coleman, 34, is a free agent this summer but Dyche expects him to stay.
    Coleman was stretchered off during the 2-2 draw at Leicester at the start of the month and taken to hospital. More

  • in

    Inside the football clubs making sure EVERY child can play as Harry Maguire and Phil Foden back our grassroots scheme

    AFTER years of desperately wanting to be picked first for the football team, Eddie finally found somewhere that let him play every match.The nine-year-old, who is affected by autism and skull birth defect craniosynostosis, has found confidence with a group of friends.
    Ashford United’s under-11 disability team offers a way into football for youngsters and transforms their lives for the betterCredit: Louis Wood
    And it’s all thanks to Ashford United –– one of the football clubs that The Sun wants to benefit from our Footie For All campaign to help grassroots sport.
    Eddie’s grandmother, Linda Burrows, credits the Kent club’s under-11 disability team, run by Dan Ambler, with giving her grandson new confidence.
    She said: “When Eddie first went along he was hiding behind his mum, but now he is straight out of the car and playing with the other kids.
    “It’s amazing what it has done for his confidence. He believes in himself now.
    “He’s always smiling when he’s playing — even if he doesn’t always get a chance to touch the ball.
    “It’s really nice seeing Eddie do ­normal things that he wasn’t comfortable doing just a few months ago.
    “Dan and the team have made a world of difference. Eddie was never going to be able to play in a traditional team, but this club has made sure he doesn’t miss out.”
    Figures show the cost-of-living crisis is forcing kids away from football, with 94 per cent of grassroots clubs voicing concern about the impact of soaring prices on their membership, according to the charity Sported.
    Most read in Football
    Clubs across the country have told The Sun how parents are struggling to afford to keep their children playing sports as the cost of everyday essentials continues to spiral.
    England stars John Stones, ­Raheem Sterling, Jarrod Bowen and Eric Dier, who all started out in local football, have already lent their support to our campaign.
    Ashford United ace Dan, 37, set up the disability team when he realised his autistic son Jack could not keep up when playing alongside mainstream kids.
    He said: “I saw him being left out, and I wanted to do something about it. I thought other parents might see their children in the same position so I asked around — and within a few days I had 17 other parents whose kids wanted to play.
    “It’s been amazing seeing the kids coming out of their shells. They’ve formed close friendships and the confidence they’ve developed is incredible.
    “Eddie went from being very shy to doing the “worm” celebration in front of everyone at our last match.
    “It’s incredible. It doesn’t matter if you have the skills of Ronaldo or can’t kick a ball — all are welcome.”
    Kids who play on one of the two Ashford under-11 teams have a mix of disabilities, from neurodivergent conditions to physical disabilities such as a missing limb.
    Ashford Town United has been heavily involved in keeping the team going and it provides a lot of ­support to Dan, a podiatrist by day, to get everything right.
    But he has to raise around £800 to keep things afloat, on top of the £25-a-month payment from parents.
    Thanks to huge interest, he is opening up three new teams for this season, bringing the total to six, all of which will need sponsorship.Dan added: “I never turn anyone away.
    “They are welcome whatever disability they have, and I don’t want that to change.
    “It’s going to be quite a challenge, but I’m always up for it and we are used to overcoming difficulties. Hopefully, we’ll make it all work.”
    Today, England footballers Harry Maguire and Phil Foden back our campaign to keep kids playing.
    Two teams also reveal how they are dedicated to making sure all children have access to the sport amid the cost-of-living crisis.
    Phil Foden
    Premier League winner Phil Foden started out with Reddish VulcansCredit: PROVIDED
    Phil Foden now stars for Manchester City and EnglandCredit: Getty
    GRASSROOTS football is where it began for all of us. Whether you play in the Premier League, for your country or on your local park, we all started out playing for our grassroot teams.
    For those of us lucky enough, it goes on to become our jobs. But the grassroots game is for everyone, and it’s important that we continue to support it so that boys and girls across the country can benefit from everything it has to offer.
    For me, playing for my local team gave me the chance to make new friends and learn new skills.
    I loved football then as much as I love football now.
    Knowing you could go and train with your mates during the week and play at the weekend was such an important part of growing up.
    It brings happiness for so many people across the country and it’s so important nothing gets in the way of everyone having that opportunity.
    Harry Maguire
    World Cup ace Harry Maguire began his career with Brunsmeer AthleticCredit: PROVIDED
    He has gone onto play for Sheffield United, Hull City, Leicester City and Manchester UnitedCredit: Getty
    I SPENT my childhood with a football at my feet whenever I had the chance.
    My first memory is having a kickabout with my brother.
    Playing in youth teams for Brunsmeer Athletic, then later Barnsley and ­Sheffield United, gave me a chance to make football into a career, not just a ­passion.
    Kids these days should have that same option, no matter what else is going on around them.
    There is nothing better than playing with a team, winning and learning how to lose.
    It also gives them an outlet and a chance to learn discipline, teamwork and friendship with people they might otherwise not have met.
    I loved my time in grassroots football. Those memories never leave you.
    Beacons FC, Kidbrooke, South East London
    Beacons FC are trying to help make football more afforable for parents and have launched a boots swap schemeCredit: Olivia West
    BEACONS FC has recently launched a boot swap shop to help families keep their kids in footie ­footwear without breaking the bank.
    Club secretary Adam Gillham said: “They are a necessary item parents have to shell out for each season but they can be so ­expensive – especially when kids outgrow them so quickly.
    “At the swap shop, they can donate a pair of boots their child has outgrown and swap them for a pair that fits. Anything we can do to help them save a few quid helps.”
    The club started in Kidbrooke, South East London, in 2001, and now fields eight teams of boys aged seven to 17.
    To play for the season, each player pays a one-off £50 registration fee and £245 in subs which parents are able to pay off in monthly instalments.
    Praising the Sun’s Footie For All drive, Adam said: “We are well aware of the impact of the cost of living on our players’ families in the past year, so any campaign like this will certainly help the grass- roots game.
    “We deliberately kept the fees as low as we could this season, for that reason.
    “We have not increased them since before the pandemic because we know times are hard for so many families – even though we have seen our own costs going up year on year. Football should be for all – not just for those who can afford it.
    “As a club, we do everything we can to help mums and dads who may be struggling financially.
    “If a parent comes to us and says they cannot afford the subs any longer, then of course we would not stop their child playing.
    “Each child deserves a chance to play football – no matter their ability or background. It’s the people’s game.
    “I would like to see more money filter down from the Premier League to real grassroots football – youth football in parks and recreation grounds around the UK – where it is truly needed.”
    Blackburn Eagles FC, Lancs
    Blackburn Eagles vow never to turn away anybody despite parent money strugglesCredit: BLACKBURN EAGLES
    BLACKBURN Eagles has seen more kids struggling to afford to play – but it never turns anyone away.
    The Lancashire academy’s vice chairman Chris Hughes says prices haven’t been raised in around eight years, in a bid to maintain access for all children.
    Kids as young as two take part in the Little Eagles under-six mini-kicker sessions, which cost £15 a month for weekly training.
    As the kids progress through to teams, parents pay £25 a month for a one-weekend game, and £30 a month if kids play Saturdays and Sundays every weekend.
    The club’s team keeps on growing and now has 650 players on its books, making it the biggest in the area.
    Chris, 39, said: “We don’t turn anyone away. We just take on more children, create new groups, create new training sessions and create new teams.”
    The Eagles has a hardship fund to help out families who start to struggle with the costs of subs and kits.
    The club has also recently taken teams out of the Junior Premier League due to the cost of the regular four-hour round trips to play against other teams across the North West.
    Chris said: “There have been conversations about the cost of living and cost of petrol.
    “Stuff is getting expensive, so we’ve brought some of our teams back a little bit more local to help with that.”
    To give even more kids the opportunity to play, Blackburn Eagles is currently looking to link up with local schools and charities to potentially start providing free after-school sessions in poorer communities and deprived areas.
    And Chris believes every child should have the opportunity to play football, due to its benefits for physical and mental wellbeing.
    He added: “It gives kids a good focus and we find that football can be a ­massive part of certain children’s lives.
    Read More on The Sun
    “That might be the one thing they’ll look forward to all week, and sometimes it gets them out of situations where they don’t want to be at home all the time.”

    The Sun’s Footie For All campaign aims to support families through the cost of living crisis More

  • in

    I said ‘you don’t win the Premier League with James Milners’ – 18 years later I hope he has forgiven me

    GRAEME SOUNESS has revealed he apologised for saying “you won’t win the league with James Milners” to the Liverpool star.Milner, 37, is out of contract at Anfield this summer and is expected to agree a one-year deal to join former Reds team-mate Adam Lallana at Brighton.
    Graeme Souness has revealed he has apologised to one of his former Newcastle playersCredit: Alamy
    James Milner has gone on to win the lot at Liverpool and Man CityCredit: News Group Newspapers Ltd
    The ex-England international played under Souness at Newcastle before moving on to Aston Villa and then five trophy-laden years at Manchester City.
    He arrived on a free transfer at Liverpool in 2015 and has won the lot during his nine years on Merseyside.
    After winning the Premier League twice at City, he helped the Reds end their 30-year title drought in 2021.
    That was after playing a key role in their Champions League, Uefa Super Cup and Fifa Club World Cup successes in 2019.
    READ MORE FOOTBALL NEWS
    And he added to his trophy cabinet again last season as Jurgen Klopp’s side lifted both the Carabao Cup and FA Cup.
    Liverpool legend Souness has now admitted that he hopes the veteran has “forgiven me” as he hailed his leadership qualities.
    “I was discussing leadership with Simon Jordan,” he wrote in his Daily Mail column.
    “James Milner was one of those I named as a leader I would want in my dressing room. 
    Most read in Football
    FREE BETS AND SIGN UP DEALS – BEST NEW CUSTOMER OFFERS
    “At Newcastle, I knew him as a young boy and he has matured into a professional you can bet is a ten out of ten around the dressing room. 
    “He was upset with me many years ago at Newcastle when I said that ‘you won’t win the league with James Milners’ and he took that as me saying he wasn’t good enough. 
    “I was trying to say that you needed men. He was only 19 at the time.
    “I apologised to him for that and I hope he’s forgiven me.”
    Souness added: “You can never have enough James Milners in the dressing room. He makes other players turn up.” More

  • in

    Leicester remind me of my Watford XI that went down… it’s the subtle things that add up and leave you in trouble

    IT’S a strange experience when an established Premier League club slips towards relegation.Some players start feeling a sense of entitlement, egos kick in, people take their eye off the ball, levels of desire drop, everything gets a bit lax.
    Leicester currently sit in 18th spot, two points off safety
    Watford were in the Premier League for five seasons before relegation in 2020
    It’s subtle things, little one per cents, which build up and suddenly you realise you haven’t won for ten games and you’re bang in trouble.
    That’s my lived experience, when Watford went down in 2020 — after five years in the top flight. The season before we had reached the FA Cup final and finished 11th, 16 points clear of the drop zone.
    Every club and campaign is different but I detect a lot of similarities with what has happened at Leicester City this season.
    At Watford, there were players wanting pay rises, others looking for a move, there were other disputes.
    READ MORE IN FOOTBALL
    Throw in a few injuries to key players and suddenly a squad which should have too many good players to be battling relegation, finds itself bottom of the league.
    The Premier League is unforgiving. There are too many good teams.As players, you can never afford to let your standards drop. As a club, you can never afford to stand still.
    Three seasons ago, Watford failed to win any of our first 11 matches — and I was one of two or three senior pros who got injured in the first couple of games.
    Leicester took one point from their first seven this term.
    Most read in Football
    Watford were relegated in 19th place after amassing just 34 points
    BETTING SPECIAL – BEST NO DEPOSIT CASINO OFFERS
    And when you suffer a start like that, you are facing a hell of an uphill battle.
    Leicester face Liverpool on Monday, then they visit Newcastle, with both of those opponents battling for Champions League qualification.
    So it is quite likely that they will be relegated before their final match at home to West Ham.
    Like most football followers in this country, I’ll be gutted if the Foxes go down.
    What they achieved by winning the title in 2016 allowed everybody to dream — they made the seemingly impossible real.
    And under Brendan Rodgers they won the FA Cup and twice narrowly missed out on qualifying for the Champions League.
    I like to claim, half-joking, that I set the whole Leicester fairytale in motion.
    Yesterday was the tenth anniversary of my winning goal in a play-off semi-final for Watford against the Foxes — when our keeper Manuel Almunia saved what would have been a decisive penalty and we went straight up the other end and scored.
    The following season, Leicester were promoted to the Premier League.
    The next season, they had their great escape from relegation under Nigel Pearson, and then their crazy title win under Claudio Ranieri.
    But they have lost their way badly over the last year or two. Last summer’s transfer window was a disaster for them.
    The club’s Thai owners were unable to spend big and, instead of cashing in on Youri Tielemans and James Maddison then reinvesting some of that money, they chose to stick.
    Neither Tielemans nor Maddison have been consistently anywhere near their best and now Leicester will lose the Belgian midfielder on a free and the England man for a fraction of what they might have got last summer.
    James Maddison has managed 10 goals and nine assists in the league this season, but it hasn’t been enough to pull Leicester out of danger
    When Kasper Schmeichel went last year, Leicester did not only lose a top-class goalkeeper, they lost a genuine leader, a great character and one of the few remaining links to their title-­winning season.
    That, along with the injury to Jonny Evans, has left them lacking experience and leadership at the back.
    Wesley Fofana, who went to Chelsea for big money last summer, is a very fine player but Evans used to talk him through games and Leicester are missing him badly.
    Wes Morgan had already gone and Leicester simply haven’t replaced the experience, as well as the quality, they have lost over the last couple of years.
    Jamie Vardy is getting on and the strikers they have brought in, the likes of Kelechi Iheanacho and Patson Daka, haven’t scored enough goals.
    I know Dean Smith, Craig Shakespeare and John Terry well and they are good people but they have come into this very late.
    Nobody knows whether they will be sticking around for the substantial rebuild which will be needed if Leicester do go down.
    Read More on The Sun
    There has been a lot of confused thinking at Leicester this season and a lot of players who have not done themselves justice.
    I know that painful feeling and, sadly, I recognise it when I look at Leicester.
    Dean Smith took charge of the Foxes in April to try keep them afloat More

  • in

    Tottenham rule Nagelsmann OUT of manager’s job and say they have not spoken to him, leaving fans fuming

    TOTTENHAM are no longer considering Julian Nagelsmann to be their next manager.The German, 35, was a contender to become permanent successor to Antonio Conte, who left the club in March.
    Tottenham are no longer considering Julian Nagelsmann to be their managerCredit: Getty
    Spurs fans reacted to the news with anger on TwitterCredit: PA:Press Association
    But Spurs have decided against making a move for Nagelsmann, insisting they have NOT met the ex-Bayern Munich boss nor do they intend to.
    A source at the North Londoners maintained the club has “great respect” for the former RB Leipzig chief but he was not one for them right now.
    It means interest in the likes of Arne Slot, who has taken Feyenoord to the top of the Eredivisie, and former Liverpool midfielder Xabi Alonso, currently boss of Bundesliga side Bayer Leverkusen, could ramp up in the coming weeks.
    Sporting Lisbon chief Ruben Amorim is also admired, though the Portuguese is understood to have a sky-high release clause of £17.43million for foreign clubs.
    READ MORE TOTTENHAM NEWS
    Another candidate is Oliver Glasner, who will leave Eintracht Frankfurt in the summer with Nagelsmann’s former No2 Dino Toppmoller the favourite to replace him.
    Spurs have been without a permanent boss since Conte departed on March 27, 47 days ago. 
    The Italian’s assistant Cristian Stellini was handed the reins on an interim basis until he himself was sacked following the 6-1 defeat at Newcastle last month and replaced by Ryan Mason until the end of the season.
    Tottenham are also without a director of football since Fabio Paratici resigned last month.
    Most read in Football
    FREE BETS AND SIGN UP DEALS – BEST NEW CUSTOMER OFFERS
    It is understood that Spurs would not necessarily need to hire a new director of football before appointing a manager.
    But if they were to name a new head coach first, they would ensure their character and approach fit in with any prospective director of football appointed further down the line.
    They are very keen to avoid the chaotic summer of 2021 where Spurs came close to appointing a number of managers before finally plumping for Nuno Espirito Santo, who was sacked five months later and replaced by Conte.
    Spurs are currently sixth in the Premier League and visit Aston Villa tomorrow where a victory would go a huge way to guaranteeing European football next season.
    Meanwhile, one fan reacted to the Nagelsmann news with a tweet saying: “Tottenham are a joke. The fact that Nagelsmann is off, shows the lack of vision at Tottenham.”
    “This Tottenham Club is so finished,” blasted another.
    Another wrote: “We yet again look pathetic by saying we had no interest in a manager that ticked every box.”
    As a fellow Spurs fan commented: “What a joke Tottenham Hotspur one of the best young managers available and we’re not interested again the cheap option… Enough is Enough.” More