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Tottenham news: Fan views on World Cup transfer targets

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Tottenham news: Fan views on World Cup transfer targets - BBC
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We asked you which players you have watched at the World Cup that you think would be a great fit at Tottenham.

Here are some of your comments:

Barry: Brian Brobbey, the Dutch centre forward, who is an out and out striker and is a real handful, makes Dominic Solanke look like a League One player. Morgan Rogers would fit in great and can play as an attacking midfielder or on the left.

Adebarro: Brobbey from Sunderland would be my choice to lead the Spurs line!

Pete: German midfielder Felix Nmecha. Imperious. Something Spurs have missed for years.

Josiah: Crysencio Summerville because he is able to run forward and dribble through defenders and score goals. I would also like Vozinha.

Kevin: I'd like to see Spurs go all out for Marcus Rashford, the guy looks in top shape, will have a point to prove to both Man Utd and Barcelona, while still being within the Spurs budget, whatever that might be this season. But don't hang about, that price could go up with a good World Cup behind him.

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Bias possible in council's Spurs training ground vote, court told

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Bias possible in council's Spurs training ground vote, court told - BBC
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There was "a real possibility of bias" in a council's decision to let Tottenham Hotspur build a training facility on a London park, the High Court has been told by a campaign group.

The Guardians of Whitewebbs is challenging Enfield Council's decision to grant planning permission for a 16-hectare women and girls' football academy at Whitewebbs Park in north London.

Lawyers for the group argued the decision should be quashed on several grounds, including potential "predetermination", "as Spurs had unparalleled access to senior council figures".

They also claim planning officers got it wrong when assessing the impact on the green belt.

The council, which was Labour-controlled at the time but is now run by a Conservative minority administration, withdrew its defence on Wednesday after its new leader said last month the club was "no longer welcome" to build on the park.

But Spurs are continuing to defend the action, with the club's lawyers telling the hearing the bias claims were "completely overblown" and the decision-making was the "opposite of closed-mindedness".

In written submissions, Jenny Wigley KC, for Guardians of Whitewebbs, said between March 2024 and July 2025, Spurs offered hospitality to senior council leaders six times, which were mostly accepted.

These included the then-chief executive attending a "working lunch" at the training ground, and the then-council leader attending a reception with the club's board to celebrate Spurs winning the Europa League last year.

Wigley said the incidents were in breach of the council's own policy, which expressly forbids this conduct in the context of outstanding applications for planning permission.

She said: "One would readily expect a local Premiership football team to have a close working relationship with the local authority where its training facilities are based.

"However, the closeness of that relationship does not mean that behaviour which would otherwise give rise to the appearance of bias can be excused."

The club agreed a 25-year lease for the site in 2023, a decision unsuccessfully challenged at the High Court in 2024. The plans would see 10 football pitches built on the park near the club's men's training facilities.

In response, James Maurici KC for Spurs said the council's withdrawal of its defence was "purely a political decision" and that the women's facilities allowed the club to "positively respond to gender inequality".

He said members of the planning committee were "never offered or involved in" hospitality, and those who attended publicly declared it.

He added: "Modest hospitality does not give rise to apparent bias unless it is accompanied by evidence that it was intended to influence the decision-maker improperly or that it was excessive. Neither is the case here."

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Tottenham news: Martin Dubravka signs on free transfer - have your say

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Tottenham news: Martin Dubravka signs on free transfer - have your say - BBC
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Burnley goalkeeper Martin Dubravka is looking forward to a "new journey" when he joins Tottenham on 1 July following the expiration of his contract at Turf Moor.

The 37-year-old, who called time on a seven-and-a-half year spell at Newcastle United in August 2025, made 35 Premier League appearances last season under Scott Parker, keeping four clean sheets and conceding 71 goals.

"It is an exciting time for me," Dubravka said. "It is a new journey for me and my family, so I'm looking forward to it. I didn't tell anyone, just my family, so none of my friends know that I'm actually here yet because everything moved so fast.

"The most important thing for me is to just enjoy the ride because it is a beautiful game and it is amazing to be a part of this club.

"I will try to bring my experience, that is probably the most important thing I can bring. I'm probably one of the oldest here, so I will try to help the others get better but I will also push myself."

The Slovakia international is Roberto de Zerbi's fourth summer signing after Marcos Senesi and Andy Robertson joined on free transfers, with Jan Paul van Hecke arriving from Brighton for £52m.

"The club is going through a transition," Dubravka continued. "The manager is amazing, I saw the work that he did at Brighton and Marseille so it is going to be interesting to see how he works. I want to learn a lot of things from him.

"Tottenham is of course a huge club with great fans and an amazing stadium so I'm looking forward to it."

Head coach De Zerbi added: "I am very happy because he is a goalkeeper with big experience and a strong mentality.

"He has very important qualities for me and he will bring balance, leadership and competitiveness to our dressing room."

Are you happy with this signing? What role do you think Dubravka will play in De Zerbi's squad next season?

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Martin Dubravka transfer news: Tottenham sign Burnley goalkeeper on free transfer

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Martin Dubravka transfer news: Tottenham sign Burnley goalkeeper on free transfer - BBC
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Tottenham have agreed a deal to sign goalkeeper Martin Dubravka on a free transfer when his contract with Burnley expires on 1 July.

The 37-year-old, who had previous spells at Newcastle United and Manchester Untied, played 35 times for the Clarets in the Premier League last season.

The Slovakian is Roberto de Zerbi's fourth summer signing after defenders Marcos Senesi and Andy Robertson joined on free transfers, with the Netherlands defender Jan Paul van Hecke arriving from Brighton for £52m.

Last week, Newcastle rejected an offer worth about £80m from Spurs for midfielder Sandro Tonali.

There are also doubts over the future of Italy keeper Guglielmo Vicario and uncertainty over whether he will stay at Spurs after attracting interest from Serie A clubs.

"It's an exciting time for me, a new journey and new experience for me and my family. I'm looking forward to it," Dubravka said.

"Everything moved pretty quickly and I'm really happy to be here. I've loved watching Roberto's teams over the years and know all about his style, vision and the fantastic fans here."

Tottenham continue to strengthen their defence after back-to-back 17th-placed finishes in the Premier League.

Dubravka is a reliable shot-stopper after playing 197 times in the Premier League, registering 51 clean sheets.

Vicario and Antonin Kinsky both spent time as Spurs' number one goalkeeper last season.

Kinsky, 23, finished the season as number one and produced a stunning save against Leeds United that proved vital in keeping De Zerbi's side in the Premier League.

His form was a swift turnaround from March, when he was replaced in the 17th minute of their Champions League last-16 tie at Atletico Madrid after conceding three goals.

"I am very happy because Martin is a goalkeeper with big experience and a strong mentality," De Zerbi added.

"He has very important qualities for me and will bring balance, leadership and competitiveness to our dressing room."

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Tottenham news: How can Spurs tempt Sandro Tonali from Newcastle?

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Tottenham news: How can Spurs tempt Sandro Tonali from Newcastle? - BBC
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Aston Villa's 2024-25 end-of-season awards dinner was in full swing when Damian Vidagany took to the stage.

The director of football operations had a message for Arsenal, Manchester City, Manchester United, Liverpool, Chelsea and Tottenham.

"There is no big six anymore," he declared to loud cheers 12 months ago - and such a sentiment will have plenty of support on Tyneside.

Just as Aston Villa disrupted the established order to qualify for the Champions League in 2024 and 2026, so too did Newcastle United in 2023 and 2025.

Yet the league's highest-earning clubs have hardly withered in the face of the challenge from outside the six, and Spurs' pursuit of midfielder Sandro Tonali is a reminder of that.

Just weeks after Roberto de Zerbi's side narrowly avoided relegation on the final day of the season, they are trying to lure one of Newcastle's best players to North London.

Newcastle hardly had a stellar season themselves - finishing a disappointing 12th place - but the difference is Spurs have greater revenues to fall back on as they try to bounce back come August.

Their most recent financial accounts showed they had generated £230m more in income than Newcastle in 2024-25. As a result, they could offer far superior wages to Tonali and make a meaty bid of about £80m for the Italy midfielder, yet stay within the game's financial rules.

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Newcastle: Tottenham's Sandro Tonali hunt shows chasm between clubs

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Newcastle: Tottenham's Sandro Tonali hunt shows chasm between clubs - BBC
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Aston Villa's 2024-25 end-of-season awards dinner was in full swing when Damian Vidagany took to the stage.

Villa's director of football operations had a message for Arsenal, Manchester City, Manchester United, Liverpool, Chelsea and Tottenham Hotspur.

"There is no big six anymore," he declared to loud cheers 12 months ago.

Such a sentiment will have plenty of support on Tyneside.

Just as Aston Villa disrupted the established order to qualify for the Champions League in 2024 and 2026, so too did Newcastle United in 2023 and 2025.

Yet the league's highest-earning clubs have hardly withered in the face of the challenge from outside the six, and Spurs' pursuit of Newcastle midfielder Sandro Tonali is a reminder of that.

Just weeks after Roberto de Zerbi's side narrowly avoided relegation on the final day, they are trying to lure one of Newcastle's best players to North London.

Newcastle hardly had a stellar season themselves - finishing a disappointing 12th place - but the difference is Spurs have greater revenues to fall back on as they try to bounce back come August.

Spurs' most recent financial accounts showed they generated £230m more in income than Newcastle in 2024-25.

As a result, Spurs could offer far superior wages to Tonali and make a meaty bid of about £80m for the Italy midfielder - yet stay within the game's financial rules.

That bid was unsuccessful and although Manchester City and Arsenal have yet to come to the table, Newcastle will be in a strong position to command a bigger fee if several teams make offers.

However, if Tonali does go, Newcastle will have lost three of their four best players in the space of a year after Alexander Isak was sold to Liverpool for £125m and Anthony Gordon moved to Barcelona for £69m.

Newcastle have had to become better sellers following years of imbalanced trading, but it still feels a world away from the feeling around the club going into last summer.

Eddie Howe and his players had not long ended a 70-year wait to win a major domestic trophy by defeating Liverpool in the EFL Cup final.

Newcastle had secured Champions League football for the second time in three seasons.

They had a degree of financial headroom again following several windows of relative parsimony.

Yet it was still a struggle for Newcastle to land their top targets - let alone keep hold of Isak.

"It was very difficult to attract the players that we wanted, that we felt could really make a difference to the team," Howe said last month.

"I certainly don't think that challenge is going to be easier. It's going to be harder."

Those words proved rather prophetic.

Newcastle managed to sign highly rated goalkeeper Ewen Jaouen from Stade de Reims for £18.5m before the window even officially opened.

However, just when it appeared they were in pole position to land top target Victor Munoz, the Spain winger joined Liverpool from Osasuna.

It felt like Groundhog Day for supporters after Joao Pedro, Hugo Ekitike, James Trafford and Benjamin Sesko opted to move to Chelsea, Liverpool, Manchester City and Manchester United respectively last summer.

Newcastle, as a result, moved further down their list of targets this time last year and, aside from defender Malick Thiaw, they have not yet seen enough of a return from a £100m-plus net spend.

The club cannot afford for history to repeat itself, but it is easy to forget the window only opened on 15 June.

It is also worth remembering that Newcastle have previously managed to attract a number of promising players.

Rather than making any guarantees about the team's success, Howe's pitches have instead centred on development, how his staff work and how they can help take a player's game to another level.

Not every signing has gone on to thrive under Howe, but it was telling that Gordon repeatedly pointed to this "culture" of improvement at Newcastle as he sealed a dream move to Barcelona.

Another international, who followed Gordon to Newcastle, has also gone on to flourish.

"He wanted to come to Newcastle," a source said.

"He had a couple of other opportunities but he had a good chat with the manager and believed in the project, the squad, the club and the league. That's where he wanted to belong.

"His ambition is quite high. He wants to measure himself with the top elite players. It was just a match between Newcastle and him. There's no doubt."

The project is now entering a delicate phase, though.

There has been much talk about Newcastle somehow competing as one of the biggest clubs in the world by 2030 - but it feels like actions rather than words are needed in the coming months.

As the fifth anniversary of the Saudi-led takeover approaches in October, an announcement has still to be made on plans for a new state-of-the-art training ground following the identification of a site in Woolsington near Newcastle Airport.

Then there is the not-so-insignificant matter of the stadium, which feels pivotal in attempting to bridge a huge revenue gap in the years to come.

Newcastle once brought in £2.8m more in match-day income than Spurs when the latter played at White Hart Lane in 2007.

Although Spurs still generated more revenue overall, the gap stood at just £16m at the time.

However, in the respective clubs' most recent accounts, that gap had widened to chasm - with Spurs bringing in 14 times their previous surplus.

That is in part because of a huge difference in match-day revenue between the clubs, with Newcastle's standing at £51.6m in 2024-25 compared to Spurs' £126.5m.

Events and concerts as well as associated partnerships like the NFL and F1 Drive is another significant factor, helping the London club amass £277.1m in commercial revenue for that period compared to Newcastle's £120.2m.

Spurs' ability to offset challenging domestic seasons with strong off-pitch revenue streams is one of the reasons football finance expert Kieran Maguire believes Newcastle will ultimately have to follow suit and build a new stadium - despite the emotional wrench of leaving St James' Park.

"If the Newcastle owners want a football club which is regularly competing for one of the Champions League places, they have to move," he said.

"If they want Newcastle to be a regular top-10 club competing in the Europa League and Europa Conference League, tweak St James' Park.

"That's how significant the decision is."

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Tottenham news: Spurs fans' on reshaping midfield

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'He'd give everything for the team' - fans on reshaping Spurs' midfield - BBC
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We asked for your views on how you would reshape Tottenham's midfield, with Lucas Bergvall interested in exploring other options and Spurs' initial bid for Sandro Tonali was rejected by Newcastle.

Here are some of your replies:

Colin: Sell James Maddison, keep Bergvall, sign Palhinha and Tonali, plus Bruno Guimaraes.

Lawrence: Tonali's too expensive in my opinion. It doesn't make sense to spend big on one player when previous seasons proved there are more holes to plug. I would buy Nicolas Raskin from Rangers. He's a decent all-round ball-wining midfielder. I would love to see him link up with Xavi Simons.

Daniel: I would like us to go all out for Adam Wharton. His first thought when he receives the ball is always forward. Brilliant passer and still young.

H: If they fail to get Sandro, then they should go all out to get Wharton from Crystal Palace. His vision, ball control and passing is all that Tottenham need, amongst other positions.

Dave: I want to see us go after Alex Scott at Bournemouth - with him being a Spurs fan, it is a guarantee that he gives everything for the team. Plus he is quality too.

Anthony: I would get Wharton, Scott and Tonali or Scott McTominay.

Richard: Keep Conor Gallagher (maybe make him captain if Cristian Romero leaves) and keep Palhinha, Simons and Archie Gray. Not sure about the other midfielders. Have a look at Harvey Elliot - a very good player whom both Liverpool and Aston Villa don't want.

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Tottenham: Lucas Bergvall exploring options away from club

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Sweden's Lucas Bergvall is facing an uncertain future at Tottenham with the midfielder keen for a new challenge.

The 20-year-old is exploring his options after playing limited minutes at the end of last season under Roberto de Zerbi, often not in his preferred position as a 'number six'.

Spurs are also understood to be targeting an additional midfielder and have made an offer of about £80m for Newcastle's Sandro Tonali, which was rejected.

Bergvall's representatives are believed to have held talks with Aston Villa, Nottingham Forest and Chelsea.

However, Chelsea are no longer interested after briefly exploring a move in January.

Bergvall is currently at the World Cup and featured in Sweden's 5-1 defeat by the Netherlands in Houston on Saturday.

He played 33 games for Spurs last season, but missed two month after having ankle surgery.

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Backstage at Gorillaz' epic, one-off stadium show: 'The vibe is ridiculous'

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Backstage at Gorillaz' epic, one-off stadium show: 'The vibe is ridiculous' - BBC
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Damon Albarn has forgotten himself.

It's Friday night at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, and he's in the middle of rehearsals for Gorillaz' first ever stadium show - a multicultural, multimedia pop extravaganza, with more guests than a double-booked Airbnb.

As the band launches into Dirty Harry, the long, pitch-side LED screens light up with a cartoon choir, singing the song's refrain, "all I do is dance".

Apparently taken by surprise, Albarn jumps off the stage to watch, with a broad, toothy grin spreading across his face. Then he spots Argentine rapper Trueno striding across the stadium floor, and rushes over for a hug.

The band play on without their leader - and it takes almost 10 minutes for Albarn to realise he might be needed on stage.

"I'm the worst frontman," he confessed to me, just an hour earlier.

"I'm terrible. I have a very relaxed approach to showmanship."

Quite the opposite: Albarn's laid-back vibes set the tone for the whole entourage.

Backstage at Tottenham, there are more than 30 musicians from 15 different countries, and not a scintilla of ego between them.

"The vibe is ridiculous," says South African singer Moonchild Sanelly. "Damon is open, he's cool, he has the humility.

"Everybody whose art he admires, he brings them along for the ride. Even when he's zenned out, I'll go sit next to him, just so we can breathe each other's air."

"It's an eclectic family for sure," says Kara Jackson, a folk singer and poet who's been a regular guest at Gorillaz' recent shows.

"It's kind of like coming from the South, where I'm from in the States. You have cousins, but they're not really your blood cousins - you've just been calling your mum's best friend your aunt for all these years."

'An unusual group'

Behind the scenes, it's like a United Nations of music. Malian singer Fatoumata Diawara is chatting away in traditional Wassoulou clothes, while Johnny Marr ambles past in an equally traditional Mancunian parka.

American alt-pop heroes Sparks pull up in a black BMW just after 17:00 BST, and pop open the boot to retrieve their stage costumes (Russell has a pink polka-dot suit, Ron is in funeral clothes).

Twenty minutes later, they are on stage rehearsing The Happy Dictator; followed by Shaun Ryder, hamming up his part on the 2005 classic Dare!

"We're an unusual group, aren't we?" says Marr.

"I don't think there's anything quite like it. Not in my experience, anyway."

Over in the canteen, Syrian and African musicians chow down with Posdnuos from De La Soul and sitar legend Anoushka Shankar. On the menu, honey-glazed lime chicken, roast sea bass, caramelised leek penne and an outrageously moreish passion fruit meringue.

"The catering here is top notch, man," says UK rapper Bashy.

"When we went on the tour with Gorillaz the first time (in 2010), I put on so much weight that, when I came home, I had to get in the gym and get right."

One person who won't need a post-show workout is Jamie Hewlett – who dreamt up the idea of Gorillaz as a "virtual group" with Albarn in 1998.

He's roving the stadium with a camera crew, shooting a documentary commemorating this one-off event.

Ambitiously, the end result will show the human musicians mingling with their cartoon counterparts (2-D, Murdoc, Noodle and Russel), meaning every shot has to be meticulously mapped out.

"The aim is to reveal what it takes to put on a show like this," he says.

"We have artists filming themselves getting on planes from different parts of the world, then everybody coming together here in Tottenham, the arrival of the fans, the Gorillaz show, and the aftermath, when there's only empty beer cups left."

His enthusiasm is laced with surprise. Gorillaz wasn't meant to last for 28 years.

"We were going to do one album for fun," he says. "We had no idea it'd keep going.

"I think it's lasted because of the collaborations, and also because of the cartoons.

"You attract new generations because they like the cartoons, and then your nine-year-old kid is discovering Bobby Womack or Mark E Smith and all of the wonderful people we work with."

But there's a more serious side to the project, which has always mixed pop thrills with cross-cultural understanding.

"The message is more urgent than it's ever been," says Hewlett.

"I'm surprised that's the case, because I thought all of the (prejudice) was gone, but it seems to be coming back. I find it repugnant and hateful, and I can't stand it."

"The idea of saying your culture is somehow superior to another culture, or cannot be compatible is ridiculous," agrees Albarn.

"Everything is inextricably and very obviously connected.

"We all need to understand each other and not fall prey to over-simplistic arguments made by people who don't necessarily believe what they're saying, but see it as a political advantage."

De La Soul star Kevin "Posdnuos" Mercer, who has been recording with Gorillaz since 2005, says exploring the world with Albarn (and his own bandmates) taught him valuable lessons.

"I was blessed to grow up right, and have a pretty open mind, but when you really start to travel and take the time to be in other people's worlds, you'll find out you have preconceived notions that don't [reflect reality]," he says.

"Regardless of where this person is from or what religion they're committed to, we all have truly common moments to share.

"It allows you to cherish what's similar, and not always see the differences in one another."

Gorillaz' latest album, The Mountain, exemplifies that approach. It draws heavily on the Hindu concept of Samsara - the continuous cycle of birth, life, death, and reincarnation - to help Albarn and Hewlett process the death of their own parents.

Across 15 tracks, it blends Indian musicians with archive recordings by the band's deceased collaborators - from actor Dennis Hopper to D12 rapper Proof - creating a bridge between the living and the dead.

"I was in the world of grief and confusion, and it was just nice to have all those people with me," says Albarn.

"They helped me, in a way, deal with my own grief, and come out the other end feeling positive, which is all any of us really can hope for."

Mercer can relate. He was going through a similar process on De La Soul's 2025 album Cabin In The Sky - working with outtakes and unfinished ideas from his bandmate Dave Jolicoeur, who died in 2023.

In Tottenham, he performs alongside videos of his old friend on a version of Feel Good Inc that rumbles like a juggernaut.

Keeping that connection alive "has been so meaningful," the musician says.

"You'll find yourself crying, very teary-eyed - but the love for him is always there, and his spirit is always there."

It's not the only time the show offers a chance to reflect.

Indian playback singer Asha Bhosle - once immortalised in Cornershop's Brimful of Asha - also appears on the video screens, singing The Shadowy Light.

It was the last song she recorded before her death this April, and finds the star asking the boatman to ferry her across the river to the afterlife.

'I feel your love'

The audience rarely stops moving. And, yes, there are thousands of beaming faces for Dirty Harry's cartoon choir.

Albarn occasionally remembers his Blur-era stage moves, racing into the crowd and declaring, "I feel your love".

But he's just as comfortable ceding the spotlight to Little Simz, or chuckling as he trades riffs with flautist Ajay Prasanna.

As one reviewer put it, he's not so much a band leader as "the conductor of an entire musical ecosystem".

"I like that because that's how I like to see myself," he says.

"I can do the frontman thing, but I love being part of a community."

Moonchild Sanelly puts it more colourfully.

"Damon's a mother crazy guru," she laughs. "He's insane."

Gorillaz setlist

The Mountain

The Happy Dictator

Tranz

Tomorrow Comes Today

Rhinestone Eyes

Saturnz Barz

The Moon Cave

El Mañana

Empire Ants

With Love To An Ex

The Empty Dream Machine

Casablanca

Delirium

Andromeda

Desolé

Stylo

Damascus

Dirty Harry

Garage Palace

White Flag

The Shadowy Light

The Sad God

Encore

Cloud of Unknowing

Plastic Beach

On Melancholy Hill

Orange County

The Manifesto

Dare!

Feel Good Inc

Clint Eastwood

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Sandro Tonali: Newcastle reject Spurs bid of about £80m

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Newcastle United have rejected a bid from Tottenham Hotspur for midfielder Sandro Tonali.

It is understood an offer worth about £80m was turned down earlier this week.

BBC Sport previously reported Spurs manager Roberto de Zerbi was a long-time admirer of Tonali and that the club were exploring the finances of a deal for the 26-year-old Italian.

However, their opening proposal was declined by Newcastle, who are in a strong position to command a greater fee closer to £100m as Manchester City and Arsenal monitor developments.

Newcastle have already sold Anthony Gordon to Barcelona, but the club's chief executive, David Hopkinson, has previously made it clear they will only trade players on "our terms".

Tonali is effectively contracted until 2030 after he signed a new deal during his 10-month betting ban to repay the faith the club showed in him.

The current market might also work in Newcastle's favour, if a bidding war ensues, given the valuations of midfielders elsewhere.

Manchester City had a second bid worth about £120m rejected by Nottingham Forest for Elliot Anderson, while relegated West Ham want up to £80m for Mateus Fernandes.

There may have been scenes of celebration at full-time at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium after De Zerbi's side avoided relegation on the final day of the season.

But there was a recognition internally that the club must never find themselves in such a dire position again.

Chief executive Vinai Venkatesham vowed "change is happening" in an interview with BBC Sport in May, and there has certainly been a shift in approach.

Spurs have already spent £52m on defender Jan Paul van Hecke, which would have been an unimaginable prospect once upon a time, given he had just one year left on his contract at Brighton.

They have also looked to capitalise on their revenue by adapting their wage structure, and signed Andy Robertson and Marcos Senesi on free transfers before the window even officially opened.

Although Spurs' opening gambit was unsuccessful, this approach for Tonali also marks a shift for a club who have never spent more than the £65m deal for Dominic Solanke.

However, it was rather telling that the bid was swiftly rejected by Newcastle.

In a week when Newcastle lost out to Liverpool in the race to sign Spain winger Victor Munoz, it would have been damning if Spurs succeeded with their opening bid for Tonali.

It is clearly going to take a great deal more to tempt Newcastle to cash in.

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