Dominic Solanke endured a difficult first season at Tottenham.
The 27-year-old joined Spurs from Bournemouth for a £60m fee last summer and notched 16 goals and eight assists in 45 matches.
The England international was hampered by injury problems, which was a huge problem for Ange Postecoglou, who was sacked earlier this month.
He will hope to kick on in his second campaign in North London with Thomas Frank now at the helm.
Solanke reacts as Kerkez transfer confirmed at Liverpool
Solanke was once at Liverpool before he made the move to the Cherries and then to the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium.
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One of his former teammates on the South Coast, Milos Kerkez, has joined the Anfield outfit for a fee in the region of £40million.
The Premier League champions posted a flurry of images on Instagram (26 June) as they announced the signing, with one captioned: “Milos’ signing day.”
The Spurs star commented on that post, saying: “Congrats bro” with praying hands and white heart emojis.
Liverpool spending is bad news for Tottenham
Daniel Levy recently spoke of his desire for the Lilywhites to compete for the highest honours after the decision to sack Postecoglou.
One of their rivals for the Premier League and Champions League titles are the Reds, who have strengthened significantly this summer, with Arsenal and Manchester City also expected to make moves in the market.
They replaced England star Trent Alexander-Arnold with Jeremie Frimpong and have now added Florian Wirtz and Kerkez into the fold, which is a scary proposition ahead of the new campaign.
Meanwhile, Spurs are yet to complete a significant new signing, with loanees Kevin Danso and Matheus Tel and young, inexperienced defenders Luka Vuskovic and Kota Takai joining their ranks so far.
Frank needs Levy to back him in the transfer window; otherwise, it could be a very tricky season for the former Brentford boss after the success that his predecessor delivered and the higher expectations that are now in place.
The N17 outfit may have won the Europa League, but their ambitions are now higher, and their spending needs to reflect that, especially when they are competing in Europe’s elite competition again.