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Tottenham can still complete four transfers on deadline day with centre

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Tottenham can still complete four transfers on deadline day with centre-back update - Football London
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It has been a roller coaster ride for Thomas Frank in his first two-and-a-half months as Tottenham manager. From not being appointed until the transfer window had opened (briefly), closed again (even more briefly), and opened again (for good), he has had a whirlwind time.

In no specific order, Tottenham have tried to sign Morgan Gibbs-White, lost their first choice attacking midfielder to another long-term injury, been threatened with legal action over transfer activity, agreed to buy Eberechi Eze, beaten Manchester City, missed out on Eze to Arsenal, and lost against Bournemouth. Frank is a measured guy but would be justified in needing a rest already.

He is a coach with serious balance which will help as he prepares the squad for after the international break. Frank's track record is of improving players and working on a tight budget.

Part of the draw to him was seeing what he could do with increased support and better players. Therefore, failing to deliver in key areas in the market will understandably frustrate. For Daniel Levy and Johan Lange, it makes the coming 24-and-a-bit hours very important.

The transfer window shuts at 7pm on Monday. That is the deadline for deals to be done and there is still work to be completed. Here, football.london goes through the remaining business and what could happen.

In

This has been the priority area for Tottenham with Frank gearing up for Champions League football and the start of the Carabao Cup in midweek as well. Depth across the field is needed and Spurs still have gaps.

Notably, they found themselves short in attacking midfield, where James Maddison's latest fitness woes left a giant hole. Moves for Gibbs-White and Eze have fallen through with Xavi Simons emerging as a surprise alternative.

His transfer went from nothing to completed within a matter of hours and as a No.10 and left-side option, Simons does fit the bill. Tottenham are also admirers of Manchester City forward Savinho.

He will be able to leave if Rodrygo from Real Madrid (or another suitable replacement) arrives. It is one which has gone quiet, hence the turn to Simons.

Then there is the centre-back situation. Ange Postecoglou was forced to put Archie Gray and Lucas Bergvall into his backline at points last season due to injuries. Frank will not be keen to repeat that experiment.

Spurs do have Kevin Danso but he is currently sidelined. Luka Vuskovic is a highly rated youngster, but has gone for a loan toHamburg to aid his development.

Tottenham have previously been in the market for Marc Guehi but he has his eyes set on Liverpool if any move is to happen. Should Spurs fancy a new centre-back then he is one of the options out there, regardless.

With his contract expiring next summer, Palace could be pressured into a cut-price sale. The other long-term player of interest is Trevoh Chalobah.

Chelsea are not pushing to sell him as much as in recent years but given their attempts to meet UEFA's squad balancing rules, making big money back from Chalobah would be valuable. There is nothing to suggest he is on Tottenham's radar right now but if a new centre-back is needed now that Simons is through the door.

Manuel Akanji at Manchester City is another option. He appears set to leave the Etihad Stadium before the window closes and is a readymade Premier League proven player to keep an eye on as the final hours tick by.

Out

This is a much shorter set with Spurs moving on from an enormous group of players in the past few years. This year has been quieter but still saw Son Heung-min exit and Pierre-Emile Hojbjerg make his loan (and end of contract) into a permanent switch to Marseille.

Loans for Alejo Veliz, Mikey Moore, Alfie Devine, and Yang Min-hyeok have all been completed as well. Vuskovic, as mentioned, joinrf the loan gang at Hamburg in Germany.

Tottenham still need to find a way to sever ties with Bryan Gil, who remarkably remains on their books. Yves Bissouma is an easier one to get out of the door. He was disciplined by Frank for being late during pre-season (the third such occasion in three years) and looks to be bringing his stay in north London to an end.

Galatasaray had been waiting to take him on, albeit on a loan, but that has hit a dead end. Then there is Manor Solomon, who spent last season at Leeds United. Most of the talk has been around him returning to Elland Road but nothing has been finalised yet.

Leeds are in the market for a new winger and Solomon is a Premier League proven player with experience for Daniel Farke having helped achieve promotion with him. After leaving Leeds, Solomon said: "After nearly a year without football, I couldn't have asked for a better comeback season and a better ending.

"I really don't know what the future holds, but I do know that Leeds United will forever be in my heart. Thank you again, fans, for the unforgettable past few weeks and all your incredible support and love throughout the entire season. We are the champions."

He could go back to Yorkshire and make it three more outgoings to close the chapter for Tottenham's summer. Add in the possibility of maybe a centre-back, there are moving pieces all over and four possible deals left for Lange and Co.

Tottenham get huge transfer green light for statement signing as £47m deal edges closer

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Tottenham may have just been handed a massive transfer boost even though it involves a summer target joining a Premier League rival.

It has been a mixed trading period for Spurs with the embarrassment of failing to sign Eberechi Eze and Morgan Gibbs-White somewhat cancelled out after signing Xavi Simons, who looked set for a move to Chelsea, in a £51million deal. The Lilywhites have also brought in Mohammed Kudus, Mathys Tel, Joao Palhinha and Kota Takai.

Having sold club captain Son Heung-min to LAFC, while also being without Dejan Kulusevski, James Maddison and Dominic Solanke due to injuries, Tottenham still want to sign another attacker.

Savinho of Manchester City was their top target to replace Son but he now looks set to stay at Etihad Stadium. Atalanta star Ademola Lookman, who has played in the Premier League before, is one versatile forward that has been linked after his move to Inter collapsed.

Nico Paz, Maghnes Akliouche and Lucas Paqueta are just a few others that Tottenham have been keeping tabs on. A move for the latter always looked unlikely though as Spurs had already dealt with West Ham earlier in the summer for Kudus.

The Brazil international does still look set for a London Stadium exit though with Aston Villa making an approach and the £47million deal, which would be an initial loan that includes an obligation-to-buy, moving quickly, as per transfer guru Fabrizio Romano.

Though Paqueta is keen on a Villa Park switch, West Ham are yet to give it the green light. Considering his importance, the Hammers will almost certainly be determined to receive a sizeable fee now so that they can go and sign a replacement.

If that scenario plays out, it could open the door for Tottenham to make an audacious swoop for Morgan Rogers. As evidenced in the 1-0 defeat to Bournemouth, Frank needs another attacker that can add a new dimension to his Spurs frontline.

Capable of playing in every position behind the striker, Rogers can absolutely be that with it possible Villa are open to accepting an offer below his steep asking price if they are forced to sign Paqueta for significant funds now.

It is likely he would still cost in the region of £80million but as Eze and Savinho were pursued in separate deals earlier this month, it certainly seems as though the money is there. Even if the England international joins, Simons would still have a huge role to play at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium

Considering their involvement in the Champions League, the Lilywhites will need at least two options for every position with Simons, Rogers, Kudus, Brennan Johnson, Mathys Tel, Wilson Odobert, Solanke and Richarlison as eight players that can cover those four attacking roles.

With so much required to make it happen, it does seem unlikely that Rogers makes the move to Tottenham but Paqueta joining Villa would at least increase the possibility of it.

What Thomas Frank has asked of Lange and Levy in the final days of Tottenham's transfer window

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As certain as the passing of the seasons and the sun and moon rising in the sky is the fact that Tottenham will lose before an international break.

Spurs might have put in three impressive performances, starting the Premier League season with five goals and two clean sheets, including a win at the Etihad Stadium, but just whisper in someone's ear that it's time for international football and the north London club will crumble.

Tottenham have now lost their past seven Premier League games on the matchday before an international break. It never used to be that way, they had gone unbeaten in the previous 13 before that, winning 10 of those but something shifted a couple of years ago.

Perhaps it's just coincidence, perhaps players are mindful of getting injured or perhaps they just lack the ability to focus on the present.

Either way, this was a dismal affair reminiscent of much of what was served up in the Premier League last season with Spurs as open to counter attacks as they were back then despite Thomas Frank's new defensive structure and that's what annoyed him even more than the lack of creativity

"We clearly didn’t perform well today. We played against a very good Bournemouth team that we know can make it difficult for any team in the league," Frank told football.london. "They played to their strengths. They did that very well and we didn’t handle it well.

"We knew exactly what they came with and we trained for it. We just didn’t handle it well enough in terms of the balls in behind, the second balls, duels in the middle of the park.

"That’s the defensive side and on the offensive side we struggled to find good enough solutions to get through phase one and two so we could get up there and put a bit of pressure on them. We only did that in the last 15 where we put on good pressure and could have equalised. I think over the game it was fair that Bournemouth won."

Tottenham were missing that bit of magic and the man who can provide that was only able to step on to the pitch to say hello to the fans inside his new home.

Xavi Simons, Spurs' new £52million signing, who put pen to paper on a five-year contract with an option for another two, came out onto the turf five minutes before the supporters had been told, catching out a few who hadn't reached their seats yet.

He waved and applauded all the stands and showed off his phone goal celebration, which came about because he was always ringing his brother when he first moved to PSG and they decided on it while playing FIFA together and saw a similar celebration.

Spurs could have done with Xavi being signed before the Friday deadline and having magically been awarded his work permit in record time. For everything that the 22-year-old Dutchman brings to the table was needed against the Cherries.

"Sometimes you need a player that can do something (clicks his fingers) a little bit out of nothing, go past the player, produce a cross, a shot, a pass, with that extra quality that you need on the day, and that's what I think he can bring," said Frank of his new signing.

Xavi's arrival certainly brought a buzz inside Hotspur Way on the day he was being signed with players excited about the transfer and some asking staff whether it was done yet at points around training.

For the Barcelona product is a statement signing and he's got all the elements to become a star in this Tottenham side. The club shop on Saturday had so many fans looking to get number seven shirts with his name on it that the wait for printing reached more than an hour at one point.

The youngster watched the game from a box in the west stand, complete with a big entourage which will no doubt slim down as he settles in. He was taken down inside the stadium with about 10 minutes to go of the match.

The problem with Sunday's defeat is that it showed how Spurs can be without creativity and with the running and pressing game below what was required. They had 61.4% of the possession but an XG of just 0.17 compared to Bournemouth's 1.45. In simpler terms, the visitors had 20 shots to Tottenham's five, in their own backyard.

So what happens if Xavi misses matches against teams that are tougher to break down and double up on the wide men?

Spurs' original plan was to sign Morgan Gibbs-White to compete with and play alongside James Maddison, only for the latter to suffer that ACL injury and ruled out for much of the campaign. So it is risky to go into a busy campaign with just Xavi as a true number 10, although he can also play down the left.

When football.london asked Frank if a defeat like this showed he needed another creative player in addition to Xavi the Dane danced around the topic somewhat.

"It’s fair to say we didn’t defend as well as we should do and we have done in the first three games. That I am quite confident we will come back to defend well again but that could have helped massively," he said.

"The creativity, yes, that’s why we signed Simons to have an extra offensive player but I also think on the day with all due respect to our offensive players none of them hit a high level and that happens sometimes. I’m very aware. I don’t want to say it’s okay but it’s natural."

Spurs have less than 48 hours remaining of the transfer window which closes on Monday at 7pm.

What will make these final days all the more interesting is that Frank has made it clear to Tottenham both privately and publicly that he doesn't want extra numbers just for the sake of it and wants only to bring in the quality of player that can continue to improve the starting XI.

Despite a hugely frustrating transfer window at times, one of the major positives has been that in Mohammed Kudus, Joao Palhinha and Xavi, Spurs have brought in three starters, which in turn naturally strengthens the rest of the squad. Contrast that to last summer when Tottenham signed just a single starter in Dominic Solanke alongside a group of teenagers.

If Spurs are to compete across all four competitions, including that Champions League return, then the signings must be ready for the biggest of games.

So Frank is believed to have made it clear that he would rather wait for a top drawer player if a similar level candidate is not available right now. For instance, the Dane has Manchester City's Savinho right up at the top of his wanted list and if a winger of a similar ready-made level is not available in the remaining time of this window then he would prefer to wait for the Brazilian if he is expected to be available in a future window rather than in the final hours of this one.

The question that of course raises is why Spurs have not managed to do as much by this point as other clubs. Depending on your point of view it either puts pressure on technical director Johan Lange and chairman Daniel Levy to deliver another high level player for Frank in the remaining hours or it eases the need to panic buy just anyone to bolster numbers.

The lack of creativity aside from Xavi will be an issue if someone else does not come in until Dejan Kulusevski returns, which is not expected to be any time in the near future.

The Spurs boss also made it clear that he does not want another striker at this stage despite Solanke feeling some discomfort in the ankle that had bothered him all summer and missing Saturday's match.

"No. I would say not particularly. To have three strikers in the squad can also cause a problem as you can only play one at a time," he said. "It’s a fine balance. I’m not saying we will never go for another striker at another time but I’m happy with Dom and Richarlison."

Frank wants another winger/10 and a centre-back although the latter brings with it an age-old Tottenham problem that rarely seems to exist at other clubs.

The north London club used to struggle to attract top level strikers because their targets knew they would not play with Harry Kane in the building.

Now when it comes to centre-backs, Spurs are finding that some similar level defenders they have targeted believe Cristian Romero and Micky van de Ven's partnership will render them as a back-up.

The truth is that the duo's availability last season, 26 and 22 games played respectively from Tottenham's 60, shows the odds favour someone coming in and getting game time.

Even someone like City's Manuel Akanji. How do you sell swapping Pep Guardiola's bench for Frank's bench to the 30-year-old? It can only be done through the hope of Champions League football and games aplenty to share out.

Frank played down the need for another centre-back when asked on Friday ahead of the game.

"We have right now three centre-backs: Micky, Romero, Danso. Ben can play there if necessary," he said. " We have Kota the young central defender we bought this summer and is running now and training with the team next week, or training with the ball. There’s not many left behind, and then Dragusin is coming back in a couple of months so that should be enough. Not as it stands, no [we don't need another]."

Frank's requirement for quality rather than simply numbers is going to ensure the final days of the transfer window will see Spurs very much going big or going home. The outcome could dictate just how successful this season is.

Frank also experienced something for the first time as a Spurs manager on Saturday - the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium anxiety levels.

So far the Dane has only experienced the club's home at its most positive. Against Bournemouth, he got to see the excitement before the game over Xavi's unveiling, the early buzz of the opening minutes with an early Pape Matar Sarr run and low cross pushed out by the keeper and then what came next.

What came next was a performance from Spurs that gave the majority of the 61,250 supporters very little to cheer. When that happens the frustration grows inside the huge stadium.

Brennan Johnson found himself on the end of that. The 24-year-old actually started the game really brightly with a couple of good runs and one exquisite spinning flick into the path of Djed Spence's run.

Then he made a few bad decisions with the ball and the groans grew. It's noticeable that other players can misplace a pass or struggle with their end product but they don't receive the reaction last season's top scorer does.

When Johnson eventually came off there were cheers for his substitution, despite the fact that this was a player who had scored key goals in both of the two previous games.

It was made all the more awkward by the fact that he had to then walk past three of the stands as he came off on the other side of the pitch. He understandably kept his eyes on the game the whole time.

The truth as well is that few others were any better on the day, perhaps only Guglielmo Vicario and Van de Ven coming out of the encounter with any real credit as they kept the defeat from being a heavy one.

Pedro Porro had a nightmare, as many others have had, in dealing with Antoine Semenyo. The Spaniard became so concerned about getting left exposed in a foot race with the Ghana international that he would sometimes tuck inside behind Romero, on one occasion causing the Argentine to bellow at him as he provided no passing option when he had strode out of defence with the ball.

Porro was taken off in the 71st minute, something that was rarely seen last season, but it said a lot about his impact.

Djed Spence, after his first England call-up, was simply okay on the whole other than playing Evanilson onside by a distance as the back four tried to step out, allowing the Brazilian, who had peeled off Romero to score with a deflected effort.

Rodrigo Bentancur, Palhinha and Sarr were hard-working without having the guile to open up Bournemouth. This was a game when Sarr as a number 10 just did not work.

Richarlison put in a performance up top that had none of the highlights of recent weeks as his hold-up play was poor and so was his distribution.

On his right, Kudus tried to make things happen but often did his best Lucas Moura impression of either beating one man and running into another as Bournemouth doubled up on him or getting into good positions only to deliver a poor final ball.

Of the substitutes, Wilson Odobert continues to look lightweight and tentative in his decision-making at times, firing over a decent chance from inside the Cherries' box when unmarked. Lucas Bergvall was brighter and grabbed hold of the midfield play when he could, while Destiny Udogie's return showed the balance he can bring down the left and he flashed a last-gasp header wide.

Mathys Tel only came on for the final minutes but could have scored a wonderful goal had his acrobatic volley from Spence's cross flown the other side of the left-hand post.

At the final whistle came the boos, as they had to a lesser degree at half-time. There was definitely some aimed towards the officials, who had let some of Bournemouth's more physical play go unpunished.

However, those final whistle boos came after a rare period without any gripes at the referee Simon Hooper. They were about the performance of the Spurs players. It was only when the officials walked off and down the tunnel that they got their own separate and loud boos.

"I prefer them not to boo, but I understand," said Frank afterwards. "It was not a good performance today and they have high expectations, which is absolutely fair. I think let's say if we perform even better and still lose the football match today, I don't think we hit the level we should.

"I think the players gave everything and then that's the foundation and put the heart out there, but football-wise we didn't hit our top level today."

The international break is now upon us and the Spurs players will scatter off around the world. For some, we may not see them at the north London club again.

Bryan Gil has not been spotted at Tottenham anyway this summer thanks to his knee injury recovery and it would seem miraculous if no exit emerges for him before Monday ends.

Yves Bissouma celebrated his 29th birthday on Saturday out of the squad with his knee injury. Galatasaray had previously held discussions over trying to sign the midfielder and others could well try in the coming days but it all depends on the player and what level he believes is befitting of him.

Manor Solomon was back on the bench in Solanke's absence, but barring a remarkable turnaround it seems a difficult route for the 26-year-old to get into Frank's thinking. The sheer number of players the Dane has to squeeze into 22 spots in his Champions League squad next week suggests Solomon will not be among them.

It's going to be a fascinating final two days of the transfer window at Tottenham. The club turned their business around with the statement signing of Xavi only for the defeat to Bournemouth to show more is needed.

Frank wants only those who can make a big contribution right away rather than simply fill gaps. Are such players available so late in the window and if so, will Tottenham make their clubs an offer they simply cannot refuse?

Tottenham fixtures before and after Champions League games with Arsenal and Man City challenge

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Thomas Frank and Tottenham now have their Champions League schedule for the 2025/26 season. All clubs taking part in this season's competition discovered their fixtures on Saturday morning having found out their opponents in Thursday's draw in Monaco.

Villarreal are first up for Spurs in Europe's premier competition, with the match taking place at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium on Tuesday, September 16. Two weeks later the team are on the road as they return to Bodo/Glimt having played the Norwegian side in the semi-finals of last campaign's Europa League.

AS Monaco away is up next on Wednesday, October 22, with FC Copenhagen at home and PSG at Parc des Princes to come on Tuesday, November 4 and Wednesday, November 26 respectively.

The Lilywhites only have one European game on the calendar in December as Slavia Prague visit Tottenham Hotspur Stadium on Tuesday, December 9. Spurs' league phase campaign draws to a conclusion in January with Borussia Dortmund at home on Tuesday, January 20 and Eintracht Frankfurt away on Wednesday, January 28.

Tottenham do have a decent set of Champions League fixtures and the hope will be that they can claim enough points to secure a place in the knockout round, whether that be via the top eight or the knockout phase play-offs. As ever when it comes to the Champions League, all managers want Premier League fixtures to fall kindly for them either side of their European exploits.

Tottenham do have a couple of tricky games either before or after their Champions League fixtures in the 2025/26 season. Perhaps the most notable is the north London derby at Arsenal's Emirates Stadium coming four days before they visit Paris to take on Luis Enrique's exciting PSG team.

Given the importance of their last league phase game at Eintracht Frankfurt as they may need the points to secure qualification to the next stage of the competition, they then play Manchester City on home soil three days later. Here is the full list of who Tottenham play before and after their eight league phase fixtures:

Matchday 1

Saturday, September 13 - West Ham (A)

Tuesday, September 16 - Villarreal (H)

Saturday, September 20 - Brighton & Hove Albion (A)

Matchday 2

Sunday, September 28 - Wolves (H)*

Tuesday, September 30 - Bodo/Glimt (A)

Saturday, October 4 - Leeds United (A)

*Now subject to further rescheduling after Champions League draw

Matchday 3

Sunday, October 19 - Aston Villa (H)

Wednesday, October 22 - AS Monaco (A)

Sunday, October 26 - Everton (H)

Matchday 4

Saturday, November 1 - Chelsea (H)

Tuesday, November 4 - FC Copenhagen (H)

Saturday, November 8 - Manchester United (H)

Matchday 5

Saturday, November 22 - Arsenal (A)

Wednesday, November 26 - PSG (A)

Saturday, November 29 - Fulham (H)

Matchday 6

Saturday, December 6 - Brentford (H)

Tuesday, December 9 - Slavia Prague (H)

Saturday, December 13 - Nottingham Forest (A)

Matchday 7

Saturday, January 17 - West Ham (H)

Tuesday, January 20 - Borussia Dortmund (H)

Saturday, January 24 - Burnley (A)

Matchday 8

Saturday, January 24 - Burnley (A)

Wednesday, January 28 - Eintracht Frankfurt (A)

Saturday, January 31 - Manchester City (H)

Every word Thomas Frank said on new striker transfer, Xavi Simons and Solanke injury

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Thomas Frank had plenty to discuss after Tottenham's 1-0 defeat at home against Bournemouth on Saturday afternoon in the Premier League.

Spurs' new £52million signing Xavi Simons was unveiled to the fans before the kick-off but the party atmosphere in north London was spoiled when Bournemouth attacker Evanilson scored just four minutes in.

The Brazilian was given too much space in the Spurs box and his shot on the run deflected off the sliding Cristian Romero and over Guglielmo Vicario's dive. The Cherries could have scored more goals with Vicario called upon to make a string of acrobatic saves in both halves to keep the home side in the game until a later flurry from Tottenham brought plenty of huffing and puffing in front of goal but no equaliser.

Our Spurs correspondent Alasdair Gold was among those putting the questions to Frank after the game. Here's the full transcript from the press conference at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium.

What was the team missing today?

We clearly didn’t perform well today. We played against a very good Bournemouth team that we know can make it difficult for any team in the league. They played to their strengths. They did that very well and we didn’t handle it well. We knew exactly what they came with and we trained for it. We just didn’t handle it well enough in terms of the balls in behind, the second balls, duels in the middle of the park.

That’s the defensive side and on the offensive side we struggled to find good enough solutions to get through phase one and two so we could get up there and put a bit of pressure on them. We only did that in the last 15 where we put on good pressure and could have equalised. I think over the game it was fair that Bournemouth won.

The lack of creativity will be partially addressed by Xavi Simons, but do you need any more signings to address it in the final days of the window?

It’s fair to say we didn’t defend as well as we should do and we have done in the first three games. That I am quite confident we will come back to defend well again but that could have helped massively.

The creativity, yes, that’s why we signed Simons to have an extra offensive player but I also think on the day with all due respect to our offensive players none of them hit a high level and that happens sometimes. I’m very aware. I don’t want to say it’s okay but it’s natural.

Are you concerned about Dominic Solanke’s ankle injury?

I’m hopeful he will be back after the international break.

Due to Solanke’s injury, will you consider signing a centre-forward? You didn’t have a natural striker to bring off the bench today?

No. I would say not particularly. To have the three strikers in the squad can also cause a problem as you can only play one at a time. It’s a fine balance. I’m not saying we will never go for another striker at another time but I’m happy with Dom and Richarlison.

The Spurs fans booed at half-time and full time, could you understand that?

I prefer them not to boo, but I understand. It was not a good performance today and they have high expectations, which is absolutely fair. I think let's say if we perform even better and still lose the football match today, I don't think we hit the level we should. I think the players gave everything and then that's the foundation and put the heart out there, but football wise we didn't hit our top level today.

Does today show that there is work to do to get the squad to the level that you want?

Yeah, but it's not about only making the squad the level. It's also for us to not manage, but play different games. There's one game against City, one kind of football, different kind of football against Burnley. Bournemouth completely different third kind of football and all kinds of footballs you need to be able to perform against, and we struggled with it.

How excited are you to sign Xavi Simons?

Yeah, yeah, very excited, very happy that we signed him. I think it was a great signing from the club. He can play 10 or left winger, those are the two main positions.

On Dominic Solanke's injury, is there any reason why it's resurfaced?

Sometimes, you know, we just take a little bit longer time. It's easier. It's not like he re-injured it again, so you can say if you have a muscle injury, then you can maybe reinjure, it's nothing to do with that. It's not progressing as quick as we hoped for, but we are still positive that it can be solved in the next two weeks.

How do you reflect on your first three league games in charge and have you got any plans for the international break?

I think two good performances and one bad, so I would like to avoid bad performances. I think the lower level was too low today, so that's what we need to raise. I think again, work ethic and character in the team was good, but I think we lacked some football bits.

When you've got a game like that where you're struggling to break them down, what can Xavi bring with his skill set?

I think he can bring on a day where I can say our structure building up and all that because it's not only about that, then sometimes you need a player that can do something (clicks his fingers) a little bit out of nothing, go past the player, produce a cross, a shot, a pass, with that extra quality that you need on the day, and that's what I think he can bring.

Tottenham boss on more transfers, Xavi Simons and Solanke

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Thomas Frank is holding his press conference following Tottenham's 1-0 home defeat against Bournemouth on Saturday afternoon in the Premier League.

Frank named an unchanged team from the one that won 2-0 at Manchester City the previous weekend. Dominic Solanke did miss out on the squad though with his ankle injury still giving him discomfort, meaning Manor Solomon was back on the bench for the first time in two years. Destiny Udogie was also among the substitutes after his return from injury with Djed Spence remaining at left-back after earning himself his first England call-up.

Bournemouth struck early on when Evanilson scored four minutes in. He was given too much space in the box and his shot deflected off the sliding Cristian Romero and over Guglielmo Vicario's dive with Spence slow to get out and playing him onside.

The Cherries could have scored more goals with Vicario making a string of saves in both halves to keep the home side in the game until a later flurry from Tottenham brought plenty of huffing and puffing but no equaliser.

Our Spurs correspondent Alasdair Gold is among those putting the questions to Frank after the game. Scroll down for his latest updates from the press conference at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium.

Johnson and Porro flat with Vicario and Van de Ven busy

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Tottenham Hotspur lost 1-0 to Bournemouth in Thomas Frank's first Premier League defeat at the club on Saturday afternoon and here are our Spurs player ratings.

Spurs fans got a glimpse of new signing Xavi Simons ahead of kick-off as he was unveiled on the pitch following his £52million move from RB Leipzig on a five-year contract with an option for another two. The 22-year-old Dutchman signed after the deadline to register for the game against the Cherries and is awaiting his work permit.

Frank named an unchanged team from the one that beat Manchester City 2-0 at the Etihad Stadium the previous weekend. Dominic Solanke missed out on the squad though with his ankle injury from the summer still giving him discomfort, meaning Manor Solomon was back on the bench for the first time in two years. Destiny Udogie was also back on the bench after his return from injury with Djed Spence remaining at left-back after earning himself his first England call-up.

Bournemouth struck early on when Evanilson scored four minutes in. He was given too much space in the box and his shot deflected off the sliding Cristian Romero and over Guglielmo Vicario's dive with Spence slow to get out and playing him onside.

The Cherries could have scored more goals with Vicario making a string of saves in both halves to keep the home side in the game until a later flurry from Tottenham brought plenty of huffing and puffing but no equaliser.

Here are our Spurs player ratings:

Guglielmo Vicario

Couldn't do much about Evanilison's deflected early finish but did push away Brooks' clever free-kick not too long after. Did well to get a palm to Semenyo's half-volley just after the break. Made another save at the feet of Evanilson before denying Brooks a little while after. 8

Pedro Porro

Had a torrid time with Semenyo down his flank. Sent in a couple of half-decent balls, one which led to a Bergvall chance, but this was not his day. Was hooked with 20 minutes to go. 4

Cristian Romero

Unfortunate to deflect Evanilson's shot into the goal although he did let the Brazilian peel away from him too easily. Pushed up the pitch as the game wore on, often relying on his younger centre-back partner to deal with what came. 6

Micky van de Ven

Picked up an early caution. Made a great block from Tavernier midway through the first half and made a number more in the second half. He and Vicario were Spurs' best players by a distance. He was constantly getting in the tackles and then taking the ball up the pitch. 8

Djed Spence

Fresh from his first England call-up he was slow to get out and played Evanilson onside for his early goal. Switched to the right later on and put in a great cross that Tel volleyed wide. 6

Rodrigo Bentancur

Gave everything and made some good interceptions, but he's not a creative player. 6

Joao Palhinha

Put in a couple of challenges but Bournemouth just kept sweeping through. 5

Mohammed Kudus

Flattered to deceive. Plenty of beating one man but then giving the ball away soon after in his play. Should have got a few more fouls than he did. Put in some poor crosses as well after getting into good positions. 5

Pape Matar Sarr

Never really found the rhythm of the game or where his position needed him to be. 5

Brennan Johnson

Started the game brightly but seemed to lose his confidence with a string of poor decisions and the crowd let him know it. After goals in both the previous games, the fans cheered his substitution and he had to walk around the pitch in front of them. 4

Richarlison

Held up the ball well in the final exchanges but this was nowhere near the level of performance he'd put in previously this season. 5

Subs

Lucas Bergvall

Sent a shot at the goalkeeper and brought some energy to the centre of the pitch, making one good late run. 6

Wilson Odobert

Half-volleyed over from inside the Bournemouth box and made one good tracking run to stop Semenyo getting in on goal. Still looks lightweight at times and doesn't make the most of his ability. 5

Destiny Udogie

Replaced Porro for the final 15 minutes and sent a last-gasp header across the face of goal. 5

Mathys Tel

Evanilson scores opener after Solanke problem

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So close

Almost a cracking goal from Tel as he volleys a Spence cross just wide of the left-hand post.

Shot

Finally a shot from Spurs and it's Bergvall who gets on to Richarlison's knock down and hits an effort at the keeper.

Bournemouth sub

Former Spurs man Adam Smith has to come off with what looked like a hamstring issue. He's replaced by James Hill.

Save

David Brooks tries a cheeky free-kick which almost catches Vicario out from distance but the Italian gets across to push it away.

Bournemouth score

Evanilson scores four minutes in. He's given too much space in the box and his shot deflects off the sliding Romero and over Vicario's dive. Spence slow to get out and plays him onside.

Quick start

Early half-chance for Spurs as Johnson plays Sarr into the box and his low cross is pushed out by the keeper.

Xavi Simons time soon

He'll be presented to the crowd five minutes before kick off. So in about nine minutes.

Thomas Frank on Dominic Solanke

He has got a minor issue with his ankle. That's been a little bit grumbling also in the pre-season. It's just too much for this game and now we have international break so hopefully he can be ready after that.

Thomas Frank has a special way of convincing new players to join

Thomas Frank has explained the very direct way he speaks to players to get them to sign for Spurs, which seemed to work with Xavi Simons, and the Dane spoke about the kind of Tottenham squad he wants to build, and you can find that all by heading right here.

Here's our predicted Spurs team

You can find our predicted Spurs team for today by going right here. Let us know yours below.

Here's everything Thomas Frank said in his press conference

You can find every word Thomas Frank said when asked about Xavi Simons, more transfers, the latest injury news, Djed Spence's England call-up, when Radu Dragusin will be back and plenty more by heading right here.

Spurs' Champions League fixtures are out

Here's when and where Spurs will play on their return to the Champions League.

Tuesday 16 September – Villarreal (H) – 8pm UK

Tuesday 30 September – Bodo/Glimt (A) – 8pm UK

Wednesday 22 October – AS Monaco (A) – 8pm UK

Tuesday 4 November– FC Copenhagen (H) – 8pm UK

Wednesday 26 November – Paris Saint-Germain (A) – 8pm UK

Tuesday 9 December – Slavia Prague (H) – 8pm UK

Tuesday 20 January – Borussia Dortmund (H) – 8pm UK

Wednesday 28 January – Eintracht Frankfurt (A) – 8pm UK

Why Dominic Solanke is not in Tottenham squad for Bournemouth as Thomas Frank confirms injury

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Dominic Solanke has not been named in Tottenham's matchday squad for the Premier League clash against Bournemouth due to an ankle injury.

The striker is yet to start a game for Spurs this campaign and has instead been used from the bench by Thomas Frank. Richarlison has started the season in fine form, with the Dane even admitting the Brazilian is the team's current starting striker.

Speaking ahead of the match on Saturday at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, Frank explained that Solanke has been left out of the squad to face the Cherries due to a minor ankle injury.

"He has got a minor issue with his ankle," Frank said. "That's been a little bit grumbling also in the pre-season. It's just too much for this game and now we have international break so hopefully he can be ready after that."

Speaking about both Richarlison and Solanke last week, Frank said: "Right now, he is my starting nine "He scored two fantastic goals. He had two top games, he’s the Brazilian number nine.

"He’s a very good player, I’m very happy with him. Richy wants to stay, I want to keep him, there have been no talks about anything else. We just played the first game, scored three goals, that’s pretty promising. It’s a long season, we need players with different abilities.

"[Mohammed] Kudus has the spark and creativity, Wilson [Odobert] does that well, Mathys [Tel] can play different positions. We have two good strikers in Dom [Solanke] and Richy, Brennan [Johnson] the deep runner. We have variation up the pitch, but again we’ll look out there for someone who can strengthen but that’s in all areas."

Dominic Solanke absence explained as Frank names XI

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Thomas Frank has named his Tottenham team to take on Bournemouth in the Premier League on Saturday afternoon.

Spurs fans will get a glimpse of new signing Xavi Simons on Saturday although Thomas Frank cannot select the £52million player. The 22-year-old from RB Leipzig joined on Friday on a five-year contract with an option for another two. Simons signed after the deadline to register for the game against the Cherries and is awaiting his work permit. He will be unveiled in an appearance on the pitch for his new fans.

With the players he can select, Frank has named an unchanged team from the one that beat Manchester City 2-0 at the Etihad Stadium. Dominic Solanke misses out on the squad though with Manor Solomon back on the bench for the first time in two years.

On Solanke, Frank said: "He has got a minor issue with his ankle. That's been a little bit grumbling also in the pre-season. It's just too much for this game and now we have international break so hopefully he can be ready after that."

Destiny Udogie is back in training for a week now and is back on the bench because Djed Spence has done more than enough to keep his place at left-back and earned himself his first England call-up.

Here's the team Frank has selected to face the Cherries: