Home » Tottenham looking to bounce back in the 2025/26 season

Tottenham looking to bounce back in the 2025/26 season

A general view as branding which reads "UEFA Europa League, Winners, 2025" is seen outside of the Tottenham stadium. (Photo by Mike Hewitt/Getty Images)

The transfer window at Spurs is well and truly open, and Thomas Frank focuses on strengthening the squad for the 2025/26 Premier League season and what will be an incredibly tough Champions League campaign.

Believe it or not, Frank has already snapped up the versatile attacking midfielder Mohammed Kudus from West Ham, Mathys Tel from Bayern Munich as a permanent signing after a loan spell, adding depth to the Lilywhite forward line. Kevin Danso has joined from Lens after a fabulous start for Spurs. Koto Takai joined us from Kawasaki Frontale, and Luka Vuskovic came over from Hajduk Split.

The summer is when most of us are thinking about some sunshine and the freedom that comes from relaxing, playing online games like pokies New Zealand and spending time as we see fit.

The key Tottenham transfer targets for the time in quite a while are rather inspiring. Morgan Gibbs-White from Nottingham Forest, once their lunatic chairman has finished acting like a lunatic, will be a sensational signing. Yoane Wissa, currently at Brentford, is a pacey attacker with 25 goal involvements in 2024/25, open to a move. Frank’s familiarity with the player makes this a logical target. Adam Wharton of Crystal Palace is another tricky one. He’s a key midfield target, valued for his ball-playing ability.

Eberechi Eze of Crystal Palace had lots of interest from us early on. Tottenham has subsequently reportedly cooled its pursuit, with Arsenal supposedly leading the race. It has been suggested that the player himself remains keen on a move. Whether there is any truth to any of this remains to be seen.

Tottenham has a lot of repairs to do to its house, after the last coach caused untold damage, losing a club record number of games, not to mention a record number of games for the Premier League division itself without being relegated.

The cost of the repairs will be significant, and it comes as little surprise to know that the same people bleating for mercy because of the cup win were the same inventing how much revenue was brought in by securing silverware. Thanks for the cup, but we need to make the club whole again.

Maybe there’s another job waiting for Ange Postecoglou in South East Asia, as it appears unlikely any of the world’s top five divisions will be queueing up to secure his services anytime soon. At the end of the day, Donna Marie Cullen paid with her job, as did another executive in Scott Munn.

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