Citizen of Legoland
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 15 Jan 2013
- Messages
- 10,005
Levy is completely within his rights to ask for a higher figure that is true, but the question for him to answer isn't "what is Harry Kane worth?" it's "how much money do I need to make out of this deal to allow me to lower some of the debts and keep the playing squad at a similar level?". The prices are barmy because everyone has lost money in these last 18 months and the higher replacement costs meant he needed to test us with a higher request.I don't believe this at all. No buying club paying £100m+ for a player does everything on the selling clubs terms. Its fanciful at best to suggest we were trying to a deal of this magnitude, with the attitude that we would hang fire for weeks on end while Spurs tried to find a replacement. We might have done something like this with Villa for Grealish but did so knowing that with the buyout clause, Villa couldn't turn round and kibosh the deal.
We have walked away because we are not willing to meet the asking price, an asking price that by all accounts hasn't changed for weeks. We thought Spurs would lower their demands. Spurs thought we would increase our offer. Both wrong.
Remember we didn't technically need Kane, we can make do as it worked okay last season and there is talent breaking through from the youth ranks. He was a good choice though because he's proven in this league, seemed happy to join us and therefore low risk so it was worth trying for as long as we could. I don't see why that was the wrong thing to do.
In any case there are still options and another transfer window in January. If you use a scatter gun approach to transfer business you look desperate and get screwed, I prefer this patient method even if it doesn't work.