"Kane needs to cast aside selflessness"
According to journalist Paul MacInnes, Harry Kane needs to focus on his career to become a football star. The journalist urged England's top goalscorer to be decisive about his future.
1 year ago
Harry Kane wants to leave Tottenham Hotspur in the summer transfer window as he wants to join a club with ambitious plans in Europe. Several clubs are interested in England's top goalscorer.
Manchester United, Real Madrid and Bayern Munich, among others, have all wanted to secure his services but Spurs chairman Daniel Levy is not making it easy. The president did not want to sell him to the Red Devils because he refuses to transfer him to a direct rival.
The Spanish club did not want to pay the 100 million pounds that the English board are asking for him as well as the Bundesliga side. As a result, journalist Paul MacInnes has urged the 30-year-old to be more decisive in his future and to "be ruthless with his career conundrum".
"You can't climb to the top of elite football without, at some point, acting both selfishly and ruthlessly. Or, to put it in more genteel terms, "doing what’s right for myself and my family". The question in the summer of 2023 is whether Harry might have left it too late.
"All of that without taking into account the Daniel Levy factor, the Spurs chairman who always gets his asking price, unless he doesn't, in which case you either linger at the club or do a Christian Eriksen and walk to a team you hadn't quite had your heart set on joining," he wrote on 'The Guardian'.
Manchester United, Real Madrid and Bayern Munich, among others, have all wanted to secure his services but Spurs chairman Daniel Levy is not making it easy. The president did not want to sell him to the Red Devils because he refuses to transfer him to a direct rival.
The Spanish club did not want to pay the 100 million pounds that the English board are asking for him as well as the Bundesliga side. As a result, journalist Paul MacInnes has urged the 30-year-old to be more decisive in his future and to "be ruthless with his career conundrum".
"You can't climb to the top of elite football without, at some point, acting both selfishly and ruthlessly. Or, to put it in more genteel terms, "doing what’s right for myself and my family". The question in the summer of 2023 is whether Harry might have left it too late.
"All of that without taking into account the Daniel Levy factor, the Spurs chairman who always gets his asking price, unless he doesn't, in which case you either linger at the club or do a Christian Eriksen and walk to a team you hadn't quite had your heart set on joining," he wrote on 'The Guardian'.
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