Harry Kane ‘set to join Manchester City from Tottenham in £160m deal this summer’

Harry Kane ‘set to join Manchester City in £160m deal this summer after Tottenham chairman Daniel Levy granted him permission to move to Premier League rival… with England captain set to sign £400,000-per-week deal at Etihad Stadium’

  • Harry Kane informed Tottenham of his desire to leave earlier this summer 
  • Spurs chairman Daniel Levy was adamant Kane would not join English rival
  • But The Sun claim he has now U-turned on that decision on the England star 
  • Kane will reportedly sign a four or five-year deal at champions Manchester City 

Harry Kane is set to get his wish and leave Tottenham in a Premier League-record £160million transfer to Manchester City this summer, according to reports. 

Kane informed Spurs of his desire to leave north London this summer in search of trophies earlier this summer, with Premier League champions City his preferred destination.

Chairman Daniel Levy stated last month that ‘what other clubs want is not always possible to achieve’ when speaking to Tottenham’s official website on the topic of players who might be the subject of bids in the transfer market.

Harry Kane is reportedly set to join Manchester City in a £160m transfer from Tottenham

The Sun claim Daniel Levy has granted permission for Kane to join a Premier League rival

The Sun claim Daniel Levy has granted permission for Kane to join a Premier League rival

But The Sun claim Levy has agreed to let Kane join a Premier League rival following a U-turn he announced last week, with the England captain reportedly set to earn £400,000 per week at the Etihad Stadium. 

The same outlet claims Levy rang Kane and and his elder brother and agent Charlie, 32, to tell them on Friday that he had changed his mind about only letting him leave for a club in Europe.

The report adds the length of Kane’s deal at City has yet to be decided but that it will either run for four or five seasons.

Reports last month suggested Spurs had rejected a £100m bid from City for Kane and boss Nuno Espirito Santo revealed last week he was confident Kane would be committed to the cause.

New Spurs director of football Fabio Paratici was also keen to rebuild a team involving the forward, but the latest reports suggest he will be making a move up north to play under Pep Guardiola.

Kane’s desire to leave followed another trophyless campaign for Spurs, who were defeated 1-0 by City in April’s Carabao Cup final at Wembley thanks to Aymeric Laporte’s header.

The 27-year-old appeared to put that disappointment behind him by netting four goals at Euro 2020 to help England to the final of the tournament before more heartbreak arrived in the form of a penalty shootout defeat by Italy at the same ground. 

A move to City this summer would see him link up with Three Lions team-mates Kyle Walker – also a former Spurs colleague – centre-back John Stones and forward Raheem Sterling, with whom he combined so well with at the Euros. 

The Sun however claim City and Brazil striker Gabriel Jesus could be a replacement for Kane at the north London outfit. 

The reported £160m fee would see City smash the English record transfer fee, which is currently the £89m Manchester United paid Juventus for Paul Pogba in 2016.

The transfer would also be a Tottenham record, with the reported figure for Kane way above the £86m they recouped for Gareth Bale when the Wales star joined Real Madrid in 2013. 

City have been desperate for a striker after seeing Sergio Aguero join Barcelona on a free transfer earlier in the transfer window.

The top-flight champions had also been linked with Borussia Dortmund star Erling Haaland. 

Forward Lukas Nmecha – who joined Wolfsburg from City in a permanent deal already this summer – revealed earlier this week that he left because the Manchester outfit are ‘getting another top striker’.

‘I still had one year of contract,’ Nmecha told Kicker after sealing an £11m move to Wolfsburg. 

‘They’re getting another top striker, I don’t think my chances would have been very good there.’

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