What Tottenham reportedly told Harry Kane on a potential transfer to Bayern Munich

Amid reports that Bayern Munich has submitted an official offer for Harry Kane, it has emerged that the player has been told he will not be sold this summer by Tottenham Hotspur.

Now into the final year of his current contract with Tottenham, Harry Kane‘s future is a hot topic in the footballing world once again.

There are many who suggest the England captain should leave Spurs in order to win trophies and cement his legacy as one of the best players of all time.

Florian Plettenberg claimed yesterday that Bayern Munich had earmarked Kane as their top target for the current transfer window. The Athletic’s David Ornstein then broke the news earlier today that the German side had indeed submitted an offer for Kane.

That offer is believed to be worth around €70 million (£60.1 million) plus add-ons, but Alasdair Gold has revealed that Spurs will reject that offer.

Tottenham has told Harry Kane he is not for sale

What Tottenham reportedly told Harry Kane on a potential transfer to Bayern Munich
What Tottenham reportedly told Harry Kane about a potential transfer to Bayern Munich

Now, the latest report from ESPN appears to confirm that, as Kane has apparently been told he will not be sold by Tottenham this summer.

According to the report, Tottenham “have not received an official bid” from the Bundesliga side yet, but if and when they do, it will be knocked back.

While Spurs are “aware” of Bayern’s interest in their star man, it is thought “there are no plans to offload” Kane during this transfer window.

The same applies to Manchester United’s reported interest in the player, with a move to Old Trafford being deemed “unlikely.”

It seems the only way Kane could possibly leave Tottenham this summer is if he “actively forces a transfer by telling Spurs that he wants to leave this summer.”

There is no way we should sell Kane for any amount this summer.

He is invaluable, and I would rather have another year of him scoring goals for us and see what happens next year, rather than cashing in now when we can’t possibly find a suitable replacement anyway.

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