Kane 'reaches agreement in principle' to join Bayern

Harry Kane ‘reaches agreement in principle’ to join Bayern Munich after his brother and agent held talks with the German champions but Tottenham insist their record goalscorer is NOT for sale

  • Harry Kane is drawing closer to securing a blockbuster transfer to Bayern 
  • Tottenham are adamant Harry Kane is not for sale despite his desire to leave
  • Stay up-to-date with the latest transfer news, rumours and gossip at Mail Sport 

Harry Kane and Bayern Munich have reached ‘an agreement in principle’ on a sensational summer transfer.

The England skipper was the subject of a £60m offer from the Germany champions on Tuesday, which was rejected by Tottenham as it falls well short of their valuation of the player.

But despite Spurs and Daniel Levy’s determination to keep their talisman, who has one year left on his deal, Kane is keen on a move to Thomas Tuchel’s side, as revealed by Mail Sport earlier.

And according to the German outlet Bild, the two have now reached ‘an agreement in principle’ with negotiations conducted by Kane’s father and brother.

The only thing holding up the deal now appears to be the rather sizable issue of Tottenham agreeing on a price for their wantaway star.

Harry Kane has only one year left on his contract, having been with the club for two decades

Thomas Tuchel’s side are confident of completing a blockbuster deal for Harry Kane 

Tottenham remain adamant that their talisman is not for sale and they will reject all offers

Tottenham’s stance at present is that they will reject any offer for the 29-year-old, who they say is not for sale. But receiving a transfer fee in the final summer window before his contract expires may become a more attractive prospect.

Bayern’s opening bid clearly fell well short of enticing club chiefs to appear from their entrenched position, but this revelation could lead to constructive negotiations on a deal.

Kane’s only realistic English suitor – Manchester United – are looking at alternatives amid concerns over his price and the prospect of negotiating with Spurs chairman Levy.

Without a market to drive up the price, Levy and Spurs are not in as good of a position to demand a hefty transfer fee.

That being said, the Tottenham chairman has garnered the reputation of a tough negotiator for a reason and he is well accustomed to forcing buyers to pay big money for club departures.


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