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Will Harry Kane ever leave Spurs or will he go down solo club greatest hit act?

Harry Kane could be in Munich when August dawns; or he could be in London. He could be combining with Leroy Sane and Thomas Muller; or he could be revving up with his usual chum Son Heung-min. There is a predictable familiarity—a sense of tedium even—about where he could end up and where he eventually ends up.
Every transfer window—an industry of high theatre and undulating drama—for the best part of the last decade winks in with a rumour, speculation or conjecture of Kane bidding farewell to his childhood club, for whom he has played all his life except for brief loan spells in formative years, and ends with the recurring climax of him remaining at the club. Infinite possibilities are spun, like he is building a new house near the training camp of the rivals, or that he was spotted holidaying in Spain, or idling in Paris. The rumours whirl all window along, until the last second of deadline day has passed and Kane appears with his blazing smile from the tunnel.

The Kane-script, thus, has become entirely humdrum, indefinitely di reguer. There have been times when he refused offers; there have been instances when he flirted with switching loyalties but for the tight-fed hands of David Levy, the Tottenham Hotspur chairman Daniel Levy. Kane thus is torn between the unalloyed love for childhood club and the ambition to win major silverwares, his life made uneasier the stiff chairman.
To his credit, Kane has been utmost dignified in the episodes that run like the previous episodes. Every season, he has put those dractions aside, continued to evolve and pile on a mountain of goals. Twice in nine full EPL seasons has he netted 30 goals; four times has he converted between 20 and 30 strikes. Even in supposed bad seasons, he has nicked in at least 17 goals. He is the second highest scorer ever in the league (213), and should surpass Alan Shearer’s haul (260) if he stays in England. The staggering numbers and the skills—he has embedded more layers and skins to his game, developed from an outright centre forward to a creator and disruptor, someone who could moonlight the worlds of a No 9, False 9, and Number 10 with seamless ease—empowers him with immense bargaining powers with the Spurs board. Kane can play hardball, if he wishes.
Except that he does not. He is a man of mild dispositions. Even his goal celebrations are seldom in rage but venting out of pure joy. Every word he utters is measured and precise, seldom hurtful or vengeful. The apparent lack of hubris has been often portrayed as a flaw, unbefitting of his stature, a barricade to the potential he could unlock if he joins a bigger, meaner club, and a lack of ambition. He is the ever-smiling boy next door, his movements smooth and swift, the shock of blonde hair almost carelessly tucked back. Nothing of him suggests that he wants to pick a scrap with anyone, let alone an uncompromising chairman. He does not post veiled or cryptic messages. He is no social-media nut either.

The only time he mutinied, or so it was believed, was when he missed the preseason at the start of the 2021-22 season, when he was heavily linked with champions Manchester City. There supposedly was a “gentleman’s agreement” between Kane and Levy, but it never manifested. City was willing to cough up 127 million pounds, but Levy would not budge. An infuriated Pep Guardiola, a long-time admirer of Kane, would say: “If Tottenham don’t want to negotiate, it’s finished.”
Kane showed immense composure to ensure that the saga did not develop into a full-fledged feud. He calmly defused the hot air. “Anyone involved in the football industry knows the ins and outs and I was calm with the situation. It was between me and the club. When you know the truth and you know what is going on, your conscience is clear. I have had ups and downs and I know a lot of people who know I am a professional athlete and dedicate my life to this game,” he said.
But this has often been the case, Spurs don’t want to negotiate for their highest goalscorer, their totem and arguably the greatest at the Lane.
But Kane wants to win titles, as would most sportsmen of outrageous talent. He craves to be a regular of Europe. Only five seasons has he glided on the European canvas. And he has dazzled—belting 21 goals in 32 games. He wants to be like his England teammates like Jack Grealish and Kalvin Phillips, or like Declan Rice, who moved to Arsenal so that he could finally show some titles for his outsized talent. All he could show for his rare gifts are a pair of silver medals, achieved once each in the league and Europe. He also needs a club with stability—not one in eternal flux. If he stays at Spurs. Ange Postecoglou would be the fifth full-time manager he would work with in nine years, besides caretakers and stopgaps.
Most significantly, there lurks a fear that if he does not move now perhaps never would he. He is days from turning 30, the descent from the heights would begin gradually. He would run out of options, already Manchester City has discovered Erling Haaland; Real Madrid has their eyes transfixed on PSG, rebelling with PSG; Manchester United and Barcelona cannot afford them; he would not join bitter rivals, Arsenal; the Italian clubs have lost their sheen long ago; Chelsea could splash the cash, but Levy has insed that he would’t entertain negotiations. That leaves him with Bayern or PSG. The latter is an unlikely destination, given the mediocrity of the league, PSG’s notorious slumps in Europe and the general dysfunction.
There has been a tendency to compare him with Alan Shearer’s Newcastle United days where he would, in unfettered devotion to the club, would refuse princely offers from elsewhere, snubbing even the advances of Sir Alex Ferguson. He later admitted that he had not regrets. even though he spent a season in the Championship. But he at least had the solace of lifting the Premier League with Blackburn Rovers. And there was a notable difference too. Shearer never wanted to leave Newcastle for a richer, fancier club; Kane strives to. It would require an extraordinary narrative if he were to achieve something glorious with the Spurs. Levy clinging onto Kane seems cruel at times, though the chairman believes the club could repay Kane’s devotion. “He can absolutely win a trophy at Spurs, but being a legend is also important. The fact that he’s the top scorer for Tottenham Hotspur, he’s making hory. I hope one day there is a statue of Harry Kane outside our stadium,” he recently said.

The only way he could move away from Spurs is to see his contract out—which expires in a year but Spurs are tying every bit to keep him saddled, offering him a heftier pay package (£400,000-a-week ) as well as keep him in the club after his retirement.
The choice now for Kane is whether to be remembered as solo club greatest hit act, or a winner of trophies. He has grabbed the accolades, but time is running out for him to stack his trophy cabinet. And wherever he ends up, the transfer window would miss him.

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