The National - News

Sheringham: Kane transfer fee would top Neymar’s if he left Spurs

- PAUL RADLEY

Harry Kane is football’s leading striker and would command more than Neymar’s world-record transfer fee if Tottenham Hotspur were willing to sell him.

That is the view of Teddy Sheringham, one of Kane’s predecesso­rs up front for Spurs and England.

Kane, who helped Spurs beat Real Madrid, the Uefa Champions League holders, 3-1 at Wembley on Wednesday night, has been linked with a transfer to Madrid, although Florentino Perez, their president, recently suggested the asking price would be prohibitiv­e, predicting Spurs would request €250m (Dh1.7bn) for him.

Sheringham says that fee is not an overstatem­ent and that any potential sale would eclipse the € 222m Paris Saint-Germain paid Barcelona for Neymar.

“I think he is the best centre-forward in the world at the moment and could go anywhere,” Sheringham said, speaking at Nad Al Sheba Sports Complex last night.

“That is not an understate­ment. If he was put up for sale, any club would want him.

“You would be talking the tops [transfer fee], bigger than Neymar. If they wanted to sell him, or if Kane wanted to leave, they would be wanting that kind of money.”

Sheringham has been in Dubai for an extended training camp in his new role as manager of Atletico de Kolkata (ATK) as part of a link up with junior academy It’s Just Football. The Indian Super League champions are building up to the start of their title defence starting with a fixture against Kerala Blasters on November 17.

Sheringham has another former Spurs striker, Robbie Keane, as the headline signing in his ATK side.

Keane had two spells at the club, the second of which briefly overlapped with Kane training with the first-team as a 16-year-old youth-team player.

Unlike Keane, who became an establishe­d first-team star with his club aged 17, Kane had loan spells at four separate clubs – with mixed effect – before making his name with Spurs.

Keane said Kane’s rise proves there are different ways to go about reaching the top.

“The improvemen­t he has made over the past three years has been incredible,” Keane said.

“It goes to show you don’t have to be thought of as a superstar at 15, 16, 17 and you are automatica­lly going to make it.

“You often see with these young kids, people think they are going to be the next star, then suddenly they fade away.

“He has come through slowly with hard work and dedication. He went on loan, it wasn’t working for him, he wasn’t playing as much, then he came back.

“Look at where he has got. He is one of the best strikers in the world now.”

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