Champions League
Tottenham's £80m Tonali bid highlights newcastle's financial gap
Tottenham Hotspur are reportedly interested in Sandro Tonali, whom Newcastle United signed from AC Milan for £55 million in 2023, and the English club could consider an £80 million bid, exposing a revenue gap between the two clubs.
Tonali has become one of the few players around whom Newcastle can imagine building a serious future. His arrival highlighted Newcastle’s ambition to compete at the highest level despite infrastructure constraints.
Spurs’ reported ability to offer superior wages underscores the financial disparity between the clubs. The £80 million figure cited for a potential Tonali bid illustrates the scale of the gap Newcastle are still trying to close.
Former Newcastle director Damian Vidagany warned, “There is no big six anymore.” Newcastle and Aston Villa have both recently secured Champions League qualification, challenging traditional top‑six dominance.
Manager Eddie Howe admitted last month that attracting the players they wanted was very difficult. Meanwhile, Victor Munoz chose Liverpool and other targets such as Joao Pedro, Hugo Ekitike, James Trafford and Benjamin Sesko moved elsewhere.
The rise of former Newcastle striker Anthony Gordon before his transfer to Barcelona demonstrated the club’s ability to develop elite talent. A source said of another signing, “He wanted to come to Newcastle… He had a couple of other opportunities but he had a good chat with the manager and believed in the project, the squad, the club and the league.”
Economist Kieran Maguire argued that owners must either relocate or significantly upgrade St James’ Park to regularly chase Champions League spots, or else settle for Europa competition. Spurs generate far greater matchday and commercial income, and Newcastle’s recent trophy win, return to the Champions League, plus the departures of Alexander Isak and Anthony Gordon, leave supporters demanding tangible progress by 2026.