
West Ham Exclusive: Hammers Reveal Kudus Transfer Terms.
West Ham would reject a £50m offer from Spurs for Mohammed Kudus if they were to make a formal offer.A Guardian report suggested that Daniel Levy would test the Hammers’ resolve by making an opening £50m offer.
West Ham insiders insist there is considerable interest in Kudus from around the world, and while there have been no formal bids as yet, they are hoping for a bidding war from multiple clubs to sign the 24-year-old.
The Hammers still hope to raise £80m from the sale of their Ghanaian player, but won’t accept less than £65m this summer, so any bids below that figure will be swiftly rejected. Mohammed Kudus reflects on his time at West Ham by looking in the mirror during training at Rush Green
West Ham will not sell Kudus to Spurs on the cheap.
West Ham would rather not deal with Daniel Levy and Spurs and consider a sale to Chelsea a far more palatable deal.
Kudus dumped his previous agent, Jennifer Mendelewitsch, and then his older brother, Mohammed Fatawu, and has recently moved to a German agency called ROOF.
It is the new agent at ROOF who now holds the key to Mohamed Kudus’ next club this summer.
Four Premier League clubs in hunt for Hammer.
Four Premier League clubs are ‘sniffing around’ Mohammed Kudus, and West Ham hopes all will table offers this summer.
Three of those are believed to be Spurs, Chelsea and Newcastle United, with the fourth club unknown at this time.
The 24-year-old Ghanaian Hammer has no desire to play in Saudi Arabia, so a move to the Middle East is off the table this summer.
West Ham remains in the hope that a Premier League club or a top European club meets their valuation between £65m and £80m, of which a large percentage of the sale will be given back to Graham Potter and Kyle Macauley to help rebuild the squad.
After losing more than £95m last season, West Ham must balance their books or it will lose £100m this coming season and £80m the season after that, which is not financially sustainable.
The majority of outbound sales will be reinvested, but some will be held back to plug a hole in West Ham’s finances.
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