Moses waiting on Spurs?
2 min read
Reports are suggesting that West Ham have turned down a £15-million bid for Senegalese midfielder Cheikhou Kouyate telling us that under no circumstances is he available. Kouyate is dating Fanny Neguesha after being splitting up with by Mario Balotelli, must have a thing for football players or publicity.
£15-million is a popular figure in the press, that is th figure they have decided to throw at our alledged interest in 22-year-old (23 next July) Newcastle striker Ayoze Pérez. The Spaniard, (he was born in Tenerife) is not for sale suggest reports. He has done nothing to suggest he is a £15-million striker and transfermarkt have him valued at just £4.90-million, with potential he is currently a £10-million tops player. Last season he scored 7 goals in 39 games, a goal every 358.43 minutes which is roughly a goal every 4 games.
Victor Moses is still on our radar and that of West Ham, he is a possible option if other option don't come to fruition. As ever the player and his agent will know the score, they know who is interested, they will have preferred options themselves and will wait to see if those options are going to happen. If it looks like they won't because the preferred option club are looking likely to secure an alternative target then a transfer to his second choice is instigated.
Victor Moses is going to be a late deal, Spurs still retain an interest but with other options he has the choice to choose somewhere else or wait and do a late deal where he can. What his first choice option is we don't know, but West Ham have tried to take him on loan and he hasn't gone there yet, is he waiting for Spurs? He would be a totally uninspiring signing and has produced nothing that suggests he would enhance our squad, finger crossed he puts pen to paper on a West Ham deal, which looks likely.
That is the confusing case with all players on deadline day where late deals are done as others fall through and a player looking likely to sign for one club suddenly signs for another. All the background work has already been done, clubs know what terms players want, players know what terms clubs are willing to pay, agents have an idea of transfer fees or which clubs will take loans.
It's a busy day and one that the media enjoy and so do the public even if they tell you they don't, viewing figures and readership figures prove it.
£15-million is a popular figure in the press, that is th figure they have decided to throw at our alledged interest in 22-year-old (23 next July) Newcastle striker Ayoze Pérez. The Spaniard, (he was born in Tenerife) is not for sale suggest reports. He has done nothing to suggest he is a £15-million striker and transfermarkt have him valued at just £4.90-million, with potential he is currently a £10-million tops player. Last season he scored 7 goals in 39 games, a goal every 358.43 minutes which is roughly a goal every 4 games.
Victor Moses is still on our radar and that of West Ham, he is a possible option if other option don't come to fruition. As ever the player and his agent will know the score, they know who is interested, they will have preferred options themselves and will wait to see if those options are going to happen. If it looks like they won't because the preferred option club are looking likely to secure an alternative target then a transfer to his second choice is instigated.
Victor Moses is going to be a late deal, Spurs still retain an interest but with other options he has the choice to choose somewhere else or wait and do a late deal where he can. What his first choice option is we don't know, but West Ham have tried to take him on loan and he hasn't gone there yet, is he waiting for Spurs? He would be a totally uninspiring signing and has produced nothing that suggests he would enhance our squad, finger crossed he puts pen to paper on a West Ham deal, which looks likely.
That is the confusing case with all players on deadline day where late deals are done as others fall through and a player looking likely to sign for one club suddenly signs for another. All the background work has already been done, clubs know what terms players want, players know what terms clubs are willing to pay, agents have an idea of transfer fees or which clubs will take loans.
It's a busy day and one that the media enjoy and so do the public even if they tell you they don't, viewing figures and readership figures prove it.
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