One of the few certain points in the swirl of speculation about where Gareth Bale’s once-in-a-generation form will take him when his extraordinary playing feats have concluded for this season is that Tottenham Hotspur will hope to keep the 23-year-old Welshman.
With Bale expressing himself only through thrilling bursts of speed and last-minute thunderbolts, and his management company, Stellar, not commenting either, the surrounding consensus from scraps of clues is that Real Madrid will try to sign Bale this summer – and he will seize the opportunity.
Always anchoring that prediction are the comments Bale made to the Spanish newspaper AS just before Spurs played the Champions League quarter-final against Real Madrid at the Bernabeu in April 2011, saying of a move abroad: “You never know, but I’m not afraid to leave the country. If a great opportunity arises, you need to seriously consider it.”
That has been taken by many since as a signal from Bale he would relish a move to Real. His then manager, Harry Redknapp, mused that Spurs would have to be paid “an amazing figure” to sell their star asset.
Besides the glamour and heritage drawing players to Madrid, Real are also one of the few European clubs who could afford to pay the amazing figure Daniel Levy, Spurs’ chairman, would demand, and the wages Bale would command.
Redknapp suggested it would take a fee such as the €93m Real Madrid paid for Cristiano Ronaldo to unlock Levy’s determination, and Real are still thought the club likeliest to indulge in galactic spending with Uefa’s financial fair play rules coming into force.
The Bundesliga club Bayern Munich are expected to seriously support their new coach, Pep Guardiola, in the transfer market, but extravagance on a Bale scale is not generally expected.
The Premier League clubs with significantly higher income than Spurs – United, Manchester City, Chelsea and even Arsenal – may fancy grasping Bale for themselves, and all could conceivably juggle their resources to balance the books presentably.
Spurs’ Levy, though, would balk more at ceding a player to a Premier League rival than to a choice club overseas. It is part of his determined building of Spurs, while they still lack the new stadium planned to make more cash from fans and bridge the financial gap, that he insists adamantly his is not a selling club.
Spurs point to particular circumstances for the headline players who have moved in recent years: that Michael Carrick wanted to move north and declined a new contract, Dimitar Berbatov was approaching a legal right to buy himself out of his contract, Luka Modric was persuaded to stay another year but ultimately wanted to go.
Bale and his advisers, who will have the likely luxury of grand options in the summer, will point to uncertainties now, including over who will be managing Real Madrid, and say no decisions are being made yet.
In this form and with the Premier League’s likely €7.4bn 2013-2016 television deals beginning in August, Levy is expected to offer Bale improved terms, even though the player’s current contract already runs to 2016.
Whether Bale decides to accept that option, and stay where he is settled and flourishing, partly depends on whether Spurs qualify for the Champions League next season. Manager, Andre Villas-Boas, acknowledged that earlier this month, when he said of keeping the Welshman: “If we reach our objectives we can hopefully continue to have Gareth in our club.”
That is one settled aspect of the Bale discussion. When playing as well as any footballer in Europe, he does not want to be excluded from the greatest European club competition. If Spurs do qualify the betting, still, is that he will push to leave.
For now, though, not much is certain about the player’s future, other than a football soaring at improbable speed from Bale’s left boot into the corner of West Ham’s net on Monday evening, and Europe’s top clubs watching covetously.
Guardian Service