Tottenham Hotspur are facing a summer of enormous decisions, but selling Archie Gray would be the most damaging of them all – and we have now identified five reasons why Spurs must do everything in their power to keep him.
Liverpool have already made serious moves to sign Archie Gray, Bayern Munich are preparing to act, and Manchester United, Chelsea and Aston Villa are all circling. The interest is real, it is growing, and if Tottenham Hotspur are relegated from the Premier League, the dam could well break.
Spurs are confident of keeping Gray, and his contract runs until 2030. But confidence and reality have a way of diverging when the big clubs come knocking with serious money. We do not believe Spurs can afford to let that happen.
Here are five reasons why keeping Archie Gray has to be non-negotiable – whatever division Spurs find themselves in next season.

Archie Gray is the only Tottenham player to enhance his reputation
The rest of the squad? Careers defined by a relegation battle. Gray is different. While Tottenham have been a shambles around him – three managers, eleven players simultaneously injured at one point, not a single league win since December – he has just kept going.
Thirty-two appearances. Two goals, three assists. Six different positions. A FotMob average of 6.53 in a side that collected six points from their last fifteen matches.
Those numbers do not capture it properly either. It is the way he has played. Composed when everyone around him was panicking. Available when everyone around him was on the treatment table. Igor Tudor called him “amazing” for his versatility – not as a compliment but as a lament that the club kept having to ask too much of him.
Gray himself has spoken like a captain throughout, challenging his teammates to give an extra ten per cent and refusing to use the chaos around him as an excuse. That kind of player does not come around often at Tottenham. They need to act like they know that.
Gray’s ceiling is not just high – it is genuinely rare
Gray’s potential SciSkill rating is 132.2. That is the highest of any Premier League player aged 20 or under. Higher than Estevao Willian. Higher than Kobbie Mainoo. The only players in world football with a higher potential rating right now are Florian Wirtz and Ryan Gravenberch.
Let that settle for a moment.
Spurs have a 20-year-old who, according to the best available data, is on a developmental trajectory that puts him in the company of the two most coveted midfielders in Europe. And the conversation – right now, in April 2026 – is whether to sell him for £60m because the club need the money.
It would be funny if it were not so completely on-brand.
Liverpool and Bayern are not sniffing around because he is promising – they think he is generational
There is a version of transfer interest that is flattering but not serious. This is not that. Liverpool have made what have been described as “serious moves”. Bayern Munich have been “increasingly interested” since March. Real Madrid’s scouts have reportedly been impressed by what they describe as an “elite footballing brain”. Manchester United believe, per SciSports data, that he could become their best player within two years.
When clubs of that stature converge on the same player at the same time, it means one thing: they believe he is going to be exceptional. Not good. Exceptional.
According to SciSports data, Gray’s potential trajectory could see him surpass Dominik Szoboszlai as a long-term asset – Szoboszlai, who Liverpool signed for £60m and who is one of the better midfielders in the Premier League. That is the benchmark they are using.
Spurs need to look at that and refuse. Firmly. Publicly. Without hesitation.

Roberto De Zerbi needs Archie Gray more than Tottenham need the money
Think about what De Zerbi is being asked to build. A pressing, possession-based system. A goalkeeper who can play out. A midfield that thinks fast and moves faster. A forward line with runners and creators. He needs players who are intelligent enough to execute all of that under pressure.
Gray has revealed that playing so many different positions has given him a perspective on the game that most players his age simply do not have. Defensive mid, central mid, right-back, centre-back. He reads situations differently because he has had to. That is not just versatility – it is exactly the kind of football intelligence De Zerbi’s system demands at every position.
Selling him and then spending the summer trying to find a replacement – on top of needing a goalkeeper, a striker, and midfield reinforcements – is not a plan. It is a disaster with extra steps.
£60m sounds like a lot until you try to spend it
Reports suggest Tottenham could entertain offers of £60m or more for Gray if they go down. Fine. So what does £60m buy right now?
It bought Dominic Solanke, who scored four goals in his debut season. It bought Manuel Akanji, a good but not exceptional centre-back. In today’s market, £60m gets you a decent player. A squad player for a top-six club. A starter for a mid-table one.
Gray, at his ceiling, is worth three or four times that – and Tottenham would be selling him at 20, before he has even hit his peak, in a summer where their leverage is at its absolute lowest. They would be selling cheap and buying expensive in the same window.
We have seen this film. It ends with the club spending a decade wondering what might have been.
