Tottenham close Harry Kane chapter for good - now they look to an exciting future

  • Harry Kane returned to Tottenham with Bayern Munich in friendly on Saturday
  • Striker played last 10 minutes of Bavarians' 3-2 win
  • Spurs signed striker Dominic Solanke earlier that day
Kane returned to Tottenham on Saturday
Kane returned to Tottenham on Saturday / Vince Mignott/MB Media/GettyImages
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FROM TOTTENHAM HOTSPUR STADIUM - Now and forever, Tottenham Hotspur and Bayern Munich are bound by Harry Kane.

Spurs' all-time leading scorer made the £85m move to Bavaria almost exactly a year ago after a protracted transfer saga in which Daniel Levy had appeared to have held his own.

When Kane scored four times in a 5-1 win against Shakhtar Donetsk this time last summer, the noises out of Spurs did not suggest that would be his final appearance for the club. The feeling was Tottenham would enter the season and then figure out what to do. It's why the ripping of the bandaid days later when his move was confirmed was so painful.

You'd have forgiven Tottenham for making the whole day about Kane, for handing him a microphone and getting him to do an emotional speech, for writing a clause into the Bayern deal which permitted he play one half of this game as a Spurs player.

But instead, he and Eric Dier were allotted a slot 15 minutes from kick-off directly after the warm-ups, greeted by Tottenham ambassador Ledley King to receive commemorative cockerel statutes, as is modern tradition with Spurs greats. There was a loud, generous helping of cheers and applause, but it's not as if the roof came off. Supporters were warned of getting to their seats early for this mini-presentation, but the bowl was at most 75% full.

And yes, the presentation really was mini. No videos, no ambling, just a quick 'thank you for your service' monologue from stadium presenter Paul Coyte and fading back into the dressing room.

It was a telling contrast to what occurred five minutes later. As more fans made their way into the open air, Tottenham welcomed their three newest signings - Archie Gray, Dominic Solanke and January recruit Lucas Bergvall.

The place came alive.


Dominic Solanke
Solanke was presented pre-match / Warren Little/GettyImages

Where Kane and Dier were greeted with cheers and claps, the new boys got roars. That sweeping feeling brought Tottenham Hotspur Stadium to its feet, a palpable energy, an intangible unity.

Kane was introduced as an 80th-minute substitute with Spurs 3-2 down. This time, the home faithful showed more appreciation, but that quickly turned into a desire to turn a game that had lost its spark around, even if only a friendly.

Tottenham, as a club and a fanbase, have healed and moved on. This was no pity party, but an acceptance and excitement towards the future. Even when Kane went to applaud the four stands of the stadium post-match, it was not overly saccharine, but just right.

So much of the last half-decade at Spurs has been dominated by the misery of win-now managers telling the club they should feel bad about itself, that the fans were in part responsible for this malaise somehow.

Ange Postecoglou's arrival was appreciated because Tottenham had gone through so much self loathing, they needed the warm embrace of positivity and progression again. It helped that his first season showed enough promise to suggest they are on the right path, and now the pieces are falling into place.

Gray and Bergvall are typical Spurs signings of old - young, hungry players who are ready for minutes now. Solanke, Kane's belated successor, is not a replacement and an altogether different kind of striker, an important distinction with a difference.

The real parting of ways happened a year ago, but now the circle of closure is complete.


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