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Spurs smash transfer record again to sign Tonali in £100m deal
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Sandro Tonali: Tottenham sign Italy midfielder in club-record £100m deal from Newcastle Sandro Tonali has joined Spurs from Newcastle in club-record £100m deal; the north London club will pay the Magpies £92.5m plus £7.5m in achievable add-ons for the midfielder; Italian wanted to work with Roberto De Zerbi and will earn more than £275,000 per week Monday 6 July 2026 11:01, UK Tottenham have signed Sandro Tonali from Newcastle United in a club-record £100m deal. The midfielder, who is...
Sandro Tonali: Tottenham sign Italy midfielder in club-record £100m deal from Newcastle
Sandro Tonali has joined Spurs from Newcastle in club-record £100m deal; the north London club will pay the Magpies £92.5m plus £7.5m in achievable add-ons for the midfielder; Italian wanted to work with Roberto De Zerbi and will earn more than £275,000 per week
Monday 6 July 2026 11:01, UK
Tottenham have signed Sandro Tonali from Newcastle United in a club-record £100m deal.
The midfielder, who is expected to earn more than £275,000 per week, was keen to work under Spurs boss and fellow Italian Roberto De Zerbi, despite interest from elsewhere, including Manchester City.
It is the second-highest fee Newcastle have ever received for a player. The highest was the £125m that Liverpool paid for Alexander Isak last summer.
It is the second time in the space of a week that Spurs have smashed their transfer record after completing the £85m signing of Mateus Fernandes from West Ham on Tuesday.
The arrivals of Fernandes and Tonali takes the north London club's spending this summer through the £200m barrier.
Spurs have splashed out £52m on defender Jan Paul van Hecke from Brighton, while they have also brought in Andy Robertson, Marcos Senesi and Martin Dubravka all on free transfers.
It signals a big shift in transfer strategy from the club following back-to-back 17th-placed Premier League finishes after narrowly escaping relegation on the final day last season.
The deals for Fernandes and Tonali come after Spurs agreed to sell defender Luka Vuskovic for £50m to Brighton.
Tonali: Newcastle gave me more than football - it gave me a home
The Italian midfielder bid farewell to Newcastle in a post on Instagram. He said: "Three years ago I came to Newcastle not really knowing what to expect. Today it's time to say goodbye and it's hard to find the right words.
"I want to start by thanking the club. To the people who work every day and nobody sees at the training ground, everyone who welcomed me and made me feel at home from the very first day. Thank you to the staff and my team-mates for believing in me and helping me grow. A special mention to the gaffer, Eddie, who's been a real guiding figure and who always had my back throughout this journey.
"But above all, I want to speak directly to the fans. When things were hard for me, you were there. Not for one day did I feel alone. I felt it every time I was at St James' Park. That's something I will carry with me for the rest of my life.
"Together, we achieved something this city had been waiting decades for. At Wembley that day, it was special, a historic moment we got to share together. To the fans who never stopped believing, who never stopped cheering for this club, who were there in the hardest times, that trophy was for you.
"The game brought me to Newcastle. Today I leave with my wife and our son, born during my time here. This city gave me more than football. It gave me a home, moments I'll hold onto forever, and people I will always be grateful for.
"Thank you for everything."
'Tonali's a proper midfielder - Spurs will have a good season next year'
Sky Sports' Paul Merson on Spurs' summer business:
"Tonali is a very good signing, he is one of my favourite players in the Premier League, he is a proper, proper midfielder.
"Whenever I've watched Tottenham, I always think they are a bit over-run in midfield, they do not ever dominate games.
"They've got good centre halves and forwards when they are all fit, but they never dominate the midfield and the manager [Roberto De Zerbi] has come in and highlighted that and he has brought in two very good midfield players.
I expect them to have a good season next year, but I wonder whether Aston Villa's performance against Tottenham at the end of last season will come back to haunt them. They were comfortably beaten and could arguably have relegated Tottenham with a better result. If the race for the Champions League places comes down to fourth or fifth next season, that match could prove to be a costly missed opportunity.
"But he [De Zerbi] has bought very well at the moment."
What does Tonali deal mean for Newcastle?
Newcastle signed Tonali from AC Milan in the summer of 2023 in a £55m deal but are now set to make a £45m profit on him.
It is understood the club believe they are getting a strong fee for Tonali and believe they are very likely to achieve the full £100m.
The feeling is that this will allow the club to strengthen in more than one position with high-potential players
It is the club's second-biggest sale, behind the £125m Liverpool paid for Alexander Isak.
And the potential sale is already being felt, with Newcastle agreeing a fee with Hoffenheim for winger Bazoumana Toure.
They are in advanced talks with the German club for the Ivory Coast international, but a deal yet to be finalised. All going well, Toure is set to be the first of multiple new signings through the door.
Newcastle, meanwhile, have not made a bid for Spurs midfielder Archie Gray, according to sources at both clubs.
Spurs' transfer dealings so far
Andy Robertson - Liverpool, free
Marcos Senesi - Bournemouth, free
Martin Dubravka - Burnley, free
Jan Paul Van Hecke - Brighton, £52m
Mateus Fernandes - West Ham, £85m
Sandro Tonali - Newcastle, £100m
Total transfer spend so far: £237m
How can Spurs afford this summer spree?
Analysis from Sky Sports News reporter Michael Bridge:
The big change has been the will of the leadership to spend on transfer fees and wages to compete with the top teams. After narrowly missing out on relegation, the message was 'never again'.
Spurs have qualified for European football in 17 years out of 20. They've had the lowest wages-to-turnover ratio in the league over the last few years.
They've invested well in the local area in terms of land, building the best stadium. That stadium is arguably one of the best in the world, and it is generating unbelievable revenue.
The criticism in the past from Spurs fans was that they're not seeing that money being spent on the pitch.
The promise of the Lewis family, Vinai Venkatesham and Peter Charrington is that they will be doing this going forward and using the revenue from things like the stadium to improve the first team. That will be a big boost in terms of their spending.
There will also be sales this summer, which will be required just in terms of creating space in the squad for all these new signings and the fact there will be fewer games to contend with after dropping out of Europe.
If you look at the players that could go - Lucas Bergvall, Luka Vuskovic, Cristian Romero, Pape Matar Sarr, Richarlison – that could raise a lot of money for Spurs.
The Lewis family injected £100m into the club this summer – and that takes them up to £200m since 2025 – but that was for the day-to-day running of the club rather than for transfer spending.
[Image text:] Sandro
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Tonali (LOCATION)
Sandro Tonali (PERSON)
Tottenham (LOCATION)
Italy (LOCATION)
Newcastle (LOCATION)
Spurs (LOCATION)
London (LOCATION)
Italian (ORG)
Roberto De Zerbi (PERSON)
UK Tottenham (ORG)
Newcastle United (LOCATION)
Manchester City (LOCATION)
Liverpool (LOCATION)
Alexander Isak (PERSON)
Mateus Fernandes (PERSON)