Tottenham Hotspur have entered the race to sign West Ham midfielder Mateus Fernandes (21), with The Athletic’s David Ornstein reporting that new Spurs head coach Roberto De Zerbi is actively pushing to secure the Portuguese international – a development that meaningfully complicates Manchester United’s pursuit of the player ahead of what is shaping up to be a competitive auction at West Ham’s £80 million valuation.
This is a manager-driven push, not passive monitoring – Ornstein’s phrasing is deliberate. De Zerbi, who inherited a Tottenham squad in need of significant midfield quality after two difficult seasons, has identified Fernandes as a priority and the club are reported to be ready to back him. That framing, from a journalist of Ornstein’s standing, elevates Spurs from interested bystander to credible competitor overnight.
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United’s position in the Fernandes pursuit
United’s interest in Fernandes is well established and predates this latest complication. Stretty News covered United’s detailed scouting of the player earlier this summer, and Michael Carrick’s side have since opened formal talks with his representatives, positioning themselves as the frontrunners before Real Madrid, PSG, and now Spurs escalated their own interest.
The structural challenge has always been West Ham’s asking price. The Hammers paid an initial £38 million for Fernandes only last summer and, despite relegation, are under no particular financial pressure to sell below their £80 million valuation. INEOS, for their part, have been engaged in talks with West Ham but are reportedly reluctant to open anywhere near that figure, with internal discussions anchored closer to £60 million and an expectation that the Hammers’ stance would soften over time.
That calculation looks more precarious now. Arsenal’s withdrawal from the race narrowed the realistic competition considerably, but Tottenham’s entry – particularly with a manager prepared to push hard – restores the auction dynamic United were hoping to avoid. Fernandes himself is reported to favour Old Trafford, keen to play alongside Bruno Fernandes, but player preference only carries so much weight when a club is willing to meet the asking price in full.
The De Zerbi factor and what Tottenham’s push actually means
De Zerbi’s tactical profile makes Fernandes a logical fit. The 21-year-old offers the kind of dynamic, press-resistant ball-carrying from central areas that De Zerbi has consistently prioritised throughout his managerial career, and a manager of his profile identifying a specific target publicly through Ornstein is not a throwaway signal. Tottenham are reported to be willing to go to the full £80 million – a number United have thus far declined to match.
The question of Champions League football is also relevant here. Both clubs are competing in Europe next season, so there is no obvious competitive distinction that would push Fernandes toward United purely on that basis. The player’s personal preference for Old Trafford remains the clearest structural advantage United hold, but INEOS will need to move with more urgency than their current negotiating posture suggests if that preference is to be converted into a signed contract.
Alas, United have been here before – watching a primary transfer target drift toward a rival while holding firm on valuation, only to lose the player and restart the search entirely. The window after losing Elliot Anderson and being priced out of Sandro Tonali does not allow much further margin for error in the midfield rebuild Carrick needs.
What happens next
The immediate pressure point is whether Tottenham formalise their interest with a concrete offer at or near West Ham’s valuation, which would force United’s hand significantly. West Ham have every incentive to let the two clubs compete – a bidding war serves their interests directly, and they have shown no inclination to grant United preferential access simply because talks opened earlier.
It remains to be seen whether INEOS accelerate their timeline and table a formal bid before Tottenham can do so, or whether their insistence on negotiating down from £80 million hands De Zerbi the opportunity to move decisively and end the pursuit on Spurs’ terms.
