Daniel Levy claimed to be selling most of Tottenham stake to American tech billionaire | OneFootball

Daniel Levy claimed to be selling most of Tottenham stake to American tech billionaire | OneFootball

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The Independent

·5 Juni 2026

Daniel Levy claimed to be selling most of Tottenham stake to American tech billionaire

Gambar artikel:Daniel Levy claimed to be selling most of Tottenham stake to American tech billionaire

A firm run by American tech billionaire Brooklyn Earick have claimed they have agreed to buy most of Daniel Levy’s stake in Tottenham.

However, their surprise announcement came as news to ENIC, the club’s majority shareholders, and it is understood there has been no communication between Eight Sports Capital, Earick’s company, and ENIC.


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Eight Sports Capital said they had signed a sale and purchase agreement to take a 24.99 percent stake in Spurs from former chairman Levy, who who stood down last September after running Tottenham for a quarter of a century.

Earick, a boyhood Tottenham fan who had expressed an interest in buying Spurs last year, is an engineer turned entrepreneur who used to work for NASA. He has now raised more than £25bn in funds, including from sovereign wealth funds.

He is the CEO of Redacted RnD, a Singapore-based venture capital company while Eight Sports Capital is a sports investment firm owned by Triller, who have also been involved in pay-per-view boxing, including Mike Tyson’s fight against Roy Jones Jr.

A spokesperson for Eight Sports Capital Limited stated: “We are delighted to have signed this agreement to acquire a significant stake in ENIC. We look forward to working with the club’s shareholders, management, staff, players and fans to support Tottenham Hotspur’s continued growth and success.”

However, ENIC remain Tottenham’s majority owners, with the Lewis family owning 70.12 percent. The billionaire Joe Lewis has been represented by his daughter Vivienne and her son-in-law, Nick Beucher, who have become prominent since Levy stood down, while Peter Charrington became chairman.

After Tottenham finished 17th for the second consecutive season, avoiding relegation on the last day of the Premier League campaign, they said in a statement they would not sell the club and promised investment.

Levy is yet to comment in public as to whether he is agreed to have sold his shares. If so, it would make him hundreds of millions of pounds, with Tottenham valued at around £3bn.

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