EPL Index
·1 Mei 2026
Report: Liverpool set to battle Man United in the race for Premier League defender

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·1 Mei 2026

There are transfer stories that arrive with noise, and there are those that begin with a murmur. Micky van de Ven’s future feels like the latter, for now. Nobody is suggesting the Tottenham defender has packed his bags, chosen a new club, or opened negotiations. In fact, the clearest message from the original report is that the Dutchman’s mind is fixed on one thing, helping Spurs preserve their Premier League status.
That detail matters. Tottenham’s predicament gives this story oxygen. A club of their stature should not be hovering around the relegation places, and if survival remains uncertain, so too does the future of their best players. Van de Ven, under contract until 2029, should theoretically be protected from speculation. Football, though, rarely works in theory.
Caught Offside reports that Liverpool and Manchester United are both interested in the 25-year-old, with both clubs examining centre-back options ahead of the summer. That makes sense. Van de Ven has pace, recovery power, composure in possession, and Premier League experience, all qualities prized by elite clubs attempting to defend with space behind them.
The crucial line from the report is this: “Van de Ven will meet with Tottenham at the end of the season, whether they stay up or not,” one source said. “For now his full focus is on keeping them in the Premier League, but he’ll be aware that clubs like Liverpool and Manchester United are interested, and that could put pressure on Tottenham.”
That is not a declaration of intent. It is not even a warning shot. It is simply the reality of modern football. Players assess direction as much as contracts. If Spurs stay up, they can point to stability, salary, importance and a long term plan. If they go down, the conversation changes instantly.
Tottenham sources are said to insist there is no desire to sell, no release clause, and no pressure to cash in. Yet relegation, or even prolonged dysfunction, has a way of reshaping certainty. A valuation between £60m and £80m, plus possible wages of around £200,000 per week, would make this a serious investment for any club.
Liverpool and United are not alone. Caught Offside also highlights Real Madrid and Bayern Munich as names to watch. Madrid’s interest feels especially logical, given their need to refresh central defence and their long standing awareness of Van de Ven from his Wolfsburg days.

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Bayern’s position appears less urgent, unless Kim Min-jae leaves, but elite clubs rarely ignore opportunity. If Van de Ven becomes even remotely attainable, the market will not stay quiet.
What makes Van de Ven attractive is not only his defending, but his suitability for high risk football. His speed allows a team to squeeze the pitch. His left foot gives balance. His physicality suits England, while his technical base suits Europe.
For Tottenham, that is precisely why losing him would sting. He represents the sort of player around whom a rebuild should be built, not the sort moved on to fund one.
From a Liverpool fan’s point of view, this is the kind of report that immediately feels worth tracking, even if it remains early. Van de Ven looks like a Liverpool centre-back in almost every meaningful way. He is quick, aggressive, comfortable carrying the ball and capable of defending large spaces, which is vital for a side that wants to dominate territory rather than sit deep.
The obvious question is cost. £60m to £80m and wages around £200,000 per week would put him firmly in marquee signing territory. Liverpool would need to be absolutely convinced he is not merely a good defender in a poor Spurs side, but someone who can become a long term pillar at Anfield.
There is also the Tottenham factor. Daniel Levy does not make these deals easy, especially with domestic rivals. If Spurs survive, the price probably becomes painful. If they go down, everything changes, and Liverpool would surely have to test the waters.
For supporters, the appeal is obvious. Virgil van Dijk cannot play forever, Ibrahima Konaté’s contract picture has invited debate, and Liverpool need pace at centre-back if they want to keep playing front foot football. Van de Ven would not be a cheap solution, but he could be a transformative one.
This feels like one to file under serious interest, not certainty. Still, if Liverpool are building for the next cycle, Van de Ven should be on the shortlist.
Langsung







































