There is a cruel irony in the idea that West Ham's most sellable asset could end up at Spurs, a rival whose name alone brings scorn in claret-and-blue circles. But football, increasingly, is about pragmatism. "There is no asking price but £60m could be enough to get a deal done," the article states -- a sentence laced with the resignation of a club whose hands are tied by financial regulations.
Graham Potter, still bedding into the West Ham job, appears willing to sanction Kudus's departure. The reasoning is part tactical, part financial. Kudus operates best on the right, a position owned by Jarrod Bowen, the club's talisman and newly confirmed captain. There is a belief internally that a sacrifice must be made for the greater structural good. "Potter is comfortable with the idea of selling Kudus because the Ghanaian is at his best on the right," the article confirms.
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