Roberto De Zerbi has already begun plans for the future as he has now been appointed the Tottenham manager.
The Italian replaced Igor Tudor and is tasked with keeping Spurs in the Premier League, with them battling relegation.
However, he has been given a long-term contract and the chance to bring in quality players during the transfer window.
👀 Which Tottenham player will benefit the most from Roberto De Zerbi’s appointment?
Harry Wilson is a key target for Roberto De Zerbi
According to TEAMtalk, Harry Wilson is understood to be a key target for De Zerbi at Spurs.
There are understood to be a number of Premier League clubs keen on securing the services of the Fulham winger.
The London outfit are keen on retaining the services of the 29-year-old, but are aware that it will be hard to keep him at the club.

Despite his age, De Zerbi is understood to be a fan and believes that he can contribute to his side’s rebuild next season.
Even the Tottenham hierarchy believe that the Wales international will strengthen their playing eleven.
However, they may find it hard to sign him as Manchester United and Liverpool are also keeping tabs on his services.
🔮 How many points will Roberto De Zerbi take from his first five matches at Spurs?
How can Wilson strengthen Tottenham next season?
Wilson would significantly strengthen Spurs under De Zerbi’s stewardship by injecting creativity, goal threat and tactical versatility into a side needing that attacking spark they have lacked.
The 29-year-old Welsh winger excels as an inverted right-sided attacker who cuts inside onto his lethal left foot.
De Zerbi’s system, which has been a fluid 4-2-3-1 or 3-4-3, thrives on inverted wingers who drift into half-spaces, combine in tight areas and provide direct threats through shooting or incisive passes.
Wilson’s elite long-range shooting, set-piece delivery, key passes and ability to hold the ball fit perfectly with De Zerbi’s possession-based, build-up play that baits presses before exploiting spaces with quick transitions and underlapping runs.
His work rate and intelligence off the ball would aid the high-intensity pressing traps the former Brighton manager deploys, while his vision and dribbling add the dynamism Spurs’ attack has lacked.
Receive a digest of our best Spurs content each week direct to your mailbox


