‘No way’ Harry Winks is allowed to leave Tottenham in January, says Jose Mourinho

England midfielder is desperate to go to Euro 2020 but has fallen out of favour at his club

Jonathan Veal
Wednesday 16 December 2020 03:33 EST
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(Tottenham Hotspur FC via Getty I)

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Tottenham boss Jose Mourinho says there is "no way" Harry Winks will be allowed to leave the club in January.

The England midfielder has fallen out of Mourinho's first-choice side and has been mainly been restricted to Europa League action this season.

Winks has said he is desperate for game time in order to force his way into Gareth Southgate's England side for next summer's Euro 2020, but that is looking unlikely as things stand.

READ MORE: Klopp: Tottenham have turned into a ‘results machine’

However, with a frantic run of games coming up over the next couple of months, Mourinho is not prepared to let him leave.

"In relation to Winks (leaving) on loan in January, no way," Mourinho said.

The Portuguese confirmed that Winks had been to see him over his lack of action but was not forthcoming about details.

"You know," he said. "Yes he came to me. He came to me, not just him. Many players come to me.

"I have my office on the first floor but I also have a little space on the ground floor next to the players' dressing room where I used to be before and after training session to make it easy for them.

"So it is easy for them to come around the corner to speak to me, so yes, Winks came to speak to me."

Son Heung-min has had no such issue getting in Mourinho's side and he is in discussions with the club over a bumper new contract.

Mourinho says that he knows Son wants to commit his future to the club, but the current coronavirus pandemic makes it difficult to complete the deal.

"I don't have any news," he said. "To be honest, this instability around society, around clubs, around football. We have 2,000 people, we are expecting an evolution, we are expecting more people, we are expecting more income, certainly a couple of weeks later, 2,000 goes back to zero, nobody in the stadium.

"I'm not a money man, but I wouldn't like to be the owner or the CEO of one of these football clubs living with this instability.

"How can you sign a new contract with a player? You don't know what is going to happen next season. You don't know if you can offer the player a better contract than they have now. I think it's a very strange moment.

"I just trust Sonny and Mr Levy (Daniel, chairman). I know that both, they want to stay, if possible, for life, if possible until the end of the career, so I see Sonny signing a new contract here.

"But I don't believe and I don't even ask and I don't even press for something to happen now because probably it's not the right moment to happen."

PA

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