That's not how I'd look at Kane in terms of valuation. He isn't in tier with the true world stars, proven over a number of seasons and international tournaments, but he is:Not wanting to push this too far, but what bracket do you consider Kane in then? If not De Bruyne/Suarez type money?
Obviously City overpaid on Sterling, but that's like using our Bebe transfer to value other Sunday league no names.
Kane shouldn't leave because he doesn't want to, but I can't imagine he'd command a world record fee, I mean, he's never going to be as good as Ronaldo/Suarez/Neymar etc. Personally I don't think he's as good a pure striker as Lewandowski or as useful to a team as Muller. I'd put him in the top 20 world players for sure, but not top 10.
- Young. (tax)
- English. (tax)
- At Spurs/with Levy. (tax)
- Practically non-viable as an intra league transfer.
Add all those taxes onto dealing with Levy, and assume an English club would expect to be essentially buying out 7yrs minimum of his best years, and you're talking an astronomical fee.
Of those who could afford him, there are only two foreign clubs that would move for Kane: Real and PSG. He's not a Barcelona player and Bayern are far more likely to move for the next great Bundesliga striker. Real won't be interested until Kane's profile is higher and he does something of note in the CL or has a blinding Euros, and if either of those things happen, he'll be elevated into the top bracket of player anyway.
There's only two clubs in England who could afford the package for Kane: ourselves and Chelsea. Chelsea will never be in the running, and we would be put through the ringer, as we always are when dealing with Levy.
If Kane was doing the exact same thing for West Ham instead of Spurs, he'd be worth around £60m, I think, but as it is Spurs and Levy, you have to add on an incredulous amount of extra cost and not look at it in terms of raw talent or true worth, imo.