Amanda Staveley has been searching for “great opportunities” since leaving Newcastle last summer.
She clearly felt that Spurs fitted such a description – even before chairman Daniel Levy’s departure – given the club’s stature, potential and state-of-the-art infrastructure.
Spurs have also been something of an outlier as a major Premier League club who have not changed hands in the last decade-and-a-half.
But ENIC are adamant that will continue to be the case after Staveley showed a “preliminary expression of interest”.
It is worth noting that Staveley does not tend to give up.
For context, she spent the best part of four years attempting to broker a deal for Newcastle and the consortium even returned to the table after announcing that they had pulled out at one stage.
But, even if it is not to be Spurs, this interest highlights the desire of Staveley and husband Mehrdad Ghodoussi to get back into football at the very highest level following their spell at Newcastle.
Staveley spoke of Newcastle one day challenging for titles and the Champions League just hours after taking over the day-to-day running of a stripped-back club in deep relegation trouble in 2021.
She went on to play an important role in Newcastle’s resurgence and was heavily involved in the appointment of Eddie Howe as head coach, following a failed attempt to bring in Unai Emery, as well as the negotiations to bring in several key players, including Bruno Guimaraes, Anthony Gordon and Tino Livramento.
Staveley and Ghodoussi’s departures therefore came as a shock last summer following a change in ownership structure, which led to Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund and the Reuben Family purchasing their shares.
The pair remain Newcastle fans – and were at Wembley to witness the Carabao Cup final back in March – but they are clearly determined to return to the frontline.
This article is the latest from BBC Sport’s Ask Me Anything team.
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