Tottenham consider offer for the Aston Villa defender Curtis Davies

• Spurs look to bolster injury-plagued defence
• Aston Villa could use funds to invest in midfielder

Tottenham Hotspur are interested in signing the Aston Villa defender Curtis Davies in a deal that could mean Jermaine Jenas moving in the opposite direction. Spurs were monitoring Davies before he moved to Villa Park three years ago and the former West Bromwich Albion and Luton Town player is interesting them again after Martin O’Neill indicated he was willing to listen to offers for the 25-year-old.

With three other senior central defenders – Richard Dunne, James Collins and Carlos Cuéllar – the Villa manager is willing to sacrifice Davies, who was a £9m signing from Albion but could leave for little more than half that sum, to raise funds to strengthen his squad. O’Neill has targeted central midfield, which will be severely weakened if he loses James Milner to Manchester City, and up front as the two areas he would most like to improve.

Jenas could therefore be attractive to O’Neill, who has also looked at West Ham United’s Scott Parker. Jenas endured a frustrating season at White Hart Lane, making only nine Premier League starts and dropping behind Tom Huddlestone in the pecking order for club as well as country, although it remains to be seen whether he would be willing to leave Spurs at a time when the club has finally broken into the Premier League’s top four.

Tottenham see Davies as providing cover in defence. Although Redknapp has five centre-halves, Ledley King and Jonathan Woodgate missed large chunks of last season through injury. In the case of Woodgate there are genuine concerns about whether he will play again. Redknapp admitted this month that the 30-year-old, who has not made an appearance for Spurs since November, was “at a very low point in his life” as he battled to overcome persistent groin injuries.

Davies, whose availability has also been at West Ham, has been in a couple of Fabio Capello’s England squads but he has yet to win a senior cap. He scored in Villa’s 3-1 win at Liverpool last August, but then had a spell on the sidelines following shoulder surgery and was unable to dislodge Dunne or Collins when he returned to fitness.

Aston VillaTottenham HotspurTransfer windowStuart Jamesguardian.co.uk

Football Weekly podcast: Portsmouth reach the FA Cup final

James Richardson and the Football Weekly crew return to analyse Portsmouth’s triumph in the FA Cup. Administrators permiting, they’ll meet Chelsea in the final, but what now for beaten semi-finalists Tottenham Hotspur and Aston Villa? Meanwhile, Barry Glendenning points green fingers as he explains why Wembley stadium – which didn’t leave much change from a billion quid, remember – has such a terrible pitch.

Turning our attention to the Premier League, Owen Gibson gives his thoughts on the title race, the relegation battle between Hull City and Burnley, and that potential dry run of the European final between Liverpool and Fulham.

Finally, Paolo Bandini muses on a momentus weekend in Serie A, with Roma knocking Internazionale off the top, while Sid Lowe reflects on a super Clásico that was neither super nor classic, but saw Barcelona humiliate Real Madrid all the same. For entertainment, he urges you to look at this goal instead.

Have a listen and give us your thoughts on the blog below. Remember to find us on Twitter and Facebook, and get your daily dose of the Fiver too

James RichardsonBen GreenSean IngleBarry GlendenningOwen GibsonPaolo BandiniSid Lowe

Football transfer rumours: Laurent Blanc to Arsenal, Manchester City or Liverpool?

Today’s spillage leaves an indelible stain

Leading environmentalists have praised Arsène Wenger for vowing to contest tonight’s Champions League quarter-final with a side made up mainly of recycled or previously discarded players. Wenger has been a long-time advocate of clubs reducing their playing resources so as to minimise their impact on competitions and his salvaging of Sol Campbell and Mikaël Silvestre from football’s scrapheap has been cited by Friends of the Earth as a best practice akin to Rafael Benítez’s sagacious use of free transfers, Dimitar Berbatov’s highly advanced energy conservation technique and El-Hadji Diouf’s organic fertiliser spray.

Word is Wenger was tempted to enrich his injury-depleted squad upon his arrival at Barcelona airport yesterday after spotting an agile-looking baggage-handler but the ever-idealistic Frenchman instead decided to believe that Manuel Almunia can have a full game like the first 45 minutes he had last week. And that’s good news for Arsenal fans: because word is that Wenger has told his employers that if Arsenal win the Champions League or the Premier League this season he is going to retire.

Wenger would consider such a triumph his finest achievement and a supreme vindication of his methods, and would step down satisfied that he has left his successor a squad capable of dominating for years to come. Who will that lucky successor be? Wenger has reputedly put in a good word for Laurent Blanc, who, coincidentally, is also French and also set to be eliminated from the Champions League this week.

Blanc is going to be in high demand this summer. Not only will the France job be his if he wants it, but also three of the most prestigious posts in England are about to be vacated – well, two, in the event of Wenger staying on at Arsenal until he feels his mission has been accomplished. Manchester City will be hiring a new figurehead and they’ll go for Blanc if José Mourinho turns them down. But José Mourinho won’t turn them down, especially when he hears that City are already close to agreeing deals for Wolfsburg striker Edin Dzeko and Hamburg central defender Jerome Boateng, who’s also being courted by Chelsea and Real Madrid.

But Blanc will be invited to take the Liverpool job once Rafael Benítez skedaddles. It is unsure whether he will accept it, however, since the whole point of leaving Ligue 1 is to go to a club with the money to buy the best players in the world and Blanc wants assurances that Liverpool belong in that category. Not to worry: Messers Hicks and Gillett have a cunning back-up plan, one sure to endear to the Kop at last – if Blanc turns them down, they will instead enthrone Liverpool legend Steve Nicol, currently masterminding untold success at New England Revoluton. And by ‘untold’ we mean ‘hardly worth mentioning’.

Major League Soccer will get over that loss by recruiting some marquee pensioners, namely Thierry Henry, Luís Figo and Patrick Vieira.

Harry Redknapp, meanwhile, will get over the disappointment of Tottenham’s capitulation in the stilted run for the Champions League spots by doing business with Aston Villa, whose collapse has been even sorrier and who want to buy Robbie Keane for £11m, if you don’t mind. Redknapp will then sell Gareth Bale to Juventus for £14m and take a long, hard laugh in the mirror.

Manchester United have not collapsed, but their empire is surely crumbling and they face another summer of modest investment. Sir Alex Ferguson’s grand plan for rejuvenating his midfield is to attempt to lure Mohamed Diamé from Wigan, from whom he may also attempt to prise Hugo Rodallega, though Everton and Arsenal are also on the Colombian’s case. So United will end up trying to cadge Karim Benzema on loan from Real Madrid.

David Moyes meanwhile is set to lure Kevin Prince-Boateng from Portsmouth for a knock-down fee, while canny Mick McCarthy will collect Nadir Belhadj and then rest him for daunting trips to Old Trafford.

ArsenalManchester CityLiverpoolMajor League SoccerAston VillaTottenham HotspurPaul Doyleguardian.co.uk