
Tottenham chairman Daniel Levy has once again become the highest-paid director among the current 20 Premier League clubs, as reported by Mail Sport.
According to the latest confirmed figures from the 2021-22 club accounts, Levy received a payment of £3,265,000, surpassing second-placed Paul Barber, the CEO of Brighton, by an annual margin of £400,000.
However, this substantial remuneration is unlikely to lift the spirits of Spurs fans, who expressed their disappointment by booing the team off the pitch in their recent final home match against Brentford, capping off a dismal season.
Levy, a long-serving figure at Tottenham, regained the top spot for the highest pay after former Manchester United chief executive Ed Woodward left Old Trafford following the January transfer window last season.
Previously, Woodward was the Premier League’s highest-paid director, earning £1.941 million in the months leading up to his departure, equivalent to an annual salary of £3,327,000.