Tottenham take on Monaco on Saturday without Gareth Bale, who misses the pre-season friendly in the Principality through injury ahead of a likely defining week for his forecast world record transfer to Real Madrid.
Eyes will be as much on Cristiano Ronaldo and Manchester United as they will be on Bale and Real.
The transfer market is rife with speculation that Bale sealing a move to Spain, could trigger several moves, not least of which is Ronaldo to Old Trafford, and then, possibly Wayne Rooney to Chelsea.
Whether Cristiano Ronaldo and Gareth Bale can both play together at Real Madrid is not yet clear, but Bale would certainly put pressure Ronaldo for his place in the team.
The suggestions are that Rooney and United are ready to move on – whether that is with him staying or moving to London is not yet clear.
However, with new manager David Moyes’ Cesc Fabregas move being thwarted by Barcelona, getting Ronaldo may be the perfect coup.
The Wales superstar bid "an emotional farewell" to his teammates in London on Friday, autographing their shirts before they left for Monte Carlo, according to a report in The Sun.
The Spurs forward sits out Saturday evening's match, and may also miss Wales' friendly against Ireland in Cardiff on August 14, with a minor hamstring problem.
As Bale works on his fitness Tottenham chairman Daniel Levy will sit down for his first face-to-face talks with his Real Madrid counterpart Florentino Perez in Miami next week, possibly on Wednesday, The Times suggested.
Real are in Florida where Levy has a holiday home for a pre-season warm-up.
They are keen to see Bale at the Bernabeu ahead of their opening league game against Real Betis on August 18.
The 24-year-old is set to become the most expensive player of all time, an honour currently held by Cristiano Ronaldo who moved from Manchester United to Real for 94 million euros ($125 million, £82 million) in 2009.
Levy is reportedly holding out for a transfer fee in excess of £105 million while Real are looking to strike a deal at around £85 million with a makeweight, possibly Fabio Coentrao, thrown in.
On Friday, Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger claimed Bale's proposed mega transfer made a mockery of UEFA's Financial Fair Play rules.
It makes a joke of it. It's quite amazing that in the year where the Financial Fair Play comes in, the football world has gone completely crazy," the Frenchman said.
"You wonder what kind of impact and effect it has on the football world. It looks like it has made everybody worse than before."