Events include entertainment and food, while competition classes will play a big part and feature over 170 categories, from flowers and photography to handicrafts and culinary creations.
One source added that Levy - a renowned negotiator famously described by Sir Alex Ferguson as "more painful [to deal with] than a hip replacement" - will demand a high price for Spurs given their elite facilities, brand, London premium and the revenue the club now generates.Various reports in recent years have valued Tottenham at between £3.5bn and £4bn.
Chelsea were bought in a deal worth up to £4.25bn from Roman Abramovich in 2022 by a consortium led by American investor Todd Boehly and private equity firm Clearlake Capital. The purchase price was £2.5bn with a commitment to spending £1.75bn over the next 10 years.Meanwhile, Sir Jim Ratcliffe's Ineos bought a 25% stake in Manchester United for £1.03bn in December 2023 in a process which included a rival bid from Qatar's Sheikh Jassim, reported to be nearer to £5bn for 100% of the club.Despite those huge sums, both clubs - unlike Tottenham - need major investment in their stadiums to unlock bigger commercial earning potential.
According to the first source, the period when Tottenham were building their new £1.2bn stadium, between 2017 and 2019, meant Levy was "all-consumed" and the board "left everyone to do their jobs".Spurs secured Champions League football under Mauricio Pochettino for four successive seasons to 2018-19 - and were beaten in the 2019 final by Liverpool.
That source suggested Levy's approach - namely "open to conversations but set in his ways" - has meant a lot of people with off-field expertise have left Spurs over the years for more influential jobs.
Paul Barber was an executive director between 2005-2010 and is now Brighton chief executive; Michael Edwards was Spurs' chief analyst from 2009-2011 before leaving for Liverpool; FA technical director John McDermott was Tottenham's head of academy and player development until 2020; while EFL chief executive Trevor Birch was - very briefly - Tottenham's director of football operations, from September 2020 to January 2021.GPs at Hull's Jean Bishop Centre are trialling a computer programme during consultations which makes notes for them, allowing them to concentrate fully on their patients.
The AI programme can also be used to draft referral letters and care summaries, slashing time spent on admin.Dr Andy Noble, a frailty expert and GP at the centre, said: "I'm able to make a little more eye contact. I'm more relaxed in speaking to patients. [I hope] they feel that benefit as well."
Named in honour of local fundraiser the Bee Lady, who died in 2021, Jean Bishop Integrated Care Centre brings together nurses, GPs, pharmacists, physiotherapists and social care staff under one roof.Frail patients are invited to the centre for the whole day, and they receive lunch and a thorough health MoT with the aim of keeping them out of hospital, reducing their medication, and finding the root cause of their conditions.