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Despite rumors of a transfer, Danny Rose is looking ahead to his future at Tottenham

He’s been linked with a move away for almost a year, but in an interview Rose is thinking only about getting his Spurs starting place back.

Tottenham Hotspur v Leicester City - Premier League Photo by Warren Little/Getty Images

A number of Tottenham Hotspur players have been linked with a move away from the club in this summer’s transfer window, and few more than Danny Rose. The outspoken Tottenham left back has been the subject of speculation about his Spurs future ever since he gave that spectacular interview with the Sun nearly a year ago.

That, combined with an injury-blighted season that saw him lose his place to Ben Davies, has led to rampant rumors about his departure, and persistent links to Manchester United, and now Everton.

But if Danny Rose is destined to be sold this summer, someone should probably tell that to Danny Rose. In a candid interview, Rose talked about his difficult season at Spurs, the perception that he is now injury prone, and about his future at Tottenham Hotspur.

“I got injured last season, I tried everything for three months to avoid an operation. I had about 50 tablets and 20 injections, it didn’t work and I needed an operation. I came back in October; I was fit until December; I was injured in a tackle; I was out for a month and then I had a muscle injury in March – my first muscle injury in two years – so I have had two injuries this season and people seem to think I have had a lot of injuries.

”It’s a load of nonsense. I have had to bide my time getting some minutes. It is a season where I have had to be patient and be mentally positive. Even though I haven’t played as much as I’d like I feel like I’ve grown mentally so there are positives to take out of the season.

“I wish I could have played more, but you have two players to compete in each position and that is how I would want it at any football club.”

Rose certainly has seemed to show the effects from the multiple injuries suffered last season and this. In his limited minutes on the pitch for Spurs this year — 1300 minutes in all competitions, only 802 in the Premier League — Rose has often looked less than sharp, missing the burst of pace and trickery that made him an England international last year and at one point a lock-down starter for England.

Rose is still on the plane to the World Cup in Russia, according to all reports, but is probably no longer is a guaranteed first choice for the Three Lions in this summer’s tournament. And while the rumor mill seems intent on shipping him out of north London, Rose is speaking only in terms of regaining his place as Mauricio Pochettino’s starting left back next season.

“I fancy myself against anybody in the league. Pre-season I’ll come back and hopefully me and Ben start from scratch and we start again and work hard to nail that number one spot.”

Rose appears proud of what Spurs have accomplished this season, and seems fully intent on looking forward to what the club can achieve next season. When asked whether or not Spurs have “overachieved” this season, he answered thoughtfully, with an eye towards the future.

“I think you could ask that after one season but when we have done three years on the bounce in the Champions League, we deserve exactly what we have got. We haven’t overachieved – nobody has seen how hard we have worked. To play 38 games away from is an amazing achievement and I hope now we can push on now and nick something next year.

”The manager gave a speech after Newcastle and he said that we need to realise what an achievement we have done this season playing 38 games away from home and when he said that I didn’t realise when you put it into that perspective. It is a huge achievement and we should be proud of what we have done this season and in the last three years as well.”