Andy Robertson Next Club Odds: Tottenham Lead the Race as Juventus Launch Late Hijack

Andy Robertson left Liverpool on Sunday after nine years, bringing the curtain down on one of the most decorated full-back careers in Premier League history.
The 32-year-old said an emotional farewell to Anfield in the 1-1 draw with Brentford, ending a spell that brought two Premier League titles, a Champions League and 378 appearances since his £8m move from Hull City in 2017.
What we're left with is one of the most intriguing free transfers of the summer - a Scotland captain, available at zero cost, with a verbal agreement reportedly in place with Tottenham and a late approach from Juventus throwing the picture wide open.
Here at FreeBets.com, we've run through the most credible destinations and assessed which clubs are realistically in the frame.
Andy Robertson Next Club Odds
With Robertson now away on Scotland duty ahead of the World Cup, speculation is intensifying over his next move - and below we break down the latest odds from the top UK betting sites on where the experienced left-back could be playing before September 1, 2026.
| Club | Odds |
| Tottenham | 4/6 |
| Any Italian Club | 5/6 |
| Any Scottish Club | 10/1 |
| Any Spanish Club | 16/1 |
| Brentford | 16/1 |
| Fulham | 16/1 |
Odds correct as of Tuesday, 26 May, 5:00pm - courtesy of BetVictor
Tottenham
Tottenham are the frontrunners and have been for months.
Spurs first opened talks in January, with Fabrizio Romano and Paul Joyce both reporting that personal terms were agreed in principle earlier this year, subject to Premier League survival.
That obstacle disappeared on Sunday. Spurs beat Everton 1-0 to secure 17th and condemn West Ham to relegation, clearing the path for Robertson to complete the free transfer.
The logic is straightforward - Tottenham need a senior left-back with title-winning experience and dressing-room leadership, and Robertson brings both.
From his side, the appeal is staying in the Premier League at the level he has spent nine years operating at, with a guaranteed starting role on the table.
At 4/6, the market is telling you this is the most likely outcome - and the reporting backs it up.
Any Italian Club
Juventus' late approach is the reason this market is no longer a one-horse race.
According to Fabrizio Romano and Gianluca Di Marzio, the Turin club contacted Robertson and his representatives while he was still awaiting Tottenham's relegation outcome. Their offer is now on the table.
The pitch is obvious - one of the most storied clubs in European football, a return to a top-five league, and the chance to extend his career at a club where the demands suit a veteran's game.
The complication is that Juventus will not be in next season's Champions League, which removes one of the traditional levers Serie A sides use to prise players away from the Premier League.
The summer budget is also reportedly tight, which is exactly why a free transfer like Robertson appeals.
Robertson has previous form for being open to a move abroad - he explored a switch to Atletico Madrid last summer before the deal collapsed.
The 5/6 on any Italian club rather than Juventus specifically is the smart line, with Napoli also linked earlier in the year.
Any Scottish Club
The 10/1 on any Scottish club looks long until you remember who Robertson is.
He's Scotland captain. He started his career at Queen's Park before moving to Dundee United, and his associations with Glasgow and Scottish football are well-documented.
Celtic are the obvious name. The Premiership champions have a settled left-back position in Greg Taylor, but a player of Robertson's profile would be impossible to ignore for a club still trying to make headway in the Champions League group stage.
For Robertson, the move home would be emotional rather than sporting. At 32, with a World Cup months away, the calculation is probably about staying at the highest possible level, which makes 10/1 fair rather than a steal.
Any Spanish club
The Spanish angle is essentially Atletico Madrid revisited.
Diego Simeone's side were Robertson's most concrete non-Premier League suitor last summer, with Romano reporting that Atletico had him as their "dream target" for the left-back position. That deal collapsed when Atletico moved for Atalanta's Matteo Ruggeri instead.
The underlying logic hasn't changed - Simeone still likes experienced defenders, and Robertson was open to the move - but Ruggeri is now in place, which removes the primary driver for that interest.
Other Spanish clubs like Real Betis or Sevilla fit the profile of a late-career move, but there's been no concrete reporting.
At 16/1, this is a live possibility rather than a likely outcome.
Brentford
Brentford are the under-the-radar entry on the market.
Rico Henry is out of contract this summer, leaving the Bees thin at left-back behind Keane Lewis-Potter and Aaron Hickey.
Keith Andrews' side have performed above expectations this season and will need reinforcements to build on that.
The Jordan Henderson template is the precedent worth noting - the same Liverpool-to-Brentford move that brought immediate leadership and Premier League know-how to a younger squad. Robertson would offer the same profile.
The complication is wages. Brentford's salary structure is tightly controlled, and matching what Tottenham or Juventus might offer is unlikely.
At 16/1, this is the dark horse - credible interest and the right need, but a steep ask on the financials.

Scott McGlynn draws on over 30 years of sports betting and casino experience, bringing data-led insights and first-hand knowledge to our readers. An authoritative and trusted voice in the gambling industry, Scott ensures our readers are always informed on the very latest sports and casino offerings.
