A Spurs young player, Moore, is supposedly a loan objective for the Scottish Premiership club, Rangers, after the promising player was not present for the Tottenham pre-season matches.
Moore has been permitted to stay in England to help make possible a loan this coming season, subsequent to a development campaign under Ange Postecoglou last term.
The academy standout played in 12 Premier League games during 2024-25, and an additional five appearances in the UEFA Europa League, which Spurs secured with a win over Manchester United in Bilbao.
Moore might be a part of Rangers’ chase for the title

Tottenham revealed their pre-season tour participants on the evening of Sunday, which did not have the presence of people like Moore, Alfie Devine and Dane Scarlett, all of whom apparently had permission to look into loan offers.
Manor Solomon, Destiny Udogie, Dejan Kulusevski, Radu Dragusin and Bryan Gil have also not made the trip while they are going through therapy for their injuries.

Coming straight from their acquisition by 49ers Enterprises, the Glasgow Rangers side has come up as a possible destination for Moore, who is 17 years of age.
The ‘Gers are searching for a wide attacker, having already shown their interest in Jesurun Rak-Sakyi from Crystal Palace.
Under the leadership of new head coach Russell Martin, Rangers are trying to take over Celtic’s domination of Scottish football from the last ten years or so.
The 55-time champions have already brought in Max Aarons, Joe Rothwell, Oscar Cortes, Emmanuel Fernandez, Thelo Aasgaard, Nasser Djiga and Djeidi Gassama during the summer transfer window and could possibly include Moore as their newest addition, according to national reports.

Ibrox – which got the number four spot in FourFourTwo‘s ranking of the best stadiums on earth – had its last title celebration in 2020-21. However, with fans present in the stadiums, ‘Gers supporters have not had a Scottish Premiership win to celebrate on their home ground since 2010-11.
In FourFourTwo‘s view, Rangers’ new style of ownership, together with a new coach, playing style, and player signings, could bring more fun and competition to Scotland’s top division in 2025-26.