Daniel Levy has set a world record £25 million-a-year naming-rights price on Tottenham Hotspur’s £1billion stadium, for which he has so far failed to find a buyer.

The Spurs chairman confirmed he is not close to agreeing a naming-rights deal for the stadium that Tottenham moved into in April following a series of delays - one of which has been revealed to have been a revenge attack after one of the club’s warehouses was turned into a cannabis factory.

Telegraph Sport has been told that Levy wants a naming-rights deal worth £25m-a-year for a 15-year commitment, which would earn Tottenham £375m.

Such a figure would eclipse Manchester City’s with Etihad, currently the biggest in English football, which is valued at £21.9m-a-year.

It would also be worth more per year than the highest naming-rights deal in world sport, which is the Scotiabank Arena that plays host to Toronto NHL, NBA and National Lacrosse League teams.

The £488m Scotiabank deal is spread over 20 years, which makes it worth £24.4m a year. The MetLife Stadium, which is home to the New York Giants and New York Jets NFL teams, earns about £13m-a-year from its naming rights deal with MetLife.