Seven years after leaving the English Premier League for Real Madrid in a then-world record deal, wantaway winger Gareth Bale has curtailed an unhappy period in Spain and is targeting trophies after rejoining Spurs on loan.
Madrid outcast Bale, 31, has completed the most high-profile transfer move of the new Premier League season by rejoining his former club on an initial season-long loan, although the chances of the Wales winger returning to his parent club seem scant given the nature of his departure.
Reports vary on how much Spurs will pay in fees and wages for the temporary capture of their former Player of the Year, although it is believed they will meet at least half of his £600,000-a-week ($775,000) wages.
The move follows a season in which Bale spent most of his time on the bench after failing to secure a lucrative switch to Chinese Super League club Jiangsu Suning last summer.
"It's incredible to be back," said Bale, speaking as part of a sequence showing him offering a thumbs-up as he arrived at the club's training ground.
"It's such a special club, where I made my name. What an amazing club and amazing fans. Hopefully now I can get some match fitness and really help the team, and hopefully win trophies.
"I always thought that one day I would love to come back. I feel like it's a good time for me. I'm hungry, I'm motivated, I want to do well for the team and I can't wait to get started.
"I was speaking with the chairman about the past and what we did to get the club to the next level. Since I've left, the club has been growing.
"It's such an important thing for this club to win trophies. That's what we all want to do as players. To do it at Tottenham now would be a dream come true."
Fans and journalists used flight-tracking websites to follow club chairman Daniel Levy's private jet as it took Bale and team-mate Sergio Reguilon to London Luton Airport from Spain on Friday morning after both had completed medicals ahead of their moves.
Reguilon was named La Liga's best left-back last season while on loan at Sevilla and is reported to have joined on a five-year contract for at least the $23 million total that Everton offered for him in July.
The 23-year-old had been at Madrid since the age of eight and made his Spain debut in their 4-0 win at home to Ukraine earlier this month, including an assist to further underline the attacking qualities that had also alerted Manchester United and Chelsea to his talent.
"He did great for Sevilla last year, winning the Europa League," said Bale. "He's an exciting young player, very energetic. He loves attacking and has great delivery. Everyone will enjoy watching him."
Bale started his own impressive international career more than 14 years ago and has had happier times with his country than his club in the last two years, captaining Wales to Nations League victories against Finland and Bulgaria earlier this month.
Those wins came on the back of an anonymous domestic season by his standards, playing just 14 times while contributing only two goals and two assists in major competitions for Madrid, as well as barely featuring in the Champions League.
Spurs coach Jose Mourinho had been tight-lipped about Bale's arrival after watching his side edge past Lokomotiv Plovdiv 2-1 in Bulgaria after negotiations had concluded on Thursday.
Club record $69 million signing Tanguy Ndombele bundled a late winner in the Europa League qualifying match after Tottenham had gone a goal behind with less than 20 minutes remaining, adding to Mourinho's concerns after a limp 1-0 loss at home to Everton in their Premier League opener on Sunday.
Tottenham's early-season troubles have emphasized the potential need to add players of the caliber of Reguilon and Bale to their ranks as they attempt to re-establish themselves as challengers to the top four following a sixth-placed finish last season.
They were comprehensively ousted by Leipzig in the first knockout round of the Champions League last season, and the quality Bale has shown in Europe's most prestigious competition could help them to reach it again.
Bale has won the Champions League more times in his career than any other trophy apart from the Welsh Footballer of the Year, helping Madrid to the European title in his debut season, including the winning goal in extra time of the final.
He also scored the spectacular first of a brace in the 2018 final after coming off the bench against Liverpool and registered his 100th goal for the club the following February, although he would have reached that total earlier had he not been troubled by calf, ankle, hamstring and muscle injuries during his time at the Bernabeu.
"I feel like I bring that winning mentality back to Tottenham," suggested Bale. "Hopefully I can bring that to the dressing room – a bit more belief to everybody that we can win a trophy.
"The stadium is incredible, the training ground has got even better since I was here last. It's an exciting time to be here – the club continues to progress every year and I want to try to get us to the next level, which is winning a trophy."
A return to the kind of form he showed during his first spell at Spurs, after joining for around $6.4 million from Southampton in 2013, would be a significant boost for the Mourinho's toiling side.
His tally of 26 goals in 44 appearances in his final season earned Bale the Premier League Player of the Year award before his $108 million move to Madrid broke the transfer record at the time.
Even a return to the double-figure totals of his two previous seasons, when he scored 23 goals overall, would ease their reliance on Harry Kane and Son Heung-min, the pair responsible for 42 of their 81 goals last season.