Graham Roberts has slammed Tottenham for the signings of Jack Clarke, Ryan Sessegnon and Joe Rodon.

The trio were signed over a 14 month period between 2019 and 2020 but have all made very little impact in North London.

What's the latest news involving Clarke, Sessegnon and Rodon?

Their respective careers fittingly sum up Tottenham's struggles in the transfer window in recent years. Clarke (£10m) and Sessegnon (£25m), were signed in the same year as Tanguy Ndombele and Giovani Lo Celso, have added almost nothing to the cause in the last two-and-a-half years.

Sessegnon has come into the picture under Antonio Conte and made his third Premier League start under the Italian against Wolves on Sunday, even though it lasted less than 30 minutes after he was hooked following Spurs' horrendous start to the game.

But Clarke has made just four first-team appearances and is already on his fourth loan spell since making the move from Leeds, with no top-flight outings to his name.

Then there's Rodon, who's hardly had a look in this season, and hasn't played a minute in the top-flight for more than five months.

With Rodon costing £11m, Tottenham forked out almost £50m for the trio, who've made less than 50 appearances between them in just under three seasons, which appears to have left Roberts frustrated.

What did Roberts say about Clarke, Sessegnon and Rodon?

He told GIVEMESPORT: "You didn't need to go out and buy Sessegnon, Rodon and Clarke, you don't need to."

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Were they all mistakes?

Signing Clarke always looked a strange one. While he was brought in by Mauricio Pochettino, who was sacked months later, he wasn't exactly pulling up any trees in the Championship with Leeds, so him doing the business in the Premier League appeared unlikely.

Sessegnon was on the back of a decent season with Fulham in the Premier League, which came after he ran riot in the Championship with the Cottagers. Therefore, at the time of his arrival he was one of the hottest prospects in English football and his age and potential looked a good fit for Pochettino.

The arrival of Sergio Reguilon last summer and Sessegnon's inability to stay fit and take his chances when they do come his way have made for a frustrating couple of years, but at the time of his signing, Danny Rose wasn't getting any better and the 21-year-old looked a potential long-term replacement.

That leaves Rodon, who's done very little wrong when he has pulled on a Tottenham shirt, but for whatever reason, that hasn't been as often as Spurs' defensive problems perhaps warrant.