Fermin Lopez has attracted interest from several top European clubs including Chelsea, Newcastle United, Bayern Munich, Tottenham and Manchester United. Chelsea submitted an opening bid near 40 million, reportedly including bonuses. Newcastle are reportedly preparing a 100 million offer with a salary package that could quadruple his current wages. Bayern have identified creative midfield needs and view Lopez as a potential solution. Manchester United are monitoring the situation quietly. Barcelona have labelled Lopez non-transferable and manager Hansi Flick expects him to stay, though offers between 70 million and 90 million could prompt reconsideration amid financial and registration pressures.
Barcelona's midfield sensation Fermin Lopez has rapidly become one of the most coveted names of the summer transfer window. His rise has not gone unnoticed, with clubs such as Chelsea, Newcastle United, Bayern Munich, Tottenham and Manchester United all circling, sources close to the agents industry have informed CaughtOffside. Chelsea surge ahead with lucrative proposal Chelsea were reportedly the first to approach with a substantial offer. Initial reports indicate an opening bid of around 40 million, possibly including bonuses.
Tottenham, Bayern & Man United keeping vigil While Chelsea are currently the most aggressive suitors, Newcastle United are reportedly preparing an even more ambitious 100 million bid, along with a salary package that could quadruple Fermin's current earnings. Bayern Munich remain in the background. Though not heavily linked, reports suggest they have identified creative needs and see Fermin as a potential solution. Manchester United, for now, are playing a quieter game, monitoring developments and keeping the Spaniard on their radar for future planning.
Barcelona standing firm but under pressure Fermin Lopez to Chelsea? (Photo by Judit Cartiel/Getty Images) Barcelona have made it clear: Fermin is non-transferable. Manager Hansi Flick is convinced the midfielder will remain at the club. Offers upward of 70 million to 90 million could make the board reconsider, especially amid financial constraints and the need to register new players.
Collection
[
|
...
]