EPL Index
·6. Juni 2026
Report: Liverpool eyeing £40m deal for Premier League midfielder

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Yahoo sportsEPL Index
·6. Juni 2026

There are few things more revealing than a new manager’s first transfer instinct. According to SportsBoom, Andoni Iraola is already looking towards Bournemouth as he begins shaping Liverpool in his own image, with Alex Scott emerging as a major target.
It is a move that makes immediate footballing sense. Scott is 22, technically assured, positionally flexible and already schooled in the kind of high-energy, aggressive football Iraola wants to install at Anfield. For Liverpool, coming off a frustrating fifth-place finish, this would not feel like a vanity signing. It would feel like a coach identifying a player who understands the rhythm, demands and emotional temperature of his football.
Scott’s situation adds intrigue. SportsBoom report that contract talks with Bournemouth have stalled, which naturally changes the landscape. Bournemouth still hold a prized asset, but stalled negotiations always invite curiosity, especially when a former manager with Liverpool’s resources enters the conversation.
Scott’s journey from Bristol City to Bournemouth has been one of the more quietly impressive development stories in English football. He arrived as a gifted Championship prospect and has grown into a Premier League midfielder with international pedigree, now preparing to represent England at this summer’s World Cup in America.
That matters. Liverpool are not simply buying potential here. They would be targeting a player with Premier League experience, tactical intelligence and a profile suited to several midfield roles. He can press, carry, combine and create. In Iraola’s system, those traits are not decorative. They are essential.

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It is easy to understand why the reunion appeals. Managers often return for players they trust, partly because football is complicated, and partly because familiarity can accelerate change. Scott would not need months to learn Iraola’s expectations. He already knows them.
For Bournemouth, this is where admiration becomes awkward. Scott is not a fringe player, nor a convenient sale. He is part of the identity Iraola helped build on the south coast, a symbol of ambition, recruitment and coaching progress.
That is why any Liverpool approach would surely have to be serious. Bournemouth have little incentive to accept anything modest, particularly with Scott’s age, England status and top-flight reputation. They can argue, quite reasonably, that he is worth more than a standard midfield prospect.
Liverpool’s rebuild under Iraola will be judged by clarity as much as glamour. Scott would offer both. He would bring energy, tactical fluency and a sense of continuity for the new manager.
If this becomes one of the first major moves of the Iraola era, it will say plenty about the direction of travel. Liverpool may be searching for stars, but first they need players who make the manager’s ideas breathe.
From a Bournemouth supporter’s perspective, this report will land with a familiar mix of pride and dread. Pride, because Alex Scott being linked with Liverpool says everything about how far he has come. Dread, because Bournemouth fans have seen this pattern before. A player develops, thrives, becomes part of the club’s modern identity, then the richer clubs begin circling.
What makes this one sharper is Iraola. This would not be a random raid. It would be the former boss looking back at the project he left behind and deciding Scott is one of the pieces he needs most. That feels personal, even if football rarely allows room for sentiment.
Bournemouth should be firm. Scott is young, English, versatile and World Cup bound. Those four words alone add millions to any valuation. If Liverpool want him, they should pay a fee that reflects his importance, not merely his contract situation.
Still, there is a wider question for Bournemouth. If the club wants to keep rising, players like Scott have to see their future there. A new contract would be more than paperwork. It would be a statement that Bournemouth are not simply a stepping stone. They are building something worth staying for.







































