EPL Index
·25 June 2026
Italian reports reveal Arsenal’s €50m interest in World Cup star

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·25 June 2026

Manu Kone has become one of those names that begins as a whisper in the market and then, almost without warning, starts to sound like strategy. According to Quotidiano Sportivo, the AS Roma midfielder has Arsenal firmly in mind as he considers the next step in a career now being sharpened by the 2026 World Cup.
The report states: “Manu Kone could be the most lucrative transfer of the Giallorossi summer.”
That line matters. Roma are not merely dealing with an interested club, they are dealing with an asset whose value is rising in real time. France have placed Kone on a stage where every touch carries extra weight, every recovery run feels like evidence, every composed pass becomes a small argument for a larger fee.
Quotidiano Sportivo add: “Playing a key role in a World Cup with the French national team is giving the Roma midfielder enormous added value, and his first performances as a starter in the United States have refocused his attention on the transfer market.”
For Arsenal, this is familiar territory. Mikel Arteta’s side, Premier League champions and Champions League finalists last season, are shopping in a different aisle now. They no longer look for possibility alone. They look for players who can step into pressure, absorb it, and still make good decisions.

Photo IMAGO
Kone, 25, fits that profile. Powerful, tidy, assertive and mobile, he offers the sort of midfield security that elite sides crave across a campaign that stretches from August to May and often beyond.
The clearest part of the report is also the most important: “The player’s desire is clear: Arsenal, the reigning English champions and Champions League finalists, are in his sights.”
That does not complete a transfer, of course. Roma’s valuation, reportedly at least €50million, remains substantial. Tottenham Hotspur have also been credited with enquiries, which gives the story a familiar north London edge.
Yet player preference can alter the rhythm of a deal. It can narrow choices. It can make one club feel like destination rather than option.
Quotidiano Sportivo also note: “The 2001-born player has stated that he intends to focus on the transfer market only after his World Cup experience, but in the meantime, all parties involved have made moves.”
The report concludes: “A move to England would be a huge personal challenge, as only finding playing time there can boost his stock.”
That is the gamble. Arsenal’s midfield is already crowded with quality, status and expectation. Kone would not arrive as decoration. He would need minutes, trust and a defined role.
For Arteta, the appeal is obvious. Arsenal are now operating from a position of strength, and strength requires maintenance. Kone would bring depth, athleticism and control. More importantly, he would bring ambition at a time when Arsenal can no longer afford to stand still.
From an Arsenal supporter’s perspective, this is exactly the type of link that feels both exciting and slightly complicated. Manu Kone looks like a player built for the modern Premier League, especially for a side that wants to dominate territory, counter-press quickly and survive those frantic 20-minute spells away from home when control can disappear.
The World Cup angle is important. Arsenal fans have seen enough transfer windows to know that tournament form can inflate fees, but Kone’s profile is not based on a couple of flashy clips. He has the physical tools, the tactical discipline and the age profile to make sense.
The big question is playing time. If Arsenal are spending around €50million, this cannot be a luxury signing. He has to be part of the serious rotation, perhaps even someone who pushes the established midfielders rather than waits behind them.
There is also satisfaction in the reported preference. If Tottenham are interested and Kone still sees Arsenal as the destination, supporters will naturally enjoy that. Yet the real issue is fit, not rivalry.
If Arteta and Andrea Berta believe Kone raises the floor and ceiling of the midfield, Arsenal should move decisively. Champions strengthen before weakness appears. That is what elite clubs do.







































