EPL Index
·8 May 2026
Report: Brentford star could join European giants in £50m deal

In partnership with
Yahoo sportsEPL Index
·8 May 2026

There is a particular compliment hidden within Borussia Dortmund’s interest in Kevin Schade. Dortmund rarely chase players without conviction. Their recruitment model, polished through years of calculated talent development, tends to identify footballers just before their market value explodes. Brentford supporters may therefore interpret this latest development with both pride and anxiety.

Photo IMAGO
SportsBoom report that Dortmund are preparing to reignite their pursuit of the Brentford winger this summer, with contact already understood to have taken place between the clubs. Bayern Munich’s previous admiration has reportedly cooled, leaving Dortmund in the strongest position should Schade depart west London.
Brentford’s valuation, believed to exceed £50million, underlines how dramatically Schade’s stock has risen since his £22million arrival from Freiburg in 2023.
Schade’s numbers tell only part of the story. Twenty Premier League goals in 94 appearances reflects steady productivity, but his real value lies in chaos creation. Few wide forwards attack open grass with greater aggression or stretch defensive lines so relentlessly.
Dortmund clearly see a player capable of flourishing back in the Bundesliga environment where transition football remains king. “The Bundesliga club have been monitoring the German winger for quite a while and are desperate to sign him when the window reopens,” SportsBoom state.

Photo IMAGO
For Brentford, this represents another moment of strategic balance. The club have become experts at turning smart recruitment into sizeable profits. Neal Maupay, Ollie Watkins, Ivan Toney and David Raya all departed for significant fees, while Brentford continued evolving.
Perhaps most revealing is that Brentford are reportedly already considering alternatives. Paris Saint Germain’s Lee Kang-In has emerged as a possible target should Schade leave.
That feels entirely consistent with Brentford’s planning. Emotional attachment rarely overrides sustainability at the Gtech Community Stadium. Every major departure becomes an opportunity to refresh, rebuild and challenge assumptions all over again.
Brentford supporters will probably greet this report with resignation more than panic. The club’s model has always been transparent. Develop players intelligently, improve them within a competitive Premier League environment and eventually sell at maximum value. Kevin Schade appears increasingly likely to become the next chapter in that story.
Fans may feel conflicted because Schade still feels slightly unfinished in English football. There have been flashes where his pace and directness looked devastating, particularly in transition, but there is also a lingering sense that his best football at Brentford may still be ahead of him.
At the same time, £50million represents enormous business for a player signed for £22million only two years ago. Brentford supporters have seen this cycle repeatedly with Watkins, Benrahma, Raya and Toney. The club rarely collapses after losing stars because recruitment preparation often begins months before public interest surfaces.
Lee Kang-In would certainly intrigue supporters if Brentford genuinely move in that direction. He offers technical quality and tactical flexibility, though replacing Schade’s athletic explosiveness would remain difficult.
Ultimately, most Brentford fans trust the structure more than individual names. That may be the club’s greatest achievement of all. Even when elite European clubs circle their best players, confidence in the wider project remains remarkably stable.
Live


Live


Live


Live


Live































