EPL Index
·27 November 2025
Report: Leeds United considering move to sign £31m striker

In partnership with
Yahoo sportsEPL Index
·27 November 2025

Leeds United’s growing need for attacking reinforcements has taken on fresh urgency, and the latest developments suggest the club are widening their search beyond familiar Premier League names. According to GiveMeSport, Leeds are among several clubs monitoring AZ Alkmaar striker Troy Parrott, whose recent form for club and country has transformed his market value and reputation.

Photo IMAGO
This is not a tentative enquiry. Leeds know their goalscoring output has fallen well below the level required to stay competitive across a long Premier League campaign. With the January market approaching and the club slipping into the relegation zone, the search for a reliable forward is becoming increasingly central to their planning.
The reports highlight Parrott’s remarkable form across November. Five goals in World Cup qualifying, including a hat-trick against Portugal, have thrust him into the spotlight. Described as “exceptional”, the 23 year old has taken significant strides since leaving Tottenham for AZ in 2024, scoring 19 goals in 19 appearances this season and ranking joint fourth in the Eredivisie charts.
AZ value him at around €35m, roughly £31m, and are said to be relaxed about his situation given his contract runs until 2029. Wolves had shown interest previously but cooled their pursuit due to price. For Leeds, that valuation now looks more realistic given the urgency of their situation.

Photo IMAGO
GiveMeSport underline the difficulty Farke faces. Leeds have scored just 11 goals in 12 league matches. Dominic Calvert-Lewin, Lukas Nmecha and Joel Piroe have contributed only four goals combined, three of which belong to Nmecha. Those numbers paint a stark picture. For a side that depends heavily on transition and structured pressing to create chances, the lack of a ruthless finisher has proved costly.

Photo IMAGO
Recent results reinforce the concern. A 2-1 defeat to Aston Villa left Leeds in the relegation zone for the first time this season and extended a run of five losses in six. The schedule now turns even more demanding with fixtures against Manchester City, Chelsea and Liverpool.
A signing like Parrott would provide not only goals but also energy and movement, qualities Leeds have lacked in decisive moments.
Leeds’ last win came in October, a 2-1 victory over West Ham. Since then, performances have fluctuated, confidence has dipped and the attacking unit has struggled to offer sustained threat. Parrott represents a potential reset point, a striker in form and with time on his side, someone whose profile aligns with the dynamic, vertical style Farke ideally wants.

Photo IMAGO
Whether Leeds can navigate AZ’s valuation and competition from other clubs remains to be seen, but the logic of the pursuit is clear. This is a club that desperately needs goals, and in Parrott they see a forward whose trajectory is firmly upwards.
Leeds’ forward line has needed a lift for months, and fans have grown weary of missed chances, misfiring strikers and attacking phases that collapse in the final third. Parrott feels different. His numbers alone are enough to stir excitement: 19 goals in 19 appearances is elite output at any level, and a hat-trick against Portugal shows his confidence is soaring.
What encourages fans most is his age and upward curve. Leeds supporters love players who arrive hungry, eager to prove themselves and capable of energising the crowd from the first whistle. Parrott fits that mould far more than tired veteran signings or short term loans that have offered little.
The £31m price will raise eyebrows, but fans know quality costs money, especially in January. Considering the struggles of Calvert-Lewin, Nmecha and Piroe, investing in a forward who actually scores every 87 minutes feels like a necessary gamble rather than a luxury.
Supporters are also excited by the idea of Leeds beating other Premier League clubs to a signing with real potential. It sends a message that the club are still ambitious, still willing to build rather than simply survive. And with Manchester City, Chelsea and Liverpool looming, fans know they need something, someone, to spark a turnaround.
If Parrott arrives, Elland Road will buzz again. At a time when hope has felt fragile, this is the type of move that restores belief.









































