
Anfield Index
·6 de septiembre de 2025
Newcastle United star breaks silence on Alexander Isak’s move to Liverpool

In partnership with
Yahoo sportsAnfield Index
·6 de septiembre de 2025
When Alexander Isak finally boarded the train to Anfield there was resignation. Relief, even. Newcastle had fought to keep their record signing, but the pull of Liverpool – and a £125 million fee – proved irresistible.
For weeks, Newcastle’s season had been overshadowed by Isak’s absence. A self-imposed strike left Eddie Howe with fewer attacking options, while rumours of Liverpool’s interest grew louder. The saga reached its inevitable conclusion on deadline day, when the Swedish striker was unveiled as Arne Slot’s newest addition.
Newcastle defender Dan Burn, often a mouthpiece for the mood within the dressing room, admitted to mixed emotions once the deal was sealed. “Look, I am glad it’s done,” Burn confessed. “I think we wanted the transfer window to close, just to have a bit of clarity on it.”
Burn, however, was quick to emphasise that there is no ill feeling towards his former team-mate. “Alex is a mate, so it was a tough situation because you want him to be around and helping the team – but also understanding what he needs to do personally.”
In those words lies the delicate truth of modern football: loyalty bends under the weight of ambition. Careers are fleeting; opportunities at clubs like Liverpool come rarely. For Isak, the decision to move was about chasing silverware and testing himself at the sharpest edge of European football.
Newcastle, for their part, wasted no time in shoring up the forward line. The arrivals of Nick Woltemade and Yoane Wissa signal a new chapter. Yet Burn was candid about the challenge of losing a player of Isak’s calibre. “I have got nothing but good wishes for Alex, no animosity,” he said. “As a Newcastle fan, and you know what Newcastle fans are like, we are very protective of our club and city.”
There will be frustration in the stands, a sense that a cornerstone has been taken away. But football does not wait for sentiment. Isak will debut for Liverpool against Burnley next week, stepping into the expectation that comes with a record price tag. Newcastle, meanwhile, must adjust quickly, their ambitions recalibrated after a summer defined by one name.