EPL Index
·18 de marzo de 2026
Report: Premier League forward expected to accept €15m wage cut to complete Man United deal

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Yahoo sportsEPL Index
·18 de marzo de 2026

Jadon Sancho’s career has often felt like a story written in loops, full of promise, detours, and the quiet pull of somewhere that once felt like home. According to SportsBild, that pull is growing stronger again, with Borussia Dortmund now edging closer to what is described as an “increasingly concrete” move for the Manchester United winger.
Sancho’s time at Old Trafford appears to have reached its natural conclusion. As Fabrizio Romano stated, “Man Utd believe that the chapter of Sancho at Man Utd is closed and there is no chance to find a different way.” It is a stark admission, but one that reflects a reality that has been evident for some time.
There was a time when Sancho’s arrival in 2021 felt like the culmination of a long pursuit, a signing that would redefine United’s attacking identity. Instead, his trajectory has been fragmented. Loan spells, limited impact, and a sense of dislocation have followed.
His most recent stint at Aston Villa has done little to change that narrative. Seven Premier League starts, one goal, one assist, these are not the numbers of a player commanding his surroundings. They are the numbers of someone searching for rhythm in unfamiliar territory.

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It is perhaps no surprise, then, that Dortmund emerges again. Familiarity has its own currency in football.
The report from SportsBild paints a picture of internal debate turning into consensus. “The pendulum is now swinging more strongly in favor,” it notes, highlighting how opinion within Dortmund’s hierarchy has shifted.
Sebastian Kehl’s long-standing support for Sancho is significant. “Seeing him as a clear game-changer” suggests belief not just in the player he was, but in the player he could be again. More telling is the softening stance of Lars Ricken, whose growing enthusiasm signals alignment at the top.
There is a sense that Dortmund are not simply signing a player, but reclaiming a version of themselves that once thrived with Sancho at its centre.
Niko Kovac’s stance adds another layer of intrigue. Described as “the champion of discipline and commitment”, his pragmatic acceptance of Sancho speaks volumes. “He takes a pragmatic view of the situation, aware of Sancho’s sometimes difficult personality, but also of his great strengths.”
That balance, between caution and belief, may define whether this move succeeds. Dortmund understand Sancho, perhaps better than any other club. They know both the brilliance and the fragility.
Financially, the deal reflects compromise. A reduction from €15m to around €7m suggests a player willing to recalibrate expectations in pursuit of stability and opportunity.
From a Manchester United perspective, this report feels less like breaking news and more like confirmation of what supporters have long accepted. Sancho’s exit has been inevitable for years.
There is frustration in how it has unfolded. “Sancho will not play for Man Utd again and this is the clear position of the club,” Romano explained, and that clarity underlines a failure on multiple levels. Recruitment, management, and player integration have all played their part.
A United fan might look at Dortmund’s interest and feel a mix of envy and resignation. Dortmund see “a clear game-changer”, while United never quite unlocked that version of the player. That disconnect raises uncomfortable questions about structure and coaching at Old Trafford.
At the same time, there is acceptance that a reset benefits all parties. Sancho needs an environment that understands him, and United need to move forward with players aligned to their system and demands.
If Sancho thrives again in Germany, it will sting, but it will also reinforce a broader truth. Talent alone is never enough. Context, clarity, and confidence shape careers.
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