The 4th Official
·2 Juli 2026
Leeds United Still Tracking This 30-Year-Old Free Agent: Why Should Farke Move Away?

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Yahoo sportsThe 4th Official
·2 Juli 2026

It started with a single post on social media. Ekrem Konur dropped a name that sent West Yorkshire into a collective spin: Julian Brandt. Yes, that Julian Brandt. The 30-year-old German playmaker is officially a free agent after cutting ties with Borussia Dortmund, and Leeds United are apparently in the conversation. It sounds barmy. It probably is. But in the mad world of the transfer window, it’s exactly the kind of rumour that gets fans dreaming.
The reality? It’s complicated. Ajax and PSV Eindhoven are sniffing around. More pressingly, Brandt reportedly has his heart set on sunny Spain. His representatives have already been knocking on Real Betis’s door. The Andalusians are struggling to balance their books with Isco and Giovani Lo Celso already gobbling up the wage bill, but the intent is there.
Brandt’s final year in the Bundesliga wasn’t seamless. He spent a lot of time on the bench as Dortmund went through another transitional phase. Still, class doesn’t just vanish. He managed a brilliant assist against Freiburg and a massive goal against Stuttgart toward the end of the campaign, proving he can still unlock elite defences in a split second.
DORTMUND, GERMANY – FEBRUARY 28: Julian Brandt of Borussia Dortmund runs with the ball during the Bundesliga match between Borussia Dortmund and FC Bayern München at Signal Iduna Park on February 28, 2026 in Dortmund, Germany. (Photo by Pau Barrena/Getty Images)
Daniel Farke needs a magician. There is no denying that Leeds United’s midfield lacks that killer, line-breaking pass to unlock stubborn low blocks. Brandt fits the tactical profile perfectly. He’s versatile, technically flawless, and possesses a footballing brain that operates two seconds ahead of everyone else. But then you look at the spreadsheet.
Brandt wants a net salary of around £2.5 million a year.
That is serious money. For a club fighting at the wrong end of the Premier League, those numbers break wage structures. They wreck dressing room harmony. If Leeds actually tried to pull this off, you would be looking at a signing-on fee of up to £6 million just to get him to sign the contract. It’s an eye-watering gamble for a player who just turned down top-tier English clubs to see out his Dortmund days.
Let’s be realistic. Spain is his priority. Lazio are watching, too. Expecting a player of his pedigree to swap the Champions League for a gritty night away in the English league system feels like a stretch too far. Farke cannot afford to spend the entire summer chasing an expensive daydream.
Instead of a long, drawn-out saga that ends in disappointment, the recruitment team should look elsewhere. Hungry, intense £12 million options from the continent or younger domestic starlets are far better suited to the relentless physical demands of Farke’s system. Tracking Brandt shows ambition, but ambition doesn’t win points if you end up empty-handed when the window slams shut.







































