Anfield Watch
·02 de março de 2026
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Yahoo sportsAnfield Watch
·02 de março de 2026
Liverpool came close to signing Anthony Gordon back in summer 2024.
The North East club were struggling to meet PSR requirements and a sale of their winger to Liverpool was discussed. Eddie Howe’s side managed to offload players elsewhere - including Yankuba Minteh and Elliot Anderson - with Gordon remaining on Tyneside.
The England forward signed a new, long-term contract - protecting Newcastle’s investment having only signed the player in winter 2023 from Everton.
But that interest from his hometown club is reported to have turned the 25-year-old’s head.
“There is a view the 25-year-old has not been the same player for Newcastle since he thought he was on the brink of a move to Liverpool in the summer of 2024. He wanted to go,” writes Luke Edwards in the Telegraph.
According to the reporter the Geordies now value Gordon at £100m with a verdict of “uncertain” recorded over the versatile forward’s fate.
“His switch to a more central role this season has made him even more valuable to manager Eddie Howe. That is likely to mean his asking price has risen,” Edwards writes.
Anthony Gordon looks less like a player on the market and more like the leverage point in Newcastle’s next phase.
He has quietly become Eddie Howe’s reference attacker – output, intensity, personality – and the contract situation underlines that status.
After signing an improved long‑term deal in October 2024, it has now been confirmed that his agreement actually runs to 2030, not 2028, giving Newcastle four-plus years of security and no immediate pressure to sell.
That has not cooled outside noise.
Arsenal are reported to be preparing a summer push, with talk of a bid in the region of £75m, while Liverpool and Manchester City are heavily linked as long‑term admirers who would enter the conversation if Newcastle blinked.
For now, Newcastle’s stance is simple: Gordon is central to their sporting project and tied down on their terms.
Profit and Sustainability pressures could yet test that resolve, but any move would have to come on a “star sale” scale, not as a quick fix to balance the books.









































