EPL Index
·02 de março de 2026
Manchester City willing to splash £70m for England international

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Yahoo sportsEPL Index
·02 de março de 2026

Manchester City are preparing for a defining summer move, with TeamTalk reporting that the club are ready to shatter the world record fee for a full-back in pursuit of Newcastle United’s Tino Livramento. It is a statement of intent that speaks to both necessity and ambition at the Etihad Stadium.

Photo IMAGO
City have tracked Livramento since last summer, while Newcastle have been attempting to tie the former Chelsea defender to a new contract. His current deal runs until 2028, yet progress on an extension has stalled. Crucially, it is understood that Livramento has not asked to leave Newcastle, but City are confident he would welcome the opportunity to move.
The right-back position has demanded attention since City moved on from Kyle Walker. This season, Matheus Nunes has filled the role despite arriving from Wolves as a midfielder. Rico Lewis offers another technically gifted solution, although he too drifts naturally into central areas.

Photo: IMAGO
Livramento represents something different, an orthodox yet modern full-back with recovery pace, positional intelligence and the capacity to stretch play. TeamTalk report that Newcastle would hold out for £70 million should he depart. That would eclipse the current world record for a full-back, the £60 million paid by Paris Saint-Germain to Inter Milan for Achraf Hakimi in 2021. It would also surpass the £57 million City paid Juventus for Joao Cancelo in 2019, a British record at the time.
City already hold the world record for a centre-back through the signing of Josko Gvardiol. Breaking another defensive benchmark would underline how highly they rate Livramento as a long-term solution.
This is not extravagance for its own sake. City’s structure relies on control from wide areas, whether through inverted full-backs or overlapping runners. Livramento’s athletic profile and Premier League experience align neatly with that blueprint.

Photo: IMAGO
Newcastle’s negotiating stance will be firm, yet if City decide this is the answer to a persistent tactical question, precedent suggests they will act decisively.
Manchester City’s right-back position has lacked clarity since Walker’s departure, and while Nunes has applied himself admirably, it has always looked like a temporary adjustment.
Livramento would bring defensive assurance first and foremost. City fans understand that titles are often secured by margins, by the ability to defend transitions late in tight games, whether it is a 1-0 grind or a nervy 2-1 at a rival ground. An elite full-back who can recover, defend one v one and still contribute in possession fits the modern demands of Pep Guardiola’s system.
The potential £70 million outlay will raise eyebrows, yet supporters have seen how targeted investment in key roles pays off. If the recruitment team believe Livramento can anchor that flank for the next five to seven years, then the fee becomes secondary. Stability at right-back could be the final piece in maintaining domestic dominance and restoring European authority.









































