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Junior Kroupi, a £100m forward from Bournemouth, is reportedly set to reject a move to Liverpool amidst interest from several top clubs. Bournemouth remains firm in their stance, not willing to let go of the young talent easily.
Report: £100m forward set to turn down move to Liverpool
Liverpool’s search for attacking renewal has already begun to take on the shape of a summer obsession. Every promising forward in Europe appears to have been placed somewhere on the Anfield radar, every emerging talent framed as part of the great post Salah reconstruction.
Junior Kroupi, Bournemouth’s 19 year old forward, fits that story almost too neatly. As reported by iNews, Liverpool are firm admirers of the French teenager, alongside Manchester City, Arsenal and Manchester United. Yet the important detail is not the interest. It is Bournemouth’s refusal to behave like a club waiting to be raided.
Kroupi has scored 12 goals in 30 league games, a striking return for a teenager in his first full Premier League campaign. That alone explains why Liverpool would look closely. Anfield recruitment has long prized players before they become obvious, before their price becomes absurd, before the market turns sensible scouting into a public auction.
Here, though, Bournemouth appear to hold the strongest cards. iNews reports that Kroupi has no release clause in the contract he signed after arriving from for £10m in February last year. That matters. It means no club can simply trigger a number, force a conversation and apply pressure.
Junior Kroupi is reportedly set to reject a move to Liverpool due to Bournemouth's firm stance on retaining him.
In addition to Liverpool, Junior Kroupi is attracting interest from Manchester City, Arsenal, and Manchester United.
Junior Kroupi is valued at £100m, reflecting his potential and talent as a young forward.
Bournemouth's refusal to sell Junior Kroupi indicates their intention to build around young talent rather than being a selling club.
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Bournemouth’s view, according to the report, is that the earliest any deal would be considered is summer 2027, and even then only at £100m plus. In modern Premier League economics, that is not madness. It is power.
Liverpool’s interest is framed by iNews around the likelihood of Mohamed Salah’s departure and the need to reshape the attack. That is the part that will sharpen attention among supporters. Replacing Salah is not one transfer. It is not one profile. It is not simply finding a left footed forward who scores goals.
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It is about replacing reliability, gravity, output, durability and fear. Kroupi may become an elite forward, but Liverpool must decide whether he is a future centrepiece or merely an expensive piece of a wider rebuild.
For now, Bournemouth are entitled to ask why they should sell. They have European ambitions, Marco Rose arriving, and a recruitment structure that has repeatedly absorbed major exits. Antoine Semenyo’s departure was softened by Rayan’s immediate impact. Dango Ouattara went for £42.5m despite a smaller goals return. In that context, a £60m valuation for Kroupi looks light.
There is a familiar trap here. Liverpool supporters see a young forward linked, attach hope to the name, then measure club ambition by whether the deal happens. That would be too simple.
If Bournemouth are serious, Liverpool should be equally serious in walking away from bad timing. The best recruitment departments know when admiration must remain exactly that. Admiration.
Kroupi may well be worth watching for 2027. He may become one of the Premier League’s outstanding young attackers. But this summer, Bournemouth’s message is clear, and Liverpool would be wise to hear it early rather than waste weeks chasing a locked door.
From a Liverpool fan’s perspective, this report feels like one of those transfer stories that says plenty without really opening a door. Kroupi is exactly the sort of player supporters want the club to know about early, young, productive, technically exciting and already proving himself in the Premier League. Twelve goals at 19 is not background noise. It is a proper signal.
The frustration is that Liverpool need answers now. If Salah is leaving, or even if his role is changing, then the club cannot spend a whole summer admiring players who are effectively unavailable. That has happened before, where interest becomes a substitute for action and the market moves on while Liverpool wait for ideal conditions.
Still, there is logic in keeping Kroupi on the long term list. Bournemouth’s £100m stance for 2027 might sound steep, but if he adds another strong season, that number could become the market rather than the warning. The real question is whether Liverpool need a Salah successor, a central striker, a wide forward, or all three.
Kroupi looks exciting. He also looks like a 2027 conversation. For 2026, Liverpool need something more immediate, more decisive and more available.