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Newcastle United's Anthony Gordon is set for a summer exit with an £80 million price tag. Bayern Munich and Barcelona are reportedly interested in signing him.
Sky Sports: Newcastle United star heading for summer exit with £80m price tag set
Anthony Gordon’s Newcastle United future has become one of those stories that grows louder with every passing week, partly because it feels so plausible, and partly because it speaks to where the club now sits in football’s food chain.
Credit to Sky Sports for the original reporting, with Sky Sports in Germany claiming Bayern Munich have presented Gordon’s representatives with terms for a five-year contract. Barcelona, meanwhile, have also entered the conversation, with Spanish outlets reporting that Gordon’s agents have met Deco, the club’s director of football.
Gordon arrived from Everton in 2023 with questions still attached to him. There was promise, pace, aggression and raw edge, but also the sense of a player still searching for certainty. Newcastle gave him that. He has grown into a Champions League force, scoring 10 times in this season’s competition, including one against Barcelona in August.
That changes everything. Players who score regularly at that level do not remain local secrets. They become targets, symbols, solutions. Gordon is now viewed less as potential and more as proof.
Anthony Gordon's transfer fee is set at £80 million for his exit from Newcastle United.
Bayern Munich and Barcelona are interested in signing Anthony Gordon from Newcastle United.
Bayern Munich has reportedly presented Anthony Gordon's representatives with terms for a five-year contract.
Anthony Gordon's agents have met with Deco, Barcelona's director of football, regarding a potential transfer.
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Bayern’s reported move is significant because it sounds advanced enough to feel serious, yet cautious enough to reveal the obstacle. Newcastle’s valuation, believed to be around £80m, is a deliberate line in the sand. It is roughly double what they paid Everton, and in the current market, it reflects both Gordon’s development and Newcastle’s reluctance to weaken.
Bayern, according to the report, may look elsewhere if that valuation does not drop. That feels like negotiation as much as strategy. Elite clubs often test resolve before deciding whether to attack it properly.
Barcelona’s interest carries a different kind of intrigue. If Marcus Rashford returns to Manchester United once his loan expires, there may be space for another explosive wide forward. Gordon, with his direct running, pressing appetite and improving end product, fits the modern Barcelona requirement more neatly than might first appear.
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For Newcastle, this is the delicate bit. They want to be a club that keeps players like Gordon. They also know every player has a price, especially when Financial Fair Play and squad evolution remain part of the conversation.
Newcastle cannot allow this to become a summer of uncertainty. If Gordon stays, he must feel central to the project. If he leaves, it has to be on Newcastle’s terms, for a fee that changes the shape of the squad.
For now, the story sits in that familiar transfer limbo, somewhere between ambition and anxiety. Gordon has become good enough to attract Bayern Munich and Barcelona. That is a compliment to Newcastle’s work. It is also a warning about what comes next.
From a Newcastle supporter’s perspective, this report is both flattering and deeply uncomfortable. Gordon becoming a player Bayern Munich and Barcelona want shows the club has developed him brilliantly. He has gone from a talented but inconsistent Premier League winger into a Champions League match winner, and that should make every fan proud.
Yet pride does not settle nerves. Newcastle have spent years trying to escape the feeling that bigger clubs can simply pick off their best players. Gordon leaving now would feel like a step backwards emotionally, even if the fee was huge. £80m sounds strong, but replacing his energy, speed, attitude and growing goal threat would not be easy.
There is also the message it sends. If Newcastle want to be seen as a serious European club, keeping Gordon matters. Bruno Guimaraes, Sandro Tonali and Gordon are the kind of players supporters build dreams around. Selling one of them always carries risk.
Still, there has to be realism. If Gordon wants Barcelona or Bayern, and if either club gets close to Newcastle’s valuation, the club may have a decision to make. The key is control. Newcastle cannot look passive. They either keep him with conviction or sell him with a clear plan.