
The Catalan club finalized a deal on Friday to bring Anthony Gordon to the Camp Nou from Newcastle United for a fee totaling roughly €80 million. The agreement with the Premier League side also includes a sell-on clause for the winger.
With Gordon secured, Barcelona is already turning its attention toward further high-profile recruitments ahead of the new season. Club officials are targeting Atletico Madrid forward Julian Alvarez, a pursuit that will likely force them to raise their current financial threshold.
Barcelona had prepared a €100 million bid for the Argentine international, but Atletico Madrid responded with a joke counter-offer for teenage star Lamine Yamal, signaling that the initial valuation falls short.
Beyond Alvarez, internal discussions continue regarding Manchester City midfielder Bernardo Silva, who is entering the final weeks of his current contract in England. Chelsea defender Marc Cucurella is also a target, with the player reportedly eager to depart Stamford Bridge and Chelsea willing to sell if their valuation is met.
The sudden burst of transfer activity revives long-standing questions about Barcelona’s actual purchasing power and compliance with league regulations.
Over the past five summer transfer windows, persistent financial instability has repeatedly hindered Barcelona’s ability to register new players with La Liga.
Club president Joan Laporta and the board have previously relied on unconventional financial maneuvers to navigate La Liga’s strict salary caps.
These mechanisms have included asking senior players to accept significant wage deferrals and requiring board directors to pledge personal wealth for bank guarantees. The club also famously activated several financial “levers” by selling off percentages of its future television rights and digital assets for immediate cash infusions.
Even with those cash injections, the registration process has rarely been seamless for the Spanish champions.
In the summer of 2024, newly signed midfielder Dani Olmo missed Barcelona’s opening two league matches because the club lacked the wage margin to formally register his €60 million contract. Similar registration anxieties heavily influenced Nico Williams’ decision to stay at Athletic Club last summer rather than risk a mid-season bureaucratic limbo.
The club’s latest financial statements place their total debt at roughly €1.45 billion, representing the largest deficit in global football.
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Yet the hierarchy remains outwardly confident they can fund this latest overhaul, betting heavily on immediate competitive success to balance the ledger.