What I love about the @FIFAWorldCup is that it transcends sport and brings people from every corner of the earth together. At a basic level we all want to enjoy life. Our cultures have differences but the videos and images shared show we are more similar than we might think
[🟢] NEW: From Rio Ngumoha’s perspective, while Bayern did make contact with his representatives in an attempt to lay the foundations for a move, claims that terms had been agreed between the two parties are understood to be entirely false.
The same goes for suggestions that the door to a departure might have been left ajar because of Ngumoha’s unhappiness with the minutes he picked up at Liverpool last season.
In reality, the teenager was fully appreciative of the careful handling he received from Arne Slot last term.
[@davidlynchlfc] https://t.co/OkwqVK7lri
I think the Muñoz effectively rules out bringing in Barcola this summer. Diomande is the obvious next signing and IF Gakpo leaves I could see a third attacker
Bence is putting out the best content when it comes to young up and coming talent across world football, great stuff on Liverpools newest player here 🎯
🇪🇸 The breakdown on Víctor Muñoz, what makes him elite, why Liverpool signed him and how he fits into Andoni Iraola's team 👇
🔗: https://t.co/qVlAQpUDyv
🇪🇸 The breakdown on Víctor Muñoz, what makes him elite, why Liverpool signed him and how he fits into Andoni Iraola's team 👇
🔗: https://t.co/qVlAQpUDyv
It’s hard to watch Victor Muñoz and not immediately think of the late great Diogo Jota, so many similarities in his movement and tenacity. Really excited to see how Muñoz develops under Iraola
🇪🇸 One versatile attacking option I’d love Liverpool to consider is Víctor Muñoz.
Only 22-years-old, he’s rapid and excels in one vs one situations.
He’s a very tenacious player, hard-working. Has a low centre of gravity, quick burst and a powerful physique that allows him to push past opponents with ease.
He’s comfortable receiving with his back to goal, makes excellent turns and a good link-up player as well. Also puts in decent crosses and cut-backs.
Has a very decent shot on him, too.
12 G/As this season may not seem like much but he delivered those numbers while playing in a side who were fighting for relegation.
Has played LW and RW all season. Even played in a central role in the past.
Still raw but he’s got all the ingredients to go very far.
Could be a key player off the bench for Spain at the World Cup.
Barcelona have been linked with him but Liverpool should be there, too.
Víctor Muñoz has that Real Madrid Spanish education.
Such a large pitch personality, carries with real intent, capable of manipulating the ball at speed and clean range of ball-striking.
Nice profile for the squad.
🚨💣 EXCLUSIVE: Liverpool are set to sign Víctor Muñoz with HIJACK done, HERE WE GO! 🔴🇪🇸
Newcastle in advanced talks for days but #LFC enter the deal, verbally agree terms with Muñoz and activate €40m release clause.
All set to be signed and another big surpise. 🧨
@AnfieldSector I had plenty of issues with Slot last season but Rio’s playing time was not one of them. He’s 17 and his minutes needed to be managed. Thrusting him into a dysfunctional team early in the season would not have helped his development.
Bayern Munich, through head of sport Max Eberl and head coach Vincent Kompany, did indeed establish contact with Rio Ngumoha and his representatives in recent weeks in an attempt to position Bayern Munich as a potential destination for one of English football’s most highly regarded young talents, with those approaches arriving during a period in which the player was frustrated by his limited opportunities under former Liverpool head coach Arne Slot and uncertain whether his pathway to first-team football would immediately accelerate, leading Bayern to receive indications that he could hypothetically be open to a short-term alternative pathway in order to accelerate his development and accumulate valuable senior minutes at a smaller club and in a less demanding league, before eventually returning to Liverpool, the iconic and most decorated institution in English football on Merseyside that he has always regarded as his dream club, as a more complete, experienced and established player.
However, as discussions intensified, Bayern’s representatives made their financial position clear by indicating a valuation in the region of £35 million (€40 million), a figure viewed as so far removed from Liverpool’s internal assessment that serious negotiations never truly materialised, with Liverpool having absolutely no intention of entertaining the sale of one of their most prized academy talents, while those involved increasingly recognised the vast gulf between Bayern’s proposal and Liverpool’s expectations, further reinforced by Ngumoha’s insistence that any hypothetical departure would require mechanisms facilitating a future return to Anfield following his development elsewhere, meaning no personal agreement was ever reached between Bayern Munich and the player as several fundamental conditions surrounding any potential move never aligned, ultimately underlining where his heart remained throughout the process and where he continues to envision his long-term future.
The entire situation furthermore shifted dramatically the moment Arne Slot departed and Andoni Iraola arrived at Liverpool, effectively removing the very foundations upon which Bayern’s hopes had been built as Ngumoha’s outlook changed almost immediately, with the player now believing he has a genuine opportunity to establish himself under the new manager and determined to fight for his place rather than abandon his ambitions at the club he considers his footballing home, leaving Bayern increasingly aware that their chances had diminished significantly and that important discussions between the player and his new head coach would soon take place, a development which in turn ensured that discussions never advanced towards any form of personal agreement, as the player’s focus became centred almost exclusively on earning his opportunity at Liverpool rather than pursuing a move elsewhere.
For Bayern Munich, the outcome of the situation serves as yet another reminder of where the club increasingly finds itself within football’s modern hierarchy, because while Liverpool, Real Madrid, Barcelona and the financial superpowers of the Premier League continue to compete for the sport’s most coveted talents, Bayern are finding themselves pushed further down the food chain and increasingly forced to operate in markets where competition is less fierce and rejection less likely, and with industry figures viewing as unrealistic any scenario involving Liverpool actively pushing Ngumoha out after the arrivals of targets such as Yan Diomande or Bradley Barcola, another target appears destined to join Bayern’s ever-growing collection of missed opportunities, a collection now so extensive that if one were to stack all the rejection letters accumulated over recent transfer windows they would likely form a wall high enough to block out the sun over Munich and cast a permanent shadow across Säbener Straße.