Guehi nears freedom of movement
Marc Guehi can join a European club in 34 days when his Crystal Palace contract ends on 30 June. He can also agree a pre-contract with a foreign side once the winter window opens on 1 January 2026. Liverpool failed to secure the England defender for £35m in the summer. The long pursuit collapsed when Palace could not sign a replacement, a decision driven by manager Oliver Glasner. Palace lost a major fee with only a year left on his deal, but kept their captain after selling Eberechi Eze to Arsenal a week earlier. Liverpool still want the centre-back, yet no one can guarantee the deal will happen. Guehi now has several options and major European clubs have already shown interest.
Competition grows for top defenders
Guehi is not the only high-level centre-back who could move for free next summer. Liverpool’s Ibrahima Konaté has faced links with Real Madrid as his contract runs down, following the path of former partner Trent Alexander-Arnold. Reports on Friday suggested the Spanish giants ended that apparent interest, and leading sports outlets in the UK have not confirmed any firm approach. His uncertain future has been widely cited as a factor behind his poor form. Real Madrid may lose Antonio Rüdiger and David Alaba this summer as both enter the final seven months of their deals. That situation leaves Guehi and Dayot Upamecano as potential free-market solutions to reinforce their defence, a tactic the club has used often.
Why Guehi appeals to Madrid
Spanish football analyst Guillem Balague says Real Madrid do admire Guehi because he meets a clear need at centre-back. Dean Huijsen has stepped up, but Eder Militao and Antonio Rüdiger have both suffered injuries. Rüdiger has entered his thirties, Raul Asencio has not fully convinced and David Alaba has lost pace after a long injury absence. Guehi brings Premier League experience, personality, speed and strong decision-making. He offers a stabilising presence who can compete for minutes at once. His case fits Madrid’s wider transfer approach, which includes three deal types. The first focuses on young talent who can become superstars. The second targets established players available without a fee, where signing bonuses replace transfer costs, a category that could include Guehi next summer. The third concentrates on expensive signings reserved for players expected to start immediately.
