Friday, January 23, 2026
Home/Sports/Article
Sports
6 min read

Liverpool's Marc Guehi Transfer Stumble: Why Man City Might Secure Him

This Is Anfield
January 18, 20264 days ago
Is This Why Liverpool Pulled Out?

AI-Generated Summary
Auto-generated

Liverpool reportedly missed out on signing Marc Guehi due to his high wage demands, with Manchester City set to secure him for an initial £20 million deal. Guehi's potential weekly wage of £300,000 at City would have made him one of Liverpool's highest earners. Crystal Palace had previously blocked a move last summer.

Liverpool have missed out on Marc Guehi to Man City and it would not be a surprise if his huge wages were a reason why they opted not to sign him. Guehi was agonisingly close to joining the Reds last summer, agreeing a £35 million move and undergoing a medical on deadline day. Crystal Palace pulled out at the 11th hour, however, deciding they didn’t have time to find a suitable replacement, and he has stayed put for the time being. He is now set to join Man City this month, however, with an initial £20 million deal agreed which could rise to around £30 million including add-ons, per talkSPORT. Not only that, but the 25-year-old’s five-and-a-half-year deal at the Etihad will be worth £300,000 per week, with his medical taking place on Sunday. Marc Guehi’s wages: Where they would rank at Liverpool Guehi’s eye-watering wages at City highlight the money they are willing to pay new signings compared to Liverpool, which always made them a threat in the race to sign him. For the Reds to pay a player £300,000 per week, it would need to be a world-class individual capable of being a game-changing addition. Mohamed Salah and Virgil van Dijk are Liverpool’s two highest earners after signing new deals last summer, taking home £480,000 a week (including bonuses) and £385,000 a week respectively. Alexander Isak is next on the list, paid £300,000 a week after becoming the club’s most expensive signing in history. So Guehi’s Man City salary would make him Liverpool’s joint-third highest earner. It is a blow for Liverpool to miss out on the Palace captain, considering he is arguably England’s best centre-back heading into the 2026 World Cup this summer. But matching City’s wages would arguably be a reckless approach, rather than their more measured one over the past decade, with other top-quality options out there.

Rate this article

Login to rate this article

Comments

Please login to comment

No comments yet. Be the first to comment!
    Liverpool Transfer News: Marc Guehi Move to Man City Explained