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Report: World-class Liverpool star could follow Salah out of the door at Anfield

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Liverpool Face Double Exit Storm as Isak Eyes Barcelona MoveLiverpool’s summer rebuild, already destabilised by the confirmed departure of Mohamed Salah, could yet take another dramatic turn. Report...

Report: World-class Liverpool star could follow Salah out of the door at Anfield Liverpool Face Double Exit Storm as Isak Eyes Barcelona Move Liverpool’s summer rebuild, already destabilised by the confirmed departure of Mohamed Salah, could yet take another dramatic turn. Reports emerging from Spainish site Fichajes suggest that Alexander Isak, signed less than a year ago in a record-breaking deal, is now angling for an early exit — with Barcelona positioned as his preferred destination. It is a storyline that carries all the hallmarks of modern football volatility: big money, bigger expectations, and a player whose first impression has been disrupted by circumstance rather than lack of quality.

Photo IMAGO Isak Situation Raises Eyebrows When Isak arrived at Anfield for a British-record fee reportedly in the region of £125 million, the narrative felt pre-written. Liverpool were investing not just in a striker, but in a focal point for the next tactical cycle under Arne Slot. Yet football rarely adheres to script.

Injuries have curtailed the Swede’s rhythm, limiting both continuity and chemistry within a reshaped attacking unit. Now, according to the original source report from Spain, Isak “has his heart set on a move to Barcelona” and has already instructed his representatives to begin exploring an exit route. That claim, while eye-catching, sits on uncertain ground.

There has been no corroboration from English outlets, and within Liverpool’s internal framework, such a rapid turnaround would represent a significant deviation from their recruitment logic. Barcelona Interest and Financial Reality Barcelona’s interest, while plausible on a stylistic level, runs headlong into economic reality. The Catalan club’s well-documented financial constraints make any deal north of £100 million difficult to rationalise.

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