Liverpool agree £116m Wirtz deal, Club World Cup, Frank’s emotional farewell – football live | Club World Cup 2025
Liverpool agree potential British record fee with Bayer Leverkusen for Wirtz
Andy Hunter
Liverpool have agreed a fee with Bayer Leverkusen for Florian Wirtz. The German will join the Premier League champions in an £100m deal plus £16m in potential add-ons that would make Wirtz the most expensive British transfer of all time, eclipsing Chelsea’s £115m purchase of Moises Caicedo.
He will undergo a medical and finalise the transfer in the coming days. Personal terms have already been agreed.
Key events
Brighton have signed the teenage forward Charalampos Kostoulas, who gave up a Champions League season with Olympiakos to play in the Premier League.
The 18-year-old Kostoulas signed a five-year contract, Brighton said, with the transfer fee reportedly set at an initial €35m.
“It is a dream for everybody to come here and play football,” the Greece Under-21 striker said. He scored seven goals in 22 games in the Greek league as Olympiakos won a record-extending 48th title and completed a trophy double in the domestic cup.
Olympiakos was elevated directly into the lucrative Champions League opening phase — because title-holder Paris Saint-Germain already secured a place by winning the French league — and will play eight games in the single-standings league. Brighton finished eighth in the Premier League and did not qualify for European football. Associated Press
Thomas Frank and Spurs are a good fit on paper but the north London job will be a tough one for the Dane. Frank is tactically flexible but can be a slow starter and has limited experience in managing sides competing in Europe. Plus he arrives as the love still lingers for Ange Postecoglou after the Australian delivered Tottenham’s first trophy since 2008 and the club’s first European trophy since 1984.
Frank has limited experience of balancing the domestic league and Europe, the furthest he ever took Brøndby being the fourth qualifying round of the Europa League. His European record is notably poor: played 10, won three, and two of those were against Juvenes/Dogana of San Marino. His record in domestic cups, similarly, is dismal; his past history makes it unlikely a poor league season could be redeemed by other silverware – although the depth of the Spurs squad perhaps means the cups will not be such a low priority.
There is one further doubt, which is more to do with Spurs than with Frank. He is leaving an exceptionally well-run club, at which every component worked together to a coherent philosophy. There can be no certainty that any one cog from that system, however important, can achieve success in a different environment, something Chelsea have found as they accumulate more and more parts from Brighton without ever looking like replicating the efficiency of the Brighton model. It may be that such efficiency is not even possible at bigger clubs.
Read Jonathan Wilson’s full assessment below.
Tottenham confirmed the appointment of Thomas Frank last night after holding talks via intermediaries and plainly keen to avoid a protracted search for the person to lead them forward following a season in which they finished 17th with 38 points.
Spurs have been impressed by more than the headline items of Frank’s Brentford tenure – the promotion from the Championship via the playoffs in 2021, how he has established them in the Premier League, finishing 13th, ninth, 16th and 10th. Frank consistently over-achieved in relation to his financial means at Brentford; they have one of the smallest budgets in the division. An excellent communicator and noted developer of young talent, he has also shown himself to be tactically flexible.
Frank leaves 'big part of heart' at Brentford after leaving for Spurs
Thomas Frank has penned a letter to Brentford supporters after deciding to leave the west London club nine years on from when he came in.
To everyone associated with Brentford Football Club.
The time has come for me to move on. But, even as I leave, I know I have left a big piece of my heart at Brentford, not just at the football club but with the community and, of course, the incredible and loyal supporters.
I want to extend my profound gratitude to the club for giving me the chance to pursue my dreams and for everyone involved who made the journey such a memorable one.
For my family and I, it has been a privilege to be allowed to be part of such a special community - it’s an experience and adventure that we will cherish for life. So, thank you.
Whatever we have achieved, we have achieved together, and our success is built on unity, spirit, courage and ambition at every level of the club and amongst the fans.
Everybody has contributed, and every contribution has been invaluable. I am not just leaving a football club, I am saying goodbye to friends whose support through good and bad times I will carry with me always.
I would like to say a special word of thanks to Matthew Benham [Brentford owner]. His trust and friendship have meant so much and the fact he gave me a chance in English football means I will always owe him a debt of gratitude. Thank you, Matt.
So, while this is a goodbye, I hope the relationships I have built with everybody will be lasting ones and, of course, we will meet again in the wonderful world of football.
Thank you,
Thomas
Florian Wirtz has equally impressed for Germany. After missing the 2022 World Cup due to his ACL injury. He returned to the national side in 2024, scoring his first goal for Germany in seven seconds against France to become the second fastest goalscorer in international football history behind Austria’s Christoph Baumgartner.
Wirtz was named in Germany’s squad for the 2024 Euros 2024 where he scored the opener of the tournament in a 5–1 victory against Scotland, becoming the youngest German player to score in the European Championship. Against Spain in the quarter-final, Wirtz came off the bench to score an 89th-minute equalising goal but Spain went on to win in extra-time.
A possible British transfer record is nothing to scoff at but the fact Liverpool only spent around £10m on Federico Chiesa last summer combined with the finances that come with winning the Premier League, means the club seem to be happy to spend big to support Arne Slot.
With Trent Alexander-Arnold leaving the club, there are likely concerns about where Liverpool’s creative output comes from. While the two do not play the same position, Wirtz can fill help bridge that gap as a player who can progress the ball forward effectively.
Liverpool’s pursuit of Florian Wirtz has been no secret. The club fought off interest from Manchester City and Bayern Munich with the German only wanting to join Arne Slot’s side. Wirtz, who can play across the frontline, is one of the most coveted players in Europe and was understood to be impressed by Liverpool’s plans.
The 22-year-old has spent his entire senior career at Bayer Leverkusen. He was instrumental in breaking the chokehold Munich have on the Bundesliga by helping his side win their first ever league title and the DFB-Pokal in 2023-24 with 18 goals and 19 assists in 47 games, showing no signs of his ACL injury in 2022 being an issue.
Last season, Leverkusen finished runners-up to the German giants and Wirtz managed 16 goals and 14 assists in all competitions. According to Opta, only Mohamed Salah (18) and Lamine Yamal (13) recorded more than his 12 assists from open play among players from Europe’s top five leagues.
With the fee agreed between the two clubs Liverpool is now free to speak to Wirtz to agree on personal terms.
Liverpool agree potential British record fee with Bayer Leverkusen for Wirtz
Andy Hunter
Liverpool have agreed a fee with Bayer Leverkusen for Florian Wirtz. The German will join the Premier League champions in an £100m deal plus £16m in potential add-ons that would make Wirtz the most expensive British transfer of all time, eclipsing Chelsea’s £115m purchase of Moises Caicedo.
He will undergo a medical and finalise the transfer in the coming days. Personal terms have already been agreed.
The Club World Cup starts on Sunday and has already been controversial because of extra fixtures and Fifa involvement. Add on that temperatures in US are likely to be above 30C and whew.
Notable heat events are not guaranteed during the Club World Cup but they are more likely to happen than in the past because of climate breakdownand there is a question over whether enough is being done to adapt to a new reality. The sole reference to extreme weather in Fifa’s regulations for the Club World Cup relates to the use of cooling breaks, which allow players to take on extra fluids once in each half if the wet-bulb globe temperature (WBGT) (a measure of heat stress that includes humidity and air movement) exceeds 32C on the pitch. This is the protocol in place since 2014, and for the international players’ union, FifPro, it is insufficient. It argues that the threshold for cooling breaks should be between 28C and 32C under the WBGT, with options for a second drinks break per half. If the heat rises above 32C, FifPro argues, matches should be rescheduled.
Read more from Paul MacInnes below.
First is today’s Rumour Mill with Will Unwin detailing a possible move to Aston Villa for Alejandro Garnacho (à la Marcus Rashford) while Manchester United and Liverpool continue their search for a No 9.
Preamble
Hello and welcome to our weekend football countdown! The season may be over but the Big Wheel O’Football is still spinning as fast as ever.
We are a couple days away from the opening fixture of the Club World Cup, and a lot is riding on the tournament’s financial success for Fifa’s Gianni Infantino.
Plus transfer moves and managerial changes are in full swing. Last night Tottenham confirmed Ange Postecoglou’s successor: Thomas Frank. How will he fare for the north London side? Where does it leave Brentford, the club he was at for nine years?
Join me for all the build-up, latest news and analysis and, as always, feel free to send me an email with your thoughts, questions and grievances.