FC Barcelona and Newcastle United have reached an agreement in principle for the transfer of Anthony Gordon, with journalist Ben Jacobs reporting that the deal is set to be completed for a fee of around £70 million plus bonuses, and the England winger already pencilled in for medicals in Barcelona this week.
The speed at which this deal has moved is striking. Bayern Munich had been in the picture and had even agreed personal terms with Gordon, while Liverpool had also registered their interest without ever making a formal move. Barcelona acted swiftly enough to beat both clubs to the agreement, with the aim of finalising the transfer before the FIFA World Cup kicks off in a couple of weeks.
Newcastle now face the reality of losing the player who has been central to everything they have built in their rise as a Champions League club. Gordon scored 17 goals across all competitions this season, ten of which came in the Champions League, a return that has inevitably attracted the attention of Europe’s biggest clubs.
Anthony Gordon personal terms and the Barcelona hierarchy’s approval
Flick is understood to have given his personal approval for the deal a few days ago, having identified Gordon as a good stylistic fit for the system he has been building at the Camp Nou. That approval from the manager was the key final piece that accelerated Barcelona’s pursuit ahead of Bayern Munich.
What Anthony Gordon’s departure means for Newcastle’s summer
Bayern Munich’s willingness to agree personal terms with Gordon underlines the level of competition Barcelona navigated to land the deal first. Liverpool’s failure to make a move despite their interest adds another layer to a transfer that has been one of the more significant of the early summer window. Gordon to Barcelona looks done. Newcastle’s rebuild begins immediately.


