Stay up to date with notifications from The Independent

Notifications can be managed in browser preferences.

Jadon Sancho may have to force Manchester United transfer as stalemate with Borussia Dortmund continues

With Dortmund resolute, sources close to both the player’s camp and United believe Sancho may have to take matters into his own hands to get the transfer completed, and possibly even put in a transfer request

Miguel Delaney
Chief Football Writer
Monday 10 August 2020 11:08 BST
Comments
Manchester United vs FC Copenhagen Europa League preview

Jadon Sancho may have to personally push for a transfer to move to Manchester United, according to sources close to negotiations, as the stalemate with Borussia Dortmund continues.

The Bundesliga club had set a deadline of Monday 10 August and the beginning of their pre-season camp, which Sancho has now joined, but the deal remains deadlocked with talks ongoing.

United and Dortmund are still struggling to agree a figure on the up-front fee, although The Independent has been told there is as little as £10m in the difference.

The German club want a deal that amounts to €120m overall in Euro with all deferred payments taken in, but United feel that is unrealistic in the current Covid-conditioned market.

With Dortmund resolute, sources close to both the player’s camp and United believe Sancho may have to take matters into his own hands to get the transfer completed, and possibly even put in a transfer request.

The 20-year-old and his representatives have been reluctant to do that due to a good relationship with Dortmund, but there is a growing feeling they may have to talk to the club about the situation if they believe they are being unrealistically priced out of a deal.

That could reasonably be argued given that this is set to be a greatly suppressed transfer market due to Covid-19, and that it is set to remain the case indefinitely.

Sancho had previously been so sure he was due to leave during the close-season break that he had said his goodbyes to Dortmund staff, only to greet them again on Monday.

The feeling among all parties is now that “someone has to act” to break the stalemate.

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in