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Arsenal Director Berta ‘In Constant Contact’ Over Barcola Transfer

Arsenal’s Berta in Talks Over Barcola as Player Given Ultimatum

Bradley Barcola sprinting with football in PSG kit with Arsenal's Emirates Stadium visible in background

Arsenal sporting director Andrea Berta has been in constant contact with Bradley Barcola’s agent Moussa Sissoko since last summer, with PSG now issuing the 23-year-old an ultimatum – sign a new contract or leave. The detail comes from Hand of Arsenal, a well-sourced Arsenal transfer account, and it places Berta’s involvement at a far more active level than background monitoring.

The ultimatum is the new and significant element here. Contract talks between Sissoko and PSG have been grinding along for nine to twelve months without resolution, and the impasse has now forced Paris into a binary position. That either accelerates a sale – or collapses one entirely, depending on which way Barcola moves.

What Hand of Arsenal Is Actually Reporting – And What It Means

Hand of Arsenal report that Berta has maintained ongoing dialogue with Sissoko throughout the process – not a recent flurry of calls, but sustained contact spanning almost a year. That distinction matters. Directors of football at Berta’s level do not spend twelve months nurturing an agent relationship for background intelligence; they do it because they expect a deal to eventually be possible.

The account stops short of claiming any formal bid has been made or that personal terms have been discussed. This is ‘contact’ and ‘interest’ – not an offer, not an agreement. Read the sourcing for what it is: evidence of serious intent, not confirmation of a done deal. Arsenal’s broader attacking recruitment this summer – which, as their pursuit of Julian Alvarez with named director involvement illustrates, involves Berta operating at the very top end of the market – adds weight to the idea that Barcola is a genuine priority rather than opportunistic posturing.

Why Arsenal Want Barcola – The Sporting Logic

Arsenal’s need on the left is not a secret. Gabriel Martinelli has delivered in patches but has never sustained the consistency Arteta requires across a full Premier League and European campaign. Leandro Trossard is a useful squad player, not a starting winger at a club targeting the title. Barcola represents a different level of profile for that position.

Across 2025/26, he registered 13 goals and 7 assists in 49 appearances for PSG – productive numbers, particularly given he was not an undisputed starter after Khvicha Kvaratskhelia arrived in January 2025 and effectively reshuffled PSG’s attacking hierarchy. His involvement in roughly 50 goals across the last two seasons combined underlines that his output is not a one-season spike. He operates primarily off the left but can function across the front line, which gives Arteta flexibility in how he deploys him.

The Kvaratskhelia factor is also central to why Barcola is available at all. His reduced role since January 2025 has clearly unsettled him, and Arsenal’s interest in elite wide forwards this summer reflects a club that has identified the position as the single clearest area for upgrade. Barcola fits the profile: young, proven at the highest level, and – crucially – motivated to leave.

The Ultimatum – What It Signals About the Power Dynamic

PSG issuing an ultimatum after nine to twelve months of stalled talks is not a neutral act. It tells you that Paris have run out of patience with the negotiation and are no longer willing to let the situation drift into the final year of his contract – which runs to June 2028.

Here is where the story has genuine teeth. An ultimatum at this stage signals that PSG would rather crystallise a fee now than allow Barcola to accumulate leverage as his contract shortens. That is a position that strengthens Arsenal’s hand – if Barcola declines to sign, PSG need a buyer, and they need one before the window closes.

It also tells you something about Barcola’s own position. The fact that talks have been difficult for the best part of a year, and that both parties at one point agreed to pause negotiations entirely, suggests the gap is not just about money. His diminished status after Kvaratskhelia’s arrival is the underlying issue – and no contract offer resolves that if he does not believe in his role at the club.

The Obstacles – PSG’s Valuation and the Competition for His Signature

This is where Arsenal cannot afford complacency. PSG signed Barcola from Lyon in summer 2023 for around €45m and, whatever their current openness to selling, they will not move him cheaply. Analytics-based estimates place his value at approximately €70m, and most UK and French outlets are working with a figure in the £60m–£70m range as a realistic market price.

According to L’Équipe, Liverpool are also tracking Barcola seriously – their need is acute given Mohamed Salah’s departure and questions over Cody Gakpo as a long-term answer on the left. Bayern Munich and Barcelona have also been mentioned in the broader European conversation. Arsenal are not the only club that has done the work on him, and Liverpool in particular represent a credible rival with the financial firepower to match any bid the Gunners make. Meanwhile, PSG’s own active summer recruitment means they are not operating from a position of desperation – if they sell Barcola, they will expect top-of-market terms.

The Verdict – Arsenal Lead on Contact, But Nothing Is Close to Done

The current picture: Berta’s sustained contact with Sissoko is the clearest signal of genuine Arsenal intent, and the PSG ultimatum has compressed the timeline in a way that could force the situation to a conclusion faster than anticipated. But ‘constant contact’ with an agent is not a bid, and a bid is not a signing.

What to watch: whether PSG move from ultimatum to formal asking price, and which club puts the first concrete offer on the table. If Barcola declines to extend and PSG activate the sell clause in their position, that moment will define the race. Arsenal have done the groundwork – Berta’s year-long dialogue with Sissoko is meaningful preparation. Whether they move first and with enough conviction to beat Liverpool to the punch is the question this window still needs to answer.

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