Liverpool are pushing hard to sign RB Leipzig winger Yan Diomande, with Andoni Iraola actively driving the pursuit and Leipzig holding firm on a €130m (£112m) minimum valuation – a figure that would make the 19-year-old one of the most expensive teenagers in football history.
According to TEAMtalk, Liverpool have been in near-daily contact with Diomande’s representatives since December and Iraola, who replaced Arne Slot in the Anfield dugout earlier this summer, has aligned himself firmly with sporting director Richard Hughes in pressing the club’s hierarchy to get the deal done. That is not vague transfer noise – it is a new manager using what leverage he has, early in his tenure, to shape the squad around a specific player.
What Leipzig Are Asking For
The financial gap is the story’s central obstacle. Leipzig paid €20m (£17.3m) to sign Diomande from Leganés roughly a year ago. They now want €130m back. That is a 550 per cent markup in twelve months, and Leipzig are not blinking – their contract with Diomande runs to 2030, and the club have been described in earlier reports as willing to extend it further, which removes any urgency on their side.
Earlier in the season, indicative valuations circulated around the £80m–£100m range. The World Cup exposure has done the rest. Leipzig know exactly what they have, and they are in no position where a sale is forced upon them.
Why Diomande Has Forced His Way Into This Conversation
The numbers behind his 2025-26 season are straightforward: 13 goals and 10 assists in 36 appearances for Leipzig. His World Cup showing against Ecuador – five chances created, four successful dribbles, 11 duels won in a 1-0 Ivory Coast victory – pushed the story into a different register entirely. This is no longer a promising Bundesliga winger; he is a player performing at the highest level under global scrutiny.
Liverpool’s internal framing, per TEAMtalk, positions him as the long-term successor to Mohamed Salah, with the versatility to operate across the forward line. That rationale is explored in more detail in Liverpool’s broader attacking recruitment plans this summer, where Diomande features alongside other targets as part of a deliberate post-Salah rebuild.
The Competition Liverpool Face
PSG are the most credible rival. According to TEAMtalk, the European champions have held their own conversations with Leipzig and are tracking Diomande closely. What complicates Liverpool’s position is that Diomande has spoken warmly about Ligue 1, and playing under Luis Enrique – whose player development record is well-documented – is reportedly attractive to him. PSG’s transfer ambitions this summer have been significant; their pursuit of established elite-level midfielders illustrates an organisation spending with intent rather than caution.
Real Madrid have also been flagged by TEAMtalk as showing interest in recent weeks, though the specificity of their pursuit is less detailed at this stage. In the Premier League, Manchester United, Tottenham, and Chelsea have all been linked in previous reporting, though none appear as advanced as Liverpool.
The Player’s Own Position
Ivory Coast head coach Emerse Faé told ESPN that Diomande will make no decision on his future until the World Cup concludes and is entirely focused on the tournament. That is the standard line, but it also reflects reality – no club is getting this resolved before Ivory Coast’s campaign ends.
There is also a reported complication around his representation, with a BBC transfer gossip update referencing an ongoing disagreement about which agents formally control his next move. That kind of issue can slow or derail negotiations regardless of how keen the buying club is.
The Verdict
Liverpool’s interest is genuine and sustained – daily contact since December is not a club dipping its toe in. But £112m for a player who has had one Bundesliga season is a significant institutional commitment, Leipzig have no contractual or financial pressure to concede, and PSG are a credible alternative who may suit Diomande’s stated preferences as much as Liverpool do. Iraola clearly wants this done. Whether he gets it depends on whether Liverpool are willing to meet a valuation that Leipzig have shown no sign of moving on.