
EPL Index
·21 June 2025
Bournemouth Reject PSG’s £55m Bid for Defender

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Yahoo sportsEPL Index
·21 June 2025
Paris Saint-Germain’s £55 million approach for Illia Zabarnyi has been turned away by Bournemouth, as revealed by Sky Sports. It is not just a show of transfer window intent but a statement of rising ambition on the south coast. Bournemouth’s decision to reject the second bid, following PSG’s initial £40 million plus £5 million in add-ons, signals how highly they rate the 21-year-old Ukrainian.
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Zabarnyi cost Bournemouth £24 million plus add-ons when he arrived from Dynamo Kyiv in 2023. His composure on the ball and defensive assurance have quickly made him a centrepiece of the club’s rebuild. Now, valued at over £70 million, he is attracting the kind of offers once reserved for more established Premier League defenders.
Bournemouth’s valuation is not simply stubbornness. As a club once regarded as a stepping stone, they are growing bolder. In Zabarnyi, they see a long-term project worth protecting. The Cherries “do not want to sell but the ongoing advances may be difficult to reject,” says Sky Sports, and rightly so. Financial prudence always dances with ambition in the modern game.
PSG’s willingness to return with another offer shows how seriously they rate Zabarnyi. They are expected to submit a third offer in the coming days. Their gaze stretches across Europe’s elite, but targeting a Bournemouth centre-back speaks volumes about the player’s progress.
Bournemouth’s stance is part of a wider trend. Clubs outside the traditional top six are showing teeth. Whether it is Brighton, Brentford or now Bournemouth, the model has shifted. Talented players come in, are developed smartly, and sold only on terms that make sporting and financial sense.
As a concerned Premier League supporter, especially one who has seen talents like Nathan Aké and Tyrone Mings leave Bournemouth for bigger stages, this report prompts worry and admiration in equal measure.
On one hand, Bournemouth’s hardline stance deserves respect. Turning down £55 million for a defender bought at £24 million less than two years ago suggests ambition, belief and a refusal to be bullied by football’s financial giants. They clearly value what Zabarnyi brings not just in defence but as a symbol of their evolution.
Yet, PSG’s ongoing pressure is relentless. You fear that, much like many before him, Zabarnyi could be tempted by Parisian lights and Champions League football. Bournemouth might hold out for £70 million or more, but if the player pushes for a move, that balance becomes fragile.
“PSG are expected to submit a third offer in the coming days” sounds like inevitability, not just interest. As fans, we hope the club is prepared for every scenario. Whether that means keeping Zabarnyi or replacing him smartly, the message must remain clear: Bournemouth are not here to make up numbers anymore.