
Anfield Index
·13 de junho de 2025
David Ornstein Confirms Florian Wirtz ‘to Complete Medical’ Ahead of £116m Liverpool Move

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Yahoo sportsAnfield Index
·13 de junho de 2025
Liverpool’s decision to shell out a staggering €136.3million (£116m) for Florian Wirtz has made waves across Europe, both in terms of the fee and the statement of intent. As reported by David Ornstein in The Athletic, this represents a club-record transfer and could set a new British transfer benchmark if all add-ons are triggered.
The fee structure – €117.5m upfront and €18.8m in performance-based add-ons – showcases Liverpool’s confidence in Wirtz’s long-term value. He is expected to sign a five-year deal at Anfield, capping off negotiations led by Richard Hughes and Leverkusen’s Simon Rolfes.
That Liverpool were able to fend off interest from Bayern Munich says much about Arne Slot’s growing pull, as well as the appeal of Liverpool’s project. “The playmaker favoured a move to Liverpool,” Ornstein revealed, with Wirtz already scouting properties in the North West in May.
In terms of tactical fit, Wirtz arrives to challenge and potentially supersede Dominik Szoboszlai as the central attacking fulcrum. While Szoboszlai has excelled off the ball – his underlapping runs and pressing forming the bedrock of Slot’s high-energy style – his attacking output hasn’t always convinced. Six Premier League goals and seven assists in 36 appearances fell short of expectations.
Wirtz, by contrast, brings sharper numbers and a more incisive final-third skillset. With 21 goals and 25 assists in Bundesliga competition since the start of last season, he has shown he can unlock defences with vision and composure. “Wirtz is focused more on the micro, with delicate touches and deft flicks,” The Athletic noted, a contrast to Szoboszlai’s more robust style.
It’s not a matter of replacing like-for-like, but of layering qualities. Wirtz’s dribbling, ball-carrying and spatial awareness offer an extra layer of creativity. His versatility — able to operate across the front line or in deeper roles — gives Slot fresh tactical options. Whether breaking down low blocks or injecting pace against pressing sides, Wirtz offers nuance where raw energy may not suffice.
Photo: IMAGO
One key subplot here is Liverpool’s planning for the future. Mohamed Salah turns 33 this month and although still productive, long-term succession planning is essential. Wirtz, who can drift wide or slot in behind the striker, fits into a modern attacking model not reliant on a traditional number nine.
This transfer window has already seen Liverpool move assertively, having snapped up Jeremie Frimpong for €35m following Trent Alexander-Arnold’s Real Madrid switch. That deal laid the groundwork for further talks with Leverkusen and highlights a strategy of targeted, ambitious investment rather than scattergun recruitment.
Slot’s first season ended in a Premier League title. Now, the task is to sustain success while refreshing a squad that has reached its physical and tactical limits under Jürgen Klopp. Wirtz could be the first true ‘Slot signing’ in every sense: young, intelligent, versatile and elite-level.
As Philipp Lahm described, “Wirtz and Musiala are artists,” capable of reaching completeness within well-structured systems. Under Slot, who has quickly built a side that balances structure with creative freedom, Wirtz could flourish into one of Europe’s best attacking midfielders.
Photo: IMAGO
This isn’t just a record signing. It’s a bold recalibration of what Liverpool’s attacking identity could look like for the next five years.
This is electric. Genuinely one of the most exciting pieces of transfer news Liverpool fans have seen in a decade. Forget the price – this is Florian Wirtz. A generational talent. He isn’t just good, he’s different. He glides through defences like a jazz musician plays scales. It’s not just about goals or assists, it’s how he controls tempo, beats a man with a drop of the shoulder, or fizzes a pass into space no one else even sees.
Most of us thought this summer would be about tweaking the squad. Slot’s title win was sensational, but this feels like a statement. Not a patch-up, not a reaction to losing Salah soon, but a forward-looking move that says Liverpool aren’t just here to defend their crown – they want to dominate for years.
You only have to look at what he did for Leverkusen: an unbeaten title season, Player of the Year, and numbers that rival the best in Europe. It’s frightening to think what he could do at Anfield with Luis Díaz and Mohamed Salah pulling defenders apart. And imagine him linking with Frimpong down the right. The rebuild is real, and the ceiling just got higher.