World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
150 million euros. On June 9 this year, Real Madrid slapped this check on Atlético Madrid's table, but Atlético didn't even open the door to the negotiation room.
€150 million. On June 9th of this year, Real Madrid slapped that check on Atletico Madrid's table, but Atletico didn't even open the door to the negotiation room.
President Cerezo was cornered by reporters in the hallway and dropped just two words: "Not for sale." In his pocket, he held a long-term contract set to expire in 2030, along with a €500 million release clause. Real Madrid brought a historic offer, but couldn't even get Atletico to answer the phone.
Thirteen days later, Alvarez flipped the table himself in the World Cup mixed zone.
On June 22nd, Argentina beat Austria 2-0. Cameras were fixed on the goal-scoring heroes, but Alvarez forcefully stole the spotlight. "The best choice for everyone is to transfer," he told ESPN. He paused, then added, "I want to fulfill my dream."
He knew it wasn't the time to talk about this, "but I couldn't hide it anymore." Two months of private tug-of-war was laid out on a global broadcast stage. Two months of posturing by Atletico was shattered by their own striker's single sentence.
Atletico, of course, had the confidence to run the numbers. In the summer of 2024, they shelled out an initial €75 million transfer fee plus €20 million in add-ons to snatch him from Manchester City. The total €95 million package set a record for City's highest sale.
The money was well spent. In his debut season, 54 games, 29 goals, 7 assists; 37 La Liga games, 17 goals, 55.4% shot accuracy, earning him Atletico's Player of the Season. His second season: 48 games, 26 goals; 10 goals in 15 Champions League matches. Bought for €95 million, sold for €150 million, a net profit of €55 million. On paper, Atletico won big.
But Cerezo didn't want to sell. He set the tone in April: "Julian has a contract. I decide when he leaves." In the chairman's eyes, the stake was never the profit margin, but the power of life and death.
Alvarez's camp told a completely different story. Atletico CEO Gil Marin met with the player's side at the end of the season and verbally promised, "Let him go if a suitable offer comes in." When Real Madrid's €150 million really came crashing down, Atletico backpedaled, using the €500 million release clause as a bulletproof vest. A meeting was held three days prior; Spanish outlet Sexta revealed the direct quote: "The player's current situation is very bad."
His determination to leave was evident in his actions. He bought a house in Barcelona. No agent leaks, no "sources close to the player," AS got first-hand info from the Argentina dressing room and Atletico's top brass, and spilled it directly in a podcast on June 24th.
Atletico's reaction was just as direct: their new season kit promotional photos didn't show a trace of Alvarez, who was deeply embroiled in the transfer saga.
Barcelona has already entered the fray. Their psychological price is €135 million. They calculated that if the player is determined to make a fuss, this amount is enough to pry open Atletico's mouth. Atletico CEO Gil Marin threatened to report Barcelona to FIFA for illegal contact. But those in the know understand that jurisdiction for such disputes likely lies with the Spanish Football Federation; reporting to FIFA is just making noise.
The dressing room and the circle of legends have already split into two camps.
Teammate and Spanish international Baena told Sexta: "If Julian has a dream, I would tell him to chase it."
Argentine legend Rubén Cano, who played six years for Atletico in the late 1970s, didn't hold back in Mundo Deportivo: "I think he is ungrateful." He called Alvarez "untimely, inappropriate, disloyal," but added that if he is determined to leave, he should "leave through the front door."
On one side, current teammates support his dream; on the other, legends call him an ingrate. In Atletico's dressing room, even the air feels fractured.
Don't forget his current situation. He sprained his left ankle before the World Cup, underwent special regenerative treatment in Argentina in early June, and could only come off the bench in two group stage matches. Scaloni was still reassuring before the game: "His recovery is going well, he can play tomorrow."
A forward, just recovered, only a substitute for the national team, said the words in the mixed zone that could sever ties with his own club. He bet everything on the table: the mood in Atletico's dressing room, the criticism from Spanish media. If Barcelona doesn't finally cough up that €135 million, he'll have to tough it out at Atletico until 2030.
In April, Cerezo confidently declared: "Julian wants to stay at Atletico. He has a contract. He must respect it."
Two months later, this player who "wants to stay at Atletico" flipped his cards in front of the whole world.
Atletico holds the €500 million release clause waiting for Real Madrid to raise the bid. Barcelona holds onto its €135 million waiting for Atletico to soften. Alvarez isn't waiting for anyone; he has already bought a house in Barcelona.
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