World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
The night Argentina beat Austria, Álvarez muttered a few ambiguous words to the camera. He didn't name Barcelona or announce his departure, but Atlético Madrid's top brass caught the subtext.
The night Argentina beat Austria, Álvarez muttered a few ambiguous words to the cameras. He didn't name Barcelona, didn't announce his departure, but Atlético Madrid's top brass caught the subtext.
A few days later, someone set his jersey on fire on a Madrid street. The flames illuminated the rawest anger in the stands and turned the tug-of-war between the two clubs, previously kept under wraps, into open confrontation.
Atlético then showed their hand. Álvarez joined from Manchester City in the summer of 2024 for a total of €95 million—€75 million fixed. His contract runs until 2030, with a €500 million release clause.
€500 million is no random figure. Atlético added a lock: the full amount must be paid in cash, no down payments, no long-term installments, no add-on bonuses. In other words, anyone who wants to take him must slap €500 million in cash on the table.
Barcelona doesn't have €500 million in cash.
Their first offer, submitted at the end of May, was €100 million in pure cash, which Atlético immediately rejected. After Álvarez publicly pressured the club on June 23, Barcelona upped the ante. Journalist José Álvarez from SIX reported that the new offer, including floating clauses, could reach €150 million. Santi Ovalle from SER gave a slightly lower range of €120 million to €130 million.
The numbers are buzzing. But between €150 million and €500 million lies a cash gap of €350 million. Atlético hasn't budged.
Atlético CEO Gil Marín didn't mince words. "Deception and disrespect"—that's how he described Barcelona's tactics. In his view, Barcelona is replaying the same old playbook from 2019 when they poached Griezmann: privately contacting a player under contract to undermine the other side from within.
Atlético's counterattack isn't just talk. According to AS and SER, Atlético is preparing to file a formal complaint with FIFA's sports judicial body over Barcelona's illegal contact, accusing them of using "harassment" tactics.
Barcelona clearly isn't bothered.
SER released Barcelona's camp response in just one line: "Go ahead, it won't lead anywhere."
Barcelona can say that because they remember how the Griezmann case ended. In 2019, Atlético also complained to the Spanish Football Federation about Barcelona's illegal contact with their forward. The Federation ruled that Barcelona had indeed violated the rules—and slapped them with a €300 fine.
€300. That might buy a few bottles in a VIP box at Camp Nou.
Atlético has now switched their complaint target from the Spanish Federation to FIFA, but the precedent is there. Multiple journalists say the complaint "has no basis and is purely a distraction." Atlético's calculation is likely not that FIFA will actually ban Barcelona's transfer operations, but to create noise: to make other potential buyers think twice about wading into murky waters, and to make Álvarez himself realize the cost of forcing a move.
The problem is, Barcelona has already seen that the gun is empty.
Álvarez's agent, Fernando Hidalgo, has been shuttling back and forth in this tug-of-war. Atlético denied the claim that they were "willing to sell for £130 million"—they don't want anyone to think the price is negotiable. Journalist Álvaro Benito then cut through the fog: "Álvarez isn't worth €150 million."
Worth it or not, Barcelona has to do the math. Paying €150 million in cash for a player whose value is questioned, while navigating financial fair play constraints, is no small risk.
At the heart of it all is one question: Can Atlético, with a €500 million release clause and a FIFA complaint, keep a player whose heart is no longer in Madrid stuck at the Wanda Metropolitano?
The rules are on Atlético's side. The contract is on Atlético's side. But the €300 precedent tells everyone that the cost of breaking the rules is essentially zero. Barcelona isn't afraid of being sued. Álvarez has already said he wants to leave. The three sides are locked in a deadlock that no one can break alone.