Barcelona, Liverpool, Manchester United and Paris Saint-Germain are reportedly interested in Napoli star Khvicha Kvaratskhelia. Contract extension talks between the Georgian winger and Napoli seem to have stalled, which could work in the favor of these clubs.
According to La Gazzetta dello Sport, PSG and Barcelona are intensifying their efforts to sign Kvaratskhelia, putting pressure on Napoli to reach an agreement before next summer.
Journalist Graeme Bailey recently told Rousing the Kop that Liverpool is also monitoring Kvaratskhelia as part of its preparations for Mohamed Salah’s potential departure.
“When you’ve got the likes of possibly Kvaratskhelia on the market, let’s not forget that Liverpool have just brought in the second best Georgian player,” Bailey said. “Liverpool are all over Kvaratskhelia, they know about the situation, there might be a chance of getting him next summer.”
Khvicha Kvaratskhelia’s agent makes contact with PSG
Khvicha Kvaratskhelia
Marco Luzzani/Getty Images
Rai Sport reports that Kvaratskhelia’s agent hascontacted PSG again, as the player remains disappointed by Napoli’s refusal to allow a transfer to the Parisian club last summer.
Tensions are rising between Kvaratskhelia’s camp and Napoli, with club president Aurelio De Laurentiis expressing his disappointment. Despite the ongoing friction, there has been no progress in the negotiations.
🚨 L’AGENT DE KVARATSHELIA A RECONTACTÉ LE PSG !
😬 Le joueur est triste du non de Naples pour un transfert au PSG l’été dernier !
🥶 Guerre froide entre l'entourage de Kvara et Naples. De Laurentiis est déçu, pas de relance dans les négociations
🗞 RaiSport 🇮🇹 pic.twitter.com/VbA8qWy9EP
— ParisSG INFOS (@Paris_sginfos) November 27, 2024
Sportmediaset reported that Manchester Unitedare ready to outbid Napoli andmake a bold move to bring the Georgian winger to Old Trafford. According to the report, sporting director Dan Ashworthis set to offer Kvaratskhelia a five-year contract worth €8 million net per season,which equates to £128,500 a week after tax, or £33.4 million over thelife of the deal.