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Palace firm on £40m January price for Marc Guéhi as Manchester City weigh immediate move

Palace want about £40m for Marc Guéhi in January; Man City lead clubs weighing an immediate approach

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Crystal Palace are prepared to demand as much as £40 million to sell Marc Guéhi in the January transfer window, with interest coming from several major clubs. Liverpool remain interested, while Barcelona and Real Madrid are listed among admirers. Arsenal have recently joined the queue. Manchester City have reactivated interest and are willing to try to sign Guéhi immediately after a defensive injury crisis that has left Rúben Dias and Joško Gvardiol sidelined.

The Guardian report that a fee of around £40 million would be required for a January exit. Palace face a particular complication in the midseason market: with Guéhi’s contract running closer to expiry and overseas clubs able to speak to him about a free transfer, the Eagles appear prepared to raise their asking price because replacing a central defender in January can be harder and more expensive.

Palace boss Oliver Glasner, who insisted Guéhi would not be sold during the summer, softened his stance earlier this week by admitting that the England international could leave for the right price in January. It will now be up to City to decide whether to meet that asking price or risk missing out on Guéhi.

City have already taken short-term action by recalling 20-year-old Max Alleyne from his loan spell at Watford in direct response to the absences of Dias and Gvardiol. Alleyne joined a defensive group that currently includes Abdukodir Khusanov and the injury prone Nathan Aké. The trio all started Saturday’s FA Cup third-round match with League One side Exeter City, with 17-year-old Stephen Mfuni named among the substitutes alongside makeshift fullbacks Nico O’Reilly and Matheus Nunes.

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Working in Manchester City’s favour is the belief that none of Guéhi’s other suitors are expected to pursue an immediate January bid, although offers for a free transfer to mainland Europe can be arranged ahead of the summer window. Palace’s position is clear: around £40 million is the price to consider if a January sale is to be agreed.

Crystal Palace

Glasner admits Palace may be forced to sell Marc Guéhi amid City interest

Glasner says Palace face a financial choice over Marc Guéhi as City prepare possible bid in January.

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Crystal Palace manager Oliver Glasner suggested on the record that the club may have to consider selling Marc Guéhi in the January window if circumstances demand it. The prospect of an exit has grown since the summer, when a potential move to Liverpool collapsed after Igor Julio opted to join West Ham on loan rather than heading to Selhurst Park, leaving Guéhi to remain and refocus on Palace duties.

It is now public that Guéhi will not sign a new contract at Palace. That fact leaves last season’s FA Cup winners with two clear options: attempt to sell in January and secure funds now, or retain him through the 2025/26 campaign to help produce the best possible finish and seek a replacement in the summer transfer market.

Palace initially appeared to have taken a firm stance that Guéhi was not for sale, accepting the risk of losing the England centre back on a free at the end of his deal. That position shifted after Manchester City, the eight-time Premier League champions, began searching for reinforcements following injuries to Josko Gvardiol and Rúben Dias. With many expecting City to bid, Glasner was asked whether such a move would represent a match for the player and the club.

“If a player feels too good for a club, it is better to sell him, and if a player is not good enough for a club, you also have to sell him,” Glasner said. When prompted about City specifically he added: “It could be. I’m not so naïve as not to know that if a massive offer comes from City and Marc wants to do it, it will happen.”

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Glasner expanded on the club’s dilemma with a financial analogy: “Nothing in life is one-dimensional,” Glasner added. “Let’s say you have a nice car but you need money because it’s cold and a window [at home] is broken, and somebody offers you crazy money for your car. You say, ‘No, I don’t want to sell my car. I love my car. But I don’t want to freeze.’ Then you say, ‘If I can get the window and even a new roof, you can have the car. But I would like to keep it.’

“It’s the same with Marc. Everybody wants him to play for Crystal Palace, sign a new contract and stay here for ever. On the other side, the contract ends this summer and if somebody is coming and you are freezing, there will be a moment when the club says, ‘Now the financial issue is more important than the sporting issue and we have to do it.’

“There will be a threshold where if Marc says he wants to leave and the money is above the threshold, it will happen.”

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Glasner downplays Manchester United links as Palace contract talks await quieter spell

Glasner dismisses United links and says contract talks will intensify during a quieter fixture spell

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Crystal Palace manager Oliver Glasner took a clear, dismissive stance on speculation linking him with the vacant Manchester United job, while stopping short of a full denial. Palace secured the first two trophies in the club’s history last year under Glasner while deploying a 3-4-2-1 system, a shape the club report says Amorim never fully implemented at Manchester United.

United’s choice to install an interim boss for the remainder of the season before appointing a permanent manager in the summer strengthens the case that Glasner could be available, because his Palace contract runs out by then. Asked about the mounting conjecture at his first press conference since Amorim’s sacking, Glasner was concise. “I’m not allowed to bet, I don’t look at it. I also can’t give insider information,” he told assembled media before Palace’s clash with Aston Villa. “I’m Crystal Palace manager. It makes no sense and it’s a waste of time for you to ask me any more questions on it.”

Palace have not agreed new terms with Glasner, but the delay is not attributed to a lack of support from the club’s hierarchy. Chairman Steve Parish recently declared: “I know people want him to stay desperately and I want him to stay desperately.” Glasner took a philosophical view on contracts: “You can sign a new contract,” he shrugged. “Managers in the Premier League did this last year, they aren’t the manager anymore. We can win trophies, you aren’t the manager there anymore. The length of a contract doesn’t mean anything.”

A hectic schedule has been cited as the practical reason talks have not progressed. The 51-year-old’s future is likely to become clearer as fixtures ease. “Everyone gets three days off after Macclesfield and then we have four regular weeks [without a midweek game],” Glasner revealed. “In these weeks we will intensify the talks and I expect then to find the final decision.”

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Before any long-term appointment, United must appoint stable interim leadership until May. At the time of Amorim’s dismissal, United sat sixth in the Premier League table, outside the top five on goal difference alone. Ole Gunnar Solskjær has been widely billed as a leading contender. Michael Carrick is another name linked, while Ruud van Nistelrooy has also been floated by BBC Sport and The Telegraph.

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City weigh January move for Marc Guéhi after centre-back injury blow

City consider a January bid for Marc Guéhi after injuries to Rúben Dias and Josko Gvardiol in doubt

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Manchester City have emerged as a likely active suitor for Crystal Palace captain Marc Guéhi should their recent injury problems become long term. Guéhi has six months left on his contract and will not extend it; he had been expected to remain at Palace for the rest of the season, a position confirmed by Oliver Glasner in mid-December.

The urgency at City comes after both of Pep Guardiola’s starting centre backs were forced off in the second half of a 1–1 draw with a manager-less Chelsea side on Sunday. Josko Gvardiol pulled up in the 51st minute and had to be helped from the pitch by a physio and Chelsea captain Reece James. Rúben Dias departed around half an hour later. Guardiola warned that “it doesn’t look good” and predicted the pair would be out “for a few weeks.”

He added: “We have a lot [of injuries],” he fretted. “John Stones is missing for I don’t know how many months. Rúben now will be out, Josko will be out. Nathan [Aké], always we know with Nathan he cannot play regularly. It’s the situation.

“Stay strong and we will find a solution. The spirit is there and will be there. Of course I have concerns. Have you seen the bench today? Four players from the academy and now we will have more. We don’t have players.”

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That solution could involve January investment. City were linked with Guéhi last month; Liverpool were thought to retain a strong interest and appeared to be the only party prepared to bid in January. Bayern Munich, Real Madrid and Barcelona were understood to be interested only in a free transfer in the summer. According to BBC Sport, should Dias and/or Gvardiol face long-term absences, City would be prepared to accelerate their pursuit of Guéhi.

Concern about defensive depth was already evident when City recalled academy defender Max Alleyne from his loan at Watford. The 20-year-old had made six consecutive league starts for the Hornets over the festive period, producing a trio of clean sheets.

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