Door open for Real Madrid to try signing Mbappe after he decides not to extend PSG contract

France's forward Kylian Mbappe shoots the ball during a training session in Clairefontaine-en-Yvelines on Tuesday, as part of the team's preparations for the upcoming UEFA Euro 2024 football tournament qualifying matches. (AFP)
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Updated 14 June 2023
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Door open for Real Madrid to try signing Mbappe after he decides not to extend PSG contract

  • It could be third time lucky for Madrid, after Paris Saint-Germain rejected an offer of €180 million ($190 million) for Mbappe in 2021
  • The 24-year-old Mbappe has a long connection with Madrid

PARIS: The door is open for Real Madrid to try signing Kylian Mbappe because the France superstar decided not to extend his Paris Saint-Germain contract into 2025.

Karim Benzema’s sudden departure from Madrid leaves the Spanish giant short of a star striker, and Mbappe perfectly fits the bill.

It could be third time lucky for Madrid, after Paris Saint-Germain rejected an offer of €180 million ($190 million) for Mbappe in 2021. Madrid missed out again last year when Mbappe — amid frenzied speculation that Madrid would get him to join — signed a new deal with PSG.

It included an option for an extra year. Now he’s told the club he will not trigger the 12-month extension on his contract, which expires at the end of next season.

The France superstar confirmed his decision in a letter to PSG, a person with knowledge of the correspondence told The Associated Press on Monday. The person, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, also said PSG would not allow Mbappe to leave as a free agent.

This raised the possibility of an immediate transfer bidding war by Madrid and other clubs this summer.

Mbappe posted on Twitter on Tuesday to dismiss a newspaper report saying he wants to join Madrid this summer.

“LIES,” he wrote, adding: “I’ve already said I’ll continue with PSG next season.”

He said at the French league’s end-of-season awards two weeks ago that he will be a PSG player next season, while not saying if he would stay longer.

It means PSG face the prospect of him running down his contract and leaving for nothing to Madrid, or elsewhere.

The 24-year-old Mbappe has a long connection with Madrid.

He visited the club when he was a youth before deciding instead to join Monaco, which then sold him to PSG in 2017.

He might be on another flight to Madrid before long.

The Ballon d’Or winner Benzema bid his farewell to Madrid last week after 648 games, 25 trophies and 354 goals for the club. He joined Al-Ittihad to become the the Saudi league’s latest star after Cristiano Ronaldo, who plays for Al-Nassr.

Given his stated ambition to win the Champions League and the Ballon d’Or, Mbappe seems unlikely to join them for a while yet.

With Madrid president Florentino Perez needing to rebuild, this gives him another shot at Mbappe, especially since PSG won’t let him leave for free at the end of next season.

Although Madrid would have to pay huge wages, the fact PSG doesn’t want to lose him for nothing may lower the transfer fee.

Madrid have also freed up cash with Benzema off the wage bill along with fellow high earners Eden Hazard and Marco Asensio, who are also leaving. Asensio has also been linked with a move to PSG, which could factor into the bargaining.

An issue that could potentially hinder a bid might be the fact Madrid are already preparing to spend €130 million ($139 million) to sign 19-year-old England midfielder Jude Bellingham from German club Borussia Dortmund.

The clubs have reached an agreement on the transfer, though contract details still have to be “coordinated and completed,” Dortmund said last week.

It seems unlikely that transfer won’t go through, so can Madrid afford to also buy Mbappe?

Here’s a look at where else Mbappe could go.

NEWCASTLE

If anyone can easily afford Mbappe, it’s the club with the richest owners in soccer.

Newcastle have yet to really make a signature transfer to headline their new era under Saudi ownership — so how about signing the the 2022 World Cup’s top scorer?

Whether Mbappe would want to join Newcastle is another thing entirely.

Newcastle will play in the Champions League after a fourth-place finish but may not have enough top-quality players to tempt Mbappe.

MANCHESTER UNITED

United are the other team who probably have the wealth to afford Mbappe, and the status.

It is historically considered the biggest club in England along with Liverpool.

However, it’s an awkward time for United to be putting together such an expensive transfer, given the club is up for sale and its owners — the Glazer family — are weighing up bids from Qatari banker Sheikh Jassim bin Hamad Al Thani and British billionaire Jim Ratcliffe. The Glazers might not even sell at all, and instead take up other funding options.

The prospect of United’s rival, Manchester City, being interested is unlikely considering the English and European champions already have a superstar striker in Erling Haaland.

STAY AT PSG?

If Mbappe changes his mind, then he has until July 31 to sign the one-year extension — or negotiate a longer deal.

But it looks like he’s done all he can with the club, where he is the all-time leading scorer with 212 goals.

Although PSG won the French title as expected, they finished only one point ahead of Lens and were eliminated early again from the Champions League, and from the French Cup.

PSG’s form slumped after the World Cup, with a total of 10 defeats in 28 games overall in 2023.

Mbappe’s frustration was all too apparent toward the end of a disappointing campaign.


Senegal criticizes lack of ‘fair play’ before facing host nation Morocco in the Africa Cup final

Updated 17 January 2026
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Senegal criticizes lack of ‘fair play’ before facing host nation Morocco in the Africa Cup final

  • Senegalese Football Federation criticizes alleged lack of security arrangements for the team’s arrival in Rabat

RABAT: The Senegalese Football Federation has made extensive complaints about the way its national football team is being treated in Morocco ahead of Sunday’s Africa Cup of Nations final against the host nation.
The federation, known as FSF, issued a statement in the early hours of Saturday morning in which it criticized an alleged lack of security arrangements for the team’s arrival in Rabat, problems with the team’s accommodation, issues with the training facilities, and difficulties getting a fair ticket allocation for its supporters.
It called on the Confederation of African Football (CAF) and the local organizing committee to “immediately take every corrective measure to guarantee respect for the principles of fair play, equal treatment, and security indispensable for the success of this celebration of African football.”
Senegal ‘s players traveled by train from Tangier to Rabat on Friday, but found what the federation said was a “clear lack of adequate security measures” upon their arrival. Social media videos showed the players and staff surrounded by crowds of people jostling to get selfies and photos as they attempted to make their way to the team bus.
“This deficiency exposed the players and technical staff to overcrowding and risks incompatible with the standards of a competition of this magnitude and the prestige of a continental final,” the federation said.
The federation said it had to file a formal written complaint to get adequate hotel accommodation for the team after its arrival in Rabat. It did not describe the condition of the accommodation the team was first offered.
The federation said it notified CAF of its “categorical refusal” to hold team training sessions at the Mohammed VI Complex, which is where the Morocco team has been based for the whole tournament. Morocco will also train there Saturday.
The federation said it “raises a question of sporting fairness” and that it still had not been informed of where the Senegal team can train.
In the media activities agenda for Saturday, shared with media on Friday, Senegal’s training session location was still to be confirmed.
The federation said the ticketing situation was “concerning.” It was only able to purchase 2,850 tickets for its supporters as per the maximum limits authorized by CAF.
The federation said the allocation is “insufficient given the demand” and that it “deplores the imposed restrictions, which penalize the Senegalese public.”
The capacity of the Prince Moulay Abdellah Stadium, which is hosting the final, is 69,500 fans. Morocco has been buoyed by vociferous support in all its games so far.
Morocco is bidding to end a 50-year wait for its second Africa Cup title. Senegal, which won the 2021 trophy, is also going for its second title.
The federation said it was making its complaints public “in the interest of transparency and to defend the interests of the Senegalese national team.”