
Manchester City close in on Rayan Ait-Nouri
Wolverhampton Wanderers have already begun the search to bring in a new left-back in the expectation that Rayan Ait-Nouri will be sold to Manchester City.
A transfer fee is still to be agreed for the Algeria defender but he is wanted by Pep Guardiola.
Wolves had previously valued the 23-year-old at around £50 million and it remains to be seen whether City will go close to matching that price.
However, given the expectation that the transfer will go through it appears both clubs are happy with the negotiations that have taken place so far and Ait-Nouri is keen on the move, which should be agreed in time for the Club World Cup that starts on June 14.
The Premier League transfer window is open between June 1 and June 10 because of that tournament and will then reopen on June 16 until September 1.
Wolves had planned to offer Ait-Nouri a new contract after four impressive seasons in the Premier League, having joined after an initial loan spell from French club, Angers. He has two years left on his current deal.
Angers inserted a 50 per cent sell-on clause which can be bought out by Wolves for a fee of about £9 million. Wolves are likely to trigger that option as a formality before any transfer is completed.
It will be the first time City have signed a specialist left-back since the departure of Joao Cancelo in 2022, on loan to Barcelona and then Bayern Munich before being sold to Saudi club Al-Hilal, and even the Portuguese international had switched from the right side.
Indeed Ait-Nouri is regarded as similar to Cancelo, especially with the attacking threat he provides.
Until now Josko Gvardiol has filled in at left-back although his future lies at centre-half where he is now expected to play for City. Guardiola has also used Nico O'Reilly but, again, it is not his preferred position and his future is likely to be as a No 10.
Interestingly, Guardiola wants to add some Premier League-ready players to his squad during this summer's extensive overhaul. In January City spent heavily on four players without experience of playing in England and, so far, only one of those, Omar Marmoush, has featured regularly.
City had targeted Nottingham Forest's Morgan Gibbs-White – and there was even talk of swap deal with Jack Grealish should Forest have qualified for the Champions League – but are now in negotiations to sign the far cheaper Rayan Cherki from Lyon, with the France Under-21 forward valued at £35 million. They have also bid around £50 million for AC Milan's attacking midfielder Tijjani Reijnders.
In what also looks like a pivotal summer for Wolves they have already sold Matheus Cunha to Manchester United
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
22 minutes ago
- The Independent
Ollie Watkins withdraws from England over injury fears
Ollie Watkins has withdrawn from the England squad due to a minor injury, ruling him out of the upcoming matches against Andorra and Senegal. Watkins was part of England 's training camp in Spain but will not participate in the June double-header. England is preparing for a World Cup qualifier against Andorra in Barcelona and a friendly against Senegal at the City Ground. Thomas Tuchel has cautioned that patience will be needed to break down Andorra's defence in the World Cup qualifier. Tuchel noted the difficulty of international breaks and the need to respect opponents, while also expressing a desire for England to entertain while winning.


The Sun
24 minutes ago
- The Sun
Nordic Darts Masters 2025 LIVE RESULTS: Humphries scrapes quarter-finals spot, Luke Littler on SOON
Luk who's back Luke Littler has not featured in any pro event other than the Premier League since his run at the German Darts Grand Prix back in April. The Nuke opted to skip the last four European Tour events to focus on the Premier League. But Littler is expected to compete at the Nordic Darts Masters this week as he looks to add to his two World Series of Darts titles. The world champion will take on Swedish newcomer Viktor Tingstrom in the first round of the tournament. It will be Littler's Nordic Darts Masters debut after he withdrew from last year's edition due to family commitments.


Telegraph
24 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Farage ‘seeks less powerful chairman' after Yusuf quits
Nigel Farage is considering appointing a less powerful Reform UK chairman after the sudden departure of Zia Yusuf, The Telegraph understands. Senior party figures have discussed splitting the role into several positions when Mr Yusuf is replaced, following his dramatic resignation on Thursday. Reform sources told The Telegraph that the former chairman had 'rubbed some people up the wrong way', and that a key factor in his departure was high workload. 'He was on a mission, working 18 hours a day,' said one source. 'He was doing it all unpaid, and he expected everyone else to work equally hard.' Mr Farage and the party's officials are working out how to replace the 38-year-old businessman, who said he no longer thought it was 'a good use of his time' to work on getting Reform into government. It came after an apparent dispute between Mr Yusuf and other senior figures over whether the party should campaign to ban the burka, which was suggested by the newest Reform MP Sarah Pochin at Prime Minister's Questions on Wednesday. Mr Yusuf said later it was 'dumb' to suggest policies Reform did not support, but Lee Anderson, the Reform chief whip, said he backed a ban. Mr Farage and Richard Tice, the deputy leader, both said they thought there should be a 'debate' on face coverings, including burkas, in the UK. One party source said Mr Yusuf was 'unpopular' with other members of staff, and had become 'super stretched' in managing the day-to-day running of Reform and the party's new ' Doge ' efficiency drive in the ten councils it won in last month's local elections. That workload led him to become 'authoritarian' and a 'control freak', said another figure close to Reform. Mr Farage said on Thursday that Mr Yusuf brought a 'bit of a Goldman Sachs mentality' to the role, which others said was a coded reference to his high-pressure management style. But the Reform leader also said he was 'sad' his chairman was leaving, and that he had only ten minutes' notice that he intended to resign. The tipping point for Mr Yusuf came on Wednesday, when he learned of Ms Pochin's question about burkas to Sir Keir Starmer from reading about it online. Mr Yusuf, who is a Muslim, had been receiving abuse from far-Right trolls online, which Mr Farage said had become difficult for him to bear. He had also reportedly become frustrated that another staff member had taken control of the party's operations, and felt he had been isolated from conversations about policy. He said on Thursday: '11 months ago I became Chairman of Reform. I've worked full time as a volunteer to take the party from 14 to 30 per cent, quadrupled its membership and delivered historic electoral results. I no longer believe working to get a Reform government elected is a good use of my time, and hereby resign the office.' Multiple sources said Mr Yusuf had performed well in the job, but was not a popular figure within the team. 'He didn't do what a chairman is meant to do, which is to bring people in and bring them along with you,' said one Reform source, adding: 'He isolated a lot of the staff.' Another added: 'Everyone is very sad about it. He wasn't popular with the staff, but he did a good job in the role. It all happened very suddenly – he'd had enough.' The next chairman may be given a more traditional figurehead role within the party, rather than running its expansion, elections and financial affairs as Mr Yusuf did. Mr Farage could appoint a chief executive alongside a new chairman, using funds raised by Nick Candy, the Reform treasurer. Upcoming donations returns are expected to show that the party raised more than £2.5 million in the first quarter of this year – putting Reform in contention to be the biggest fundraiser among the Westminster parties. Both the Conservatives and Labour have suffered a cash crunch since last year's election, and have laid off staff members. Early contenders to replace Mr Yusuf include Andy Wigmore and Arron Banks, the ' bad boys of Brexit ' who worked with Mr Farage on the campaign in 2016. One figure close to the party said Mr Farage could approach Ann Widdecombe, the former Conservative MP and MEP who stood for Reform at the 2019 election. Ms Widdecombe, who said last month she disagreed with Reform's policy to expand access to the winter fuel allowance, told The Telegraph she had not been approached about the job. Mr Yusuf's departure is the latest in a series of internal disputes within Reform, including a public row between the chairman and Rupert Lowe, who was elected for the party last year but has since been ejected. Mr Yusuf did not respond to a request for comment.