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Rayan Cherki to Man City is nearly a done deal

Rayan Cherki to Man City is nearly a done deal

Rayan Cherki is all set to join Manchester City in the summer transfer window as the deal is done and the details have been signed. By Ravi Kumar Jha Published on June 9, 2025, 18:41 IST
Rayan Cherki is all set to join Manchester City in the summer transfer window as the deal is done and the details have been signed. The official announcement of the deal is pending, but Fabrizio Romano has already said, 'here we go.' Cherki will sign a five-year deal with City and the club to pay €35 million plus add-ons.
Manchester City have secured one of France's brightest young talents as Rayan Cherki is all set to join the Premier League champions in the summer transfer window. According to transfer expert Fabrizio Romano, the deal is done, with his trademark tagline, confirming the agreement between City and Lyon.
The attacking midfielder has signed a five-year contract with Pep Guardiola's side, as City continue to invest in youth for the future. The club will pay an initial fee of €35 million, with additional performance-related add-ons included in the package.
While the official club announcement is still pending, all documents have been signed, and the move is essentially complete. Cherki, known for his flair, creativity, and dribbling ability, is expected to add depth and versatility to City's already stacked attacking lineup.
Ravi kumar jha is an undergraduate student in Bachelor of Arts in Multimedia and Mass Communication. A media enthusiast who has a strong hold on communication and he also has a genuine interest in sports. Ravi is currently working as a journalist at Businessupturn.com

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Rayan Cherki to Manchester City: Transfers TLDR
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Manchester City have completed the signing of Rayan Cherki from French club Lyon for €36.5million (£30.9m, $41.7m). The 21-year-old France international has signed a five-year contract until 2030. He will be available to play for Pep Guardiola's side at the upcoming Club World Cup in the United States. As part of this summer's transfer coverage at The Athletic, in addition to breaking news, tactical analysis and in-depth reads, our Transfers TLDR series (you can read them all here) will bring you a quick guide to each of the key deals. Cherki has been marked out as a rare talent since an early age. Hailing from Lyon, he joined his hometown club at the age of seven. He trained with Chelsea as a youngster, to the annoyance of Lyon, and last summer was targeted by Fulham and Crystal Palace, but until now has remained a one-club man in terms of senior football. Advertisement Though he has Italian heritage on his father's side and Algerian on his mother's, he opted to play for the country of his birth, making his first two appearances in the Nations League's semi-finals and final last week. Steve Madeley With the ball, Cherki is an extraordinary talent the City fans can look forward to fireworks from. They are also getting somebody who can play in a range of positions and is genuinely two-footed — he has been known to take set pieces with both his left and right. Cherki has worked hard to improve his defending and tactical discipline but that remains the biggest question mark about his game, so City supporters should not expect to see a complete player from the outset. Steve Madeley Cherki will infuse creativity into a City team bidding goodbye to Kevin De Bruyne this summer after 10 mostly glittering years. The Frenchman has a gifted first touch and is an excellent ball-carrier, relying on delicate dabs with either boot and trickery instead of pace to beat defenders. Cherki's technique in controlling the ball is spectacular, as he showed while scoring on his international debut against Spain in the Nations League semi-finals last week. A Goal of the Tournament contender from France debutant Rayan Cherki 🥵#UNLGOTR | @AlipayPlus — UEFA EURO (@UEFAEURO) June 5, 2025 His two-footedness gives City manager Pep Guardiola options, as Cherki has played on both wings and as an attacking midfielder for Lyon. His out-of-possession game does require fine-tuning, though. City's shift to using ball-carriers to generate creativity in recent years means Cherki, in theory, should fit in. A transition period is to be expected, however, as players often perform better in their second season under Guardiola than in the first. Anantaajith Raghuraman Cherki missed no games due to injury this season, playing 44 times for Lyon. He also featured in 67 of their 72 Ligue 1 matches across the 2022-23 and 2023-24 campaigns. He has only suffered one serious injury — a metatarsal (a bone in the foot) fracture in February 2022 that ruled him out for three months. Anantaajith Raghuraman 'Technically, he was an extraordinary player,' Jean Francois Vulliez, a former Lyon academy director and coach told The Athletic in April. 'Everyone knew who he was because he had a way of touching the ball and a way of playing that set him apart as a player. 'He has a deep love of football. He loves the relationship with the ball and he loves one-v-ones. His thing was getting the ball and thinking, 'How can I get past my opponent? How can I get past two opponents, how can I get past three opponents, how can I score a goal?'.' Steve Madeley Cherki has joined City on a five-year contract, ending in June 2030. 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From Lyon's perspective, their recognition of Cherki's sale is unencumbered by prior dealings. He has been at the club since the age of seven, and French clubs account for agent fees — such as those that might have been incurred when contract extensions were signed — at the time their services are provided, rather than across the length of player contracts (as is the case in, for example, England), so Cherki's book value at his boyhood club is zero. Chris Weatherspoon

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'I have worked so hard for his all my life': Rayan Cherki is unveiled as a Manchester City player. 'I have worked so hard for his all my life': Rayan Cherki is unveiled as a Manchester City player. Photograph: Isaac Parkin/Courtesy of Manchester City Manchester City have completed the signing of Rayan Cherki from Lyon, in time for the attacking midfielder to feature at the upcoming Club World Cup. The 21-year-old, who has made almost 200 appearances for Lyon and earned two France caps, has signed a contract until 2030. City will pay a reported initial fee of €36m (£30.5m) plus add-ons, with the move announced just in time for the 7pm (BST) deadline to register players for Fifa's 32-team club tournament in the United States. Advertisement Related: Men's transfer window summer 2025: all deals from Europe's top five leagues Cherki is the club's third signing in two days as the new director of football, Hugo Viana, begins reshaping Pep Guardiola's squad after a disappointing season. Left-back Rayan Aït-Nouri arrived from Wolves for £31m on Monday, while Marcus Bettinelli will replace the departing Scott Carson as third-choice goalkeeper after joining from Chelsea on Tuesday. 'This is a dream for me,' said Cherki after completing his move. 'To be joining a club like Manchester City and have the opportunity to make the next step in my career here is something very, very special.' 'I have worked so hard for this all my life. I love this sport, and I can't wait to develop further here in Manchester with Pep and his backroom staff,' he added. 'I would only leave Lyon for a project I really believe in and everything at City suggests I can develop my game and help the team be successful in the future.' Advertisement Viana said Cherki, who can play in the middle or as a winger on either flank, is 'a player our scouts have watched for a long time. We have all been impressed with his skill and creativity. I am convinced our fans will be excited to see him play.' Cherki, who has spent his entire career to date with his home town club, posted a tribute to Lyon on Instagram after the transfer was confirmed. 'Thousands of emotions, hundreds of memories and an indelible imprint on my heart,' he wrote. 'I hope to continue making you proud and represent 'Lyon DNA' with dignity.' City are close to completing the signing of the Milan midfielder Tijjani Reijnders after a €55m (£46.3m) fee was agreed last week. The club also announced two coaching arrivals on Tuesday with Pepijn Lijnders, who worked under Jürgen Klopp at Liverpool, appointed assistant coach. James French, an analyst at Anfield for more than a decade, moves to the Etihad as a set-piece coach.

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Some worrying news for bookshops on Merseyside. Any copies of Intensity by Pep Lijnders are likely to remain on the shelves. They may want to instead store them with El Nino, the Fernando Torres autobiography that was a love story to Liverpool. But Torres joined Chelsea and now, barely a year after leaving Liverpool, Lijnders' return to English football comes alongside Pep Guardiola. Advertisement The supporters who branded Trent Alexander-Arnold a traitor for heading for Real Madrid – though one of their complaints has been removed now he is no longer going on a free transfer, but for €10m – may transfer their irritation to Jurgen Klopp's former sidekick after his move to Manchester City was confirmed ahead of the Club World Cup, with every game live on DAZN. City, of course, is the club that ensured one of the great Liverpool managers won just one league title. If a year away has illustrated the legacy Klopp and Lijnders left, with Arne Slot's success reflecting well on the previous regime, it may have been chastening in other respects. Klopp's popularity in Germany has been dented by the decision of a man who was a byword for authenticity to work for the despised Red Bull group. Lijnders, once touted as a potential successor to Klopp at Anfield, floundered in his second attempt to go it alone. He was sacked by RB Salzburg – a couple of weeks before Klopp took up his role at their parent organisation – with the usually dominant force in Austrian football only fifth in the Bundesliga, 10 points off the lead, and having lost five of their six Champions League games. Defeats without scoring to Sparta Prague, Brest and Dinamo Zagreb were scarcely the great European nights Lijnders experienced at Liverpool. Take out the tribalism of football, however, and there is logic on both his and Guardiola's side; this could be a marriage of considerable convenience. City have parted company with three assistant coaches, in Carlos Vicens, Inigo Domingues and Juanma Lillo, which could leave Guardiola looking lonely. Lillo, in particular, was a symbolic figure; Guardiola admired him so much that he went to Mexico to end his playing career under Lillo at Dorados Sinaloa. Advertisement Yet if City's explanation was simply that Lillo, whose contract expired this summer, wanted to return to Spain – and he never spoke much English – Guardiola's most torrid season featured many a strange decision. The Guardiola-Lillo axis may not have worked as well as it did. At 42, Lijnders is 17 years younger than the wizened Spaniard, with a Premier League pedigree, multilingual skills – speaking Spanish and Portuguese – and bringing an energy Klopp appreciated as he aged. That City struggled with the physicality of many an opponent last season could give an added reason to appoint a coach responsible for some Liverpool sides who were primed to outrun anyone. Lijnders and Jurgen Klopp pose with the FA Cup and the Carabao Cup during the Liverpool trophy parade in May 2022 (Getty) For Lijnders, meanwhile, a step backwards could nevertheless bring one of the plum coaching jobs, just not a managerial post. He was interviewed by Norwich, before they appointed Liam Manning. The City Football Group, with their portfolio of clubs, could suit Lijnders' long-term plan to get back into management. With Klopp yet to return to management, he has now found a new patron. A double act of Pep and Pep may sound good too. A theme of Guardiola's career has been his ability to win with different assistants, starting with Tito Vilanova at Barcelona. At City, he has been joined by Mikel Arteta, Brian Kidd, Domenec Torrent, Rodolfo Borrell, Enzo Maresca and Lillo. Advertisement Lijnders' partnership with Klopp followed the break-up of his long-term alliance with Zeljko Buvac. The Dutchman's ideas nevertheless took Liverpool to greater heights; arguably they played less heavy-metal football but they won the 2019 Champions League and the 2020 Premier League and pursued the quadruple in 2022. Lijnders during his time at FC Salzburg (Getty Images) His brief spell at Salzburg, like a similarly short stint at Nijmegen in 2018, could suggest that Lijnders is no manager. While he could coin Klopp-style soundbites – 'our identity is intensity' was one – perhaps they didn't sound right without Klopp and he lacked his mentor's degree in people. Lijnders is thought to be aware of his shortcomings. As a coach, though, his reputation is safe. Klopp initially inherited him, asked by Fenway Sports Group's Mike Gordon to give him a go. He agreed, ringing the FSG president a few weeks into his reign to tell him that he didn't like Lijnders... he loved him. He brought him back to Anfield after Buvac left. Pep Guardiola with his Manchester City assistant Juanma Lillo at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in February (Getty) He played him at the racket sport padel, often losing to a man 16 years his junior; that was a sign of Lijnders' competitiveness. Unlike Peter Krawietz, Klopp's other assistant and a far quieter figure, Lijnders had a profile in his own right. He did the pre-match media duties before Carabao Cup games, to prepare him for the return to management, which then backfired. Advertisement Instead, he has now joined a select group who have crossed the great divide and played a part for arguably the two most influential managers of their generation. For Ilkay Gundogan, Robert Lewandowski and Thiago Alcantara it was as players. For Lijnders, in the opposing dugout for titanic duels as Klopp enjoyed a rare winning record against Guardiola, it is as a coach. Liverpool could win the games but, over 38 matches, it was City who won the titles in Lijnders' last four seasons at Anfield. He couldn't beat Guardiola, so he has now joined him. You can sign up to DAZN to watch every Club World Cup game for free

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