Arsenal signs Sweden striker Viktor Gyokeres from Sporting Lisbon
Gyokeres completed a move from Sporting Lisbon worth a reported 63 million pounds ($85 million) and signed a five-year contract.
'Viktor is an exceptional talent and has consistently demonstrated he has the qualities and winning mentality required of a top-level centre-forward. His physicality, intelligence and work ethic make him a perfect fit for our vision,' said Arsenal sporting director Andrea Berta.
The 27-year-old striker joins Arsenal after establishing himself as one of the deadliest finishers in world soccer after two outstanding seasons in Portugal where he fired Lisbon to back-to-back league titles. He scored 82 goals in 85 games, including 48 last term, outscoring the likes of Kylian Mbappe, Erling Haaland and Mohamed Salah.
A top class striker has long-been considered the missing element for Arsenal, which came runner up in each of the last three Premier League seasons. The failure to bring one in during the January transfer window badly undermined its attempts to challenge Liverpool for the title last term.
'The consistency he has shown in his performances and availability have been outstanding, and his goal contributions speak for themselves,' said manager Mikel Arteta. 'He is a quick and powerful presence up front, with incredible goalscoring numbers at club and international levels.'
Gyokeres returns to England after joining Brighton as a youth player and later emerging at second-tier Coventry, where his 22 goals helped the team reach the playoff final in 2023.
His record of 40 goals in 97 games for Coventry caught the attention of Lisbon and led to a 20.5 million pounds ($25 million) move to the Portuguese club.
His explosive form over the past two seasons has seen frequent speculation about a move to one of European soccer's giants, including Manchester United. But Arsenal has won the race for his signature and the transfer represents a remarkable rise for a player who was first developed at Brommapojkarna, a Swedish club with a reputation for guiding the careers of some of the country's best emerging talents.
'He was a late developer because he was not the best striker or the best player in Brommapojkarna at age 16, 17, 18, 19," Dalibor Savic, his former youth coach at the Swedish club told The Associated Press in November. 'If he aims at something, he will achieve it.'
Gyokeres will have to prove he can make the step up to the Premier League after failing to break through at Brighton, a club known for unearthing players like Moises Caicedo and Alexis Mac Allister in recent years. He only made eight appearances for the club and was loaned to St Pauli in Germany and Swansea before his permanent move to Coventry.
His performances for Sweden and in the Champions League suggest he will be able to continue that form at Arsenal.
He was the leading scorer in the Nations League, with nine goals, outscoring Cristiano Ronaldo and Haaland, and hit six in eight appearances in the Champions League for Lisbon last season.
___
James Robson is at https://twitter.com/jamesalanrobson
___
AP soccer: https://apnews.com/hub/soccer
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
23 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Despondent Hamilton and Ferrari crash back to earth
Lewis Hamilton and Ferrari crashed back to earth on Sunday when 24 hours after Charles Leclerc claimed the team's first pole of 2025 they left Hungary frustrated and dejected. Seven-time world champion Hamilton, who on Saturday said he was "completely useless" to the team and ready to be replaced, wound up 12th while Leclerc dropped from race leader to a grumbling fourth. Hamilton, backed beforehand by team boss Fred Vasseur, was in a bleak mood suggesting that he remained trapped by a crisis of confidence that has turned his spectacular marquee signing for Ferrari into a nightmare. "When you have a feeling, you have a feeling," he said enigmatically, responding to a question about his comment suggesting that he was no longer good enough for Ferrari and should be replaced. He added: "There's a lot going on in the background that isn't great." Asked if he still loved racing, he replied to say he did, but with little conviction. Leclerc appeared to be little happier after he had failed to convert pole into victory for the 15th time in 16 attempts during the last three years. His one success came in last year's Monaco Grand Prix, his home event. "We lost a podium, so I am very disappointed," said Leclerc, having warned the team during the race that they had bungled his car's set-up in some unspecified way. "But I spoke too quickly because being out of the car, I had a bit more detail about what went on," he added later. "I thought it was about something else that we had discussed, but unfortunately it was on the chassis. "There was an issue on that side and we will look into it for it not to happen again. It doesn't really make me feel any better because when you're fighting for a win, and then you have these kind of issues, it never happens. "We need to look into it to make sure it never happens again because the car was just undriveable. "It was around lap 40 because as soon as I started to struggle and to complain, it was basically when we started to have the issue and it got worse and worse. "It's very frustrating to have everything under control, to know that the pace is in the car to win, and then you end up being nowhere. We lost a podium.' Hamilton, 40, winner of a record eight Hungarian Grands Prix and a record nine poles at the circuit, finished where he started and with his worst result at the circuit, inevitably sparking talk of his possible retirement. But as he headed off towards a summer break, he could look at the joy in the Aston Martin garage where, despite a back muscle injury, his one-time McLaren team-mate Fernando Alonso had finished a season's best fifth, aged 44. str/nr
Yahoo
23 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Fan's View: A start we didn't want or deserve
With all the excitement of a new season, where better to start than Edgeley Park, the scene of our heaviest and most humiliating defeat last season? A chance to assess our chances in League 1, after all the changes we have made during the summer break. Everybody was trying to pick their starting eleven, after witnessing an unbeaten and very encouraging pre-season. Hopes were high of getting something at Stockport. In the end Steven Schumacher went for his Preston line up with new loanee, Mason Burstow up front, replacing Daeshon Lawrence. Stockport kindly gave us the uncovered Railway End but the continuous drizzle did nothing to dampen our spirits. Stockport started as they meant to go on with Teddy Sharman Lowe being barged unceremoniously into the advertising hoardings. The referee did not even give the free kick, never mind take any appropriate action. Bolton were by far the better team in the first half but they squandered several good chances, hit the woodwork twice and had at least one, if not two shouts for a penalty. Luck was on Stockport 's side, when they got a deflected goal with virtually the last kick of the half. In the second half, Stockport upped their game, rather than Bolton. They harried us all over the pitch, giving nobody any space. We did have chances but again we failed to take them and paid the ultimate price when they headed home in added time. So, we start with a disappointing defeat, not what we were hoping for. We didn't play bad and with a bit more luck, could have got something from this game. But we didn't and we have got to look at where it went wrong. We need to improve our finishing. At times, our defence was quite open, especially down their left wing. Our central defenders struggled with crosses throughout the match. On the plus side, four new players made their league debuts for us, with another one coming on later. It will take time for the new players and tactics to gel. We have plenty to work on during next week and hopefully put things right against Plymouth Argyle next Saturday. My hopes are still up there and with more signings imminent and some departures likely, things can only get better. We will need time for it to come together, so let's cut the Wanderers some slack for now.
Yahoo
23 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Veteran Howson OK with Boro promotion 'failure'
Jonny Howson said he has no regrets at his failure to take Middlesbrough back into the Premier League. The midfielder left Boro last month after eight years on Teesside in which he played 341 games for the club, scoring 10 goals. The 37-year-old arrived at the Riverside from Norwich City in 2017 just after Boro had been relegated from the top flight but he was never part of a promotion campaign. "For why I came to this club, it was to gain promotion and go back and play in the Premier League with a terrific, well-supported club," he told BBC Radio Tees. "If you're basing it on that, I have failed, and I'm fine with that because I've given it everything I've got." 'I've had life moments here' Howson played under six permanent bosses at Middlesbrough and helped his team reach the play-offs on two occasions, although they lost in the semi-finals in both 2018 and 2023. He was part of the side that enjoyed memorable FA Cup successes over Manchester United and Tottenham Hotspur in the 2021-22 season, and a Carabao Cup semi-final win over Chelsea in the first leg in January 2024, before the second leg ended in a heavy defeat. And the Middlesbrough supporters showed what they thought of Howson's efforts in the pre-season friendly at Rangers as a banner in the away end at Ibrox read: '8 years of loyalty and leadership. Thank you Jonny.' "I probably never thought I'd have eight goes at it, so that's a success in itself," Howson said. "I can look back at my time and be proud because we've created other memories. "Sometimes in life you don't get maybe what you deserve or what you want, but I've got no problem with that. "Look at the other stuff I've created, the people I've met. Promotion and playing in the Premier League is a football thing, but I've had life moments here, which are bigger than that."