
No one can afford to buy Alexander Isak, says ex-Newcastle player John Anderson
That is the view of former Magpies defender John Anderson amid frenzied speculation over the Sweden international's future on Tyneside following his absence from the club's first pre-season friendly at Celtic on Saturday.
The 25-year-old striker hit the headlines once again last week when Premier League champions Liverpool indicated they would be prepared to offer £120million – around £30m shy of Newcastle's hands-off valuation – for him should he become available.
However, Anderson told the PA news agency: 'Once you've got good players and you've got very, very good players, they're always going to be linked with other teams. That's always been the nature of the game and that's never, ever going to go away.
'I just don't think anybody at this moment in time can afford Isak and that's the truth of it.
'There's a lot of speculation about whether he's going to sign a new contract and have the club offered him a new contract – I don't think the boy is in any hurry to sign a new contract because he's got three years left on his present deal.
'Why would he be?'
Head coach Eddie Howe revealed after the 4-0 defeat at Celtic Park that Isak had been sent home from Glasgow after a pre-season training camp in Austria because he was never going to play any part in the game as he manages his return from a groin injury. Howe did not want him sitting in the stands as the rumours gathered pace, despite his club's insistence that he is simply not for sale.
Anderson said: 'It's a high-profile game, the champions of Scotland against a side that's qualified for the Champions League, but I think all the speculation would have been about Isak sitting in the stand rather than being focused on the game.'
The former Republic of Ireland defender, who now covers the Magpies' games as a co-commentator for BBC Radio Newcastle, has witnessed Isak's meteoric rise since his £63m arrival from Real Sociedad during the summer of 2022 and knows how vital his retention is.
He said: 'Oh God, he's huge. It's okay getting whatever you get for him, but how do you replace a player like that? That's the bottom line.
'You've got all the money in the world, yes, but can you get a player in who can do what he does?'
Anderson played alongside Kevin Keegan and Peter Beardsley at St James' Park and watched Alan Shearer scored a record 206 goals for the club and he believes Isak is a special talent.
He said: 'Shearer was a great out-and-out goalscorer, but this boy has got everything. Not only does he score goals, but he creates goals, he makes space for other people, he frightens the life out of defenders with his movement.
'And at the age that he's at, he's still got his prime years ahead of him. He's only going to get better.'

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


Daily Mail
28 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Panathinaikos 1 Rangers 1 (Rangers win 3-1 on aggregate): New boss Martin survives baptism of fire
As the clock confirmed the 90 minutes had come and gone and darkness closed in, a hush finally descended on Panathinaikos' exuberant supporters. Russell Martin took one last look at his watch, exhaled deeply and drank in the moment. It had been far from pretty, but the fact his side did just enough in the heat of Athens will be remembered long after the minor details of this affair are long forgotten. Handed the most arduous opening assignment as manager of the Ibrox club, he's entitled to take no little satisfaction from this triumph. While he was correct to point out that its outcome would not define his side's season, it was always going to set the tone. Amid a summer of substantial change on and off the park, a two-legged victory against a seasoned European side will further engender an air of positivity around the club. It feels like a steady first step on a journey. Martin and his players may still have to clear two further hurdles to make it to the Champions League proper, but they now have the comfort of knowing they have secured group stage football of some description. The manager will need no one to tell him how differently all of this might have played out, however. With his side struggling for composure throughout the match, Panathinaikos — again — fashioned enough chances to get the job done. While Jack Butland again earned his corn, the fact is that the Greeks were toothless in the final third. A better side would have turned a hatful of chances into more goals and prevailed. There is still much work for Martin and his players to do. That, though, is for another day. For now, all that truly counts is that a work in progress has cleared an awkward first hurdle. Djeidi Gassama is emerging as quite the summer signing. A £2.2million capture from Sheffield Wednesday, the Frenchman made an immediate impact with the second goal in the first leg and made another telling contribution here. Deservedly behind on the night through Filip Djuricic's header early in the second half, Gassama soon quietened the home supporters with a superb flashing strike, his first touch of the night after coming off the bench. From that point on, Rangers looked good to get the result they came for. For all the supporters of Panathinaikos descended on the Olympic Stadium in their numbers, there was never any possibility of its 75,000 capacity being troubled. A temporary home for European matches, this stadium still echoed to the noise of their chants. But the running track around the perimeter of the pitch meant it lacked the hostility and intensity of their more compact home, the Apostolos Nikolaidis. Despite confirming that Gassama was ready to start, Martin kept the Frenchman in reserve, keeping faith the same XI who'd started the first leg. As predicted, Rui Vitoria's side came out swinging, forcing four corners inside the first 10 minutes. With the visitors struggling to get up to the pace of the game, Nico Raskin's clearing header only made it as far as Tasos Bakasetas. Butland was relieved to see the midfielder's strike from 18 yards creep a foot wide of the target. Rangers were certainly looking to get up the park, as Martin had directed them too. In the early exchanges, that proved to be wishful thinking. Fotis Ioannidis worked a one-two with Djuricic. Butland had to be smartly off his line to shut down the angle and make a telling block. Indecision by John Souttar then put Max Aarons in trouble. With the full-back beaten to the ball by Facundo Pellistri, Butland again advanced to save the day. Rangers were already riding their luck. Another green surge up the park brought a further moment of alarm for the visiting bench. Pellistri strode away from the struggling Aarons down the right and dragged Nasser Djiga out of position. His cross was met flush by the head of the flying Ioannidis. Butland didn't know much about it but was again in the right place at the right time. With his side detailed to build from the back, Djiga undercooked a pass to James Tavernier. Duricic pounced and squared the ball to Pellistri. The Uruguayan's failure to hit the target from 15 yards left his manager flapping his arms and looking up to the heavens. With men in white jerseys taking it in turns to give the ball away, there was little respite from the pressure. The half-time whistle was nigh by the time the visitors held the ball for more than a minute. While Raskin headed Joe Rothwell's corner just over the top, Martin's side didn't create a single chance of note from open play in the first period. The manager raced back up the tunnel the instant the half-time whistle sounded, doubtless with some choice words to impart. They didn't have the desired effect. Within nine minutes of the restart, Panathinaikos had the goal they richly deserved. Bakasetas's in-swinging cross from the right caught those in front of Butland on their heels. Djuricic's header back across goal was well-placed. Butland scrambled but could not prevent it from sneaking in. A raised offside flag offered Rangers false hope. As VAR eventually identified, Aarons had played Duricic onside. With Rangers rattled, Ioannidis was a hair's breadth from connecting with Djuricic's cross and squaring the tie. The introduction of Gassama arrived when his side most needed him. Starved of service to that point, Danilo had a pair of strikes repelled by a defender then the keeper. The ball sat up perfectly for the winger. His right-foot strike caught the inside of the far post and went in. The Greeks' lead had lasted just six minutes. Having laboured for so long, Rangers could now see the winning post in sight. Panathinaikos began to force the play. Substitute Adam Gnezda Cerin almost caught Butland out with a speculative cross. Ahmed Touba marched forward and drilled one wide from 30 yards. The introduction of Jefte for Kieran Dowell suggested Martin was now content for his side to sit in and see the game out. Panathinaikos rang the changes, but their body language was becoming that of a beaten side. By hook or by crook, Rangers got the job done. Yet there remains considerable scope for improvement.


Daily Mail
28 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Geri Horner celebrates with the Lionesses at Oasis' Wembley concert after the team won the women's Euros final
Geri Horner celebrated with the Lionesses as they attended Oasis' concert at Wembley Stadium on Wednesday after the team won the women's Euros final. The former Spice Girl, 52, joined Alex Greenwood, Hannah Hampton and Alessia Russo in the crowd the band's hotly-anticipated reunion. The team roared to victory in Sunday's match following a nail-biting game, which finished with an incredible 3-1 penalty shoot out win. Congratulating them on their win, Geri joined the girls for a photo before they took their seats for the gig. She captioned her Instagram post: 'They're home!' After a run of homecoming gigs in Manchester's Heaton Park, Oasis returned to London last week, where they will play five shows. Elsewhere, Geri has faced yet another blow when it was revealed her book company has racked up a huge £1million debt. It comes following the news her husband Christian was released from his operational duties as the boss of Red Bull one year after the scandal that engulfed him over texts he apparently sent to a female employee. According to a new publication Geri could now be facing her own troubles as her company Falcon Queen Productions has sunk further into the red. The Mirror reports, Geri had a deficit of £750,000 in the year ending August 2024, compared to a £276,000 the previous year. The singer released her children's books, Rosie Frost and the Falcon Queen and Rose Frost: Ice On Fire via the firm. However, her 'main company, Wonderful Productions, earned £2.16m in the 12 months to August last year.' Wonderful Productions was set up by Geri in 1997 at the height of the Spice Girls' fame and channels earnings from her career in music and other commercial deals. MailOnline has contacted Geri's representative for comment. Christian was released from his operational duties as the boss of Red Bull earlier this month. It ends the longest reign of Formula One team principals in the sport and comes a year after the scandal that engulfed him over texts he apparently sent to a female employee. Red Bull issued a statement confirming the news, reading: 'Red Bull has released Christian Horner from his operational duties with effect from today, Wednesday 9 July 2025, and has appointed Laurent Mekies as CEO of Red Bull Racing.' Horner's former Spice Girl wife Geri stood by her husband after the explosive accusations rocked the Formula One paddock last year. Horner has vehemently denied the claims. Screenshots of alleged WhatsApp messages between Horner and a Red Bull employee were leaked anonymously the day after a three-week investigation, carried out externally, cleared the 51-year-old of all allegations. Horner survived accusations of coercive behaviour towards his colleague – and was twice cleared in internal investigations of wrongdoing.


The Guardian
28 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Rangers see off wasteful Panathinaikos in Champions League qualifier
Djeidi Gassama turned super-sub once again with a crucial goal as Rangers beat profligate Panathinaikos 3-1 on aggregate in their Champions League second qualifier in Athens. Leading 2-0 from the first leg at Ibrox, only another fine performance in the Olympic stadium from their goalkeeper Jack Butland, who thwarted the Greek side in the first leg, kept the tie goalless at the break. Filip Djuricic opened the scoring with a header in the 53rd minute but moments after climbing off the bench, Gassama, who scored after coming off the bench on his debut last week, levelled at 1-1 with a stunning drive. A remarkable start to the 21-year-old's Rangers career took the heat out of the home side's fightback, although Russell Martin should not be fooled. His side rode their luck for the second time against Panathinaikos, who will rue a series of missed opportunities over the two games. In what was Martin's first away game as Rangers manager and only his second in Europe he kept the same side which started last week at Ibrox. Rui Vitória's side were without suspended right-back Georgios Vagiannidis, sent off in Glasgow for picking up two yellow cards, and his place was taken by Giannis Kotsiras. The home side bossed and battered Rangers in the first half, starting in the fifth minute when midfielder Anastasios Bakasetas drove just wide from the edge of the box following another corner. In the 14th minute, Rangers' dithering defender Max Aarons was robbed by former Manchester United man Facundo Pellistri, which left the attacker one-on-one with Butland and the goalkeeper brilliantly blocked the shot. Butland then made another terrific save from a close-range header by captain Fotis Ioannidis, who had beaten defender John Souttar to a great cross from Pellistri. Panathinaikos defender Erik Palmer-Brown headed a Bakasetas free-kick over the bar from six yards before the unmarked Pellistri missed a sitter in the 28th minute, blasting high over from 12 yards after James Tavernier had conceded possession inside the box. Rangers' two real efforts came in rare attacks, Findlay Curtis missing the target and midfielder Nico Raskin heading over, both from corners. Waves of Panathinaikos pressure continued after the break but when Duricic wrong-footed Butland with a header from a Bakasetas cross, the flag went up for offside. However, after a long VAR check, Italian referee Simone Sozza awarded the goal but more drama quickly ensued. Moments later, Gassama, the former Sheffield Wednesday forward who replaced Curtis after the goal, fired in off the post from 14 yards in a rare Rangers attack to restore their two-goal lead. Rangers' substitute Cyriel Dessers missed a great chance in added time when he failed to beat Bartlomiej Dragowski following a counter-attack but it mattered not. Rangers moved into the next qualifying round and guaranteed themselves group-stage European football of some sort this season. Shelbourne's hopes of progressing in the Champions League were ended by a 4-0 aggregate defeat to Azerbaijani club Qarabag in the second qualifying round. Trailing 3-0 following last week's first leg at Tolka Park, the League of Ireland champions were beaten 1-0 at Tofiq Bahramov Republican Stadium in Baku. Elimination means Joey O'Brien's side drop into the third qualifying round of the Europa League. Qarabag, who played in the Champions League group stage during the 2017-18 season, went ahead on the night in the 44th minute thanks to an own goal from John Martin. The visitors came close to a 56th-minute equaliser when midfielder Kerr McInroy was denied by home goalkeeper Mateusz Kochalski following fine work down the left from Liverpool loanee James Norris. O'Brien's men could have fallen further behind in the 68th minute but Wessel Speel saved a penalty from Qarabag's Brazilian midfielder Kady Borges.