
Lewandowski Seals Chicago Fire Switch as Ovechkin Eyes Capitals Future
The Polish striker ends his European career with an MLS move, while Alexander Ovechkin’s contract talks progress in Washington, and a flurry of Premier League and Bundesliga transfer sagas unfold.
The final chapter of Robert Lewandowski’s European career is being written on the shores of Lake Michigan. The Poland captain has reached an agreement to join Major League Soccer’s Chicago Fire, Spanish and German media reported on Sunday, bringing down the curtain on a glittering two-decade run on the continent. At 37 and out of contract at Barcelona — where he scored 120 goals in four seasons — Lewandowski had long signalled his intention to seek a final challenge. Now, according to multiple outlets, only the formal ink on the contract stands between him and a debut potentially as early as 16 July against Vancouver, a match that would pit him against former Bayern Munich teammate Thomas Müller, followed by a meeting with Lionel Messi’s Inter Miami a week later.
The move carries symbolic weight in Chicago, home to roughly 900,000 residents of Polish descent. Fire, third in the Eastern Conference under former Bundesliga player Gregg Berhalter, hope the striker’s arrival galvanises both attendances and the league’s profile. Yet hurdles remain: as a free agent, Lewandowski would occupy a Designated Player slot, and reports from the United States suggest the club already has three such players signed, though league rules often leave room for creative accounting. The agreement caps a courtship that stretched back to December, and eclipsed interest from European suitors including AC Milan.
On the other side of the Atlantic, another veteran’s future is under negotiation — but in ice hockey rather than football. Washington Capitals general manager Chris Patrick revealed that discussions with Russian forward Alexander Ovechkin have established clear contract parameters. Ovechkin, 40, played his last game under his current deal in April and has publicly stated he wishes to play two more seasons. Just ten goals shy of Wayne Gretzky’s all-time NHL record of 1,016, his contract talks are being watched as much for their sporting implications as their historical weight.
Back on the pitch, the summer transfer window is generating its own intrigue. German midfielder Felix Nmecha, only 25 but already a regular for Dortmund and Germany, has drawn attention from Manchester City, Manchester United, and Newcastle United, German outlets report. Newcastle view him as a potential replacement should Bruno Guimarães depart, though Dortmund’s position is fortified by a contract running to 2030. Internally, the club insists that anything below €120 million will be dismissed — a stance that leaves English suitors weighing whether to meet the premium.
In the Premier League, Sunderland have moved quickly to declare Granit Xhaka not for sale after reports emerged of Chelsea entering talks with the Swiss midfielder’s representatives. Xhaka, 33, captained the Wearside club to a seventh-place finish and Europa League qualification, and is under contract until 2028. The Stamford Bridge interest would mark a dramatic departure from Chelsea’s recent recruitment model — they have fielded the youngest side in the league for two seasons and not selected a player aged 30 or above. Yet sources close to the London club acknowledge the need for leadership, a quality Xhaka demonstrated in abundance during Sunderland’s breakout campaign. For now, Sunderland’s financial stability and the player’s openness to a reunion with former manager Xabi Alonso at Chelsea leave the saga finely poised.
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A genuine transfer coup: Robert Lewandowski, Bundesliga legend and prolific Barcelona scorer, is set to leave European football and join MLS side Chicago Fire. After four years and 120 goals in Spain, the Polish striker has chosen a new adventure in the United States, closing a golden chapter of his career.
Robert Lewandowski has agreed to join Chicago Fire of Major League Soccer, leaving FC Barcelona after his contract was not renewed. Transfer expert Fabrizio Romano reports that the 37-year-old Poland captain will sign in the coming days, ending his time in European football.
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