
Real Madrid Seal Konaté Deal as Mourinho’s Rebuild Gathers Pace
The Spanish champions confirm a free transfer for Liverpool’s French defender, adding to Cucurella and Silva, while a pursuit of Chelsea’s Enzo Fernández intensifies.
Real Madrid have officially confirmed the signing of Ibrahima Konaté on a four-year contract, the latest in a cascade of arrivals orchestrated since José Mourinho’s return to the Bernabéu. The 27-year-old France centre-back, currently on World Cup duty in North America, will join on a free transfer at the end of June after failing to agree an extension with Liverpool. Viewed from Madrid, the move is both a defensive reinforcement and a statement of intent: Konaté becomes the fourth French international in the squad, slotting in alongside Kylian Mbappé, Aurélien Tchouaméni and Eduardo Camavinga. His 183 appearances for Liverpool yielded a Premier League title, an FA Cup and two League Cups, but a gap between the player’s wage expectations and the Anfield hierarchy’s valuation made a departure inevitable.
The Konaté announcement follows the acquisitions of Marc Cucurella from Chelsea and Bernardo Silva from Manchester City, both completed in the days after Mourinho’s reappointment. Cucurella, a Spain left-back, cost €55 million and admitted the speed of the operation was dizzying: “We got it done in a day-and-a-half.” Analysts in London note that Chelsea’s failure to qualify for European competition next season weakened their hand, while the player himself acknowledged that “when a team like Madrid comes calling, it’s very hard to say no.” Silva, a 31-year-old Portugal midfielder, arrives on a free transfer after his contract at City expired, bringing a Champions League winner’s pedigree to a side that finished last season without a major trophy. Together, the three signings signal a rapid, ruthless overhaul of the squad’s spine.
Yet the most ambitious target remains unresolved. Argentine media report that Mourinho has made Chelsea’s Enzo Fernández his absolute priority for the next window, with Real Madrid prepared to table an offer exceeding €100 million. The 25-year-old World Cup winner, who captains Chelsea and is under contract until 2032, was acquired from Benfica for more than €120 million in 2023. London sources indicate the club is deeply reluctant to sell and would demand a fee close to €140 million to recoup their investment. Fernández himself is said to be focused exclusively on Argentina’s campaign in the United States, having already served an internal sanction at Chelsea for publicly musing about life in the Spanish capital. The tug-of-war is likely to dominate the post-tournament headlines.
From a broader European perspective, Madrid’s flurry of activity under Mourinho’s second spell reflects a determination to reassert dominance after a barren campaign. The blend of free-transfer experience in Silva and Konaté, a mid-career defensive upgrade in Cucurella, and the potential blockbuster pursuit of Fernández suggests a club leveraging both financial muscle and the enduring pull of the Bernabéu. With Konaté and Fernández both immersed in World Cup duties, the coming weeks will test whether Madrid can convert their momentum into a transformative summer—and whether Chelsea can resist the gravitational force of a 15-time European champion.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
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Mourinho's Real Madrid is striking hard in the transfer window. After confirming Cucurella and Konaté, the club came within a step of signing Argentine midfielder Enzo Fernández for over €100 million, underlining a massive rebuilding ambition.
Cucurella called his move to Real Madrid a "huge step" up from a Chelsea side that missed out on Europe. The €55 million deal, sealed just before Spain's World Cup opener, marks an unexpected new chapter for the player.
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