Yardbarker
x
Liverpool push Konaté contract decision as Real Madrid circle
Yukihito Taguchi-Imagn Images

The noise around Ibrahima Konaté has shifted from background hum to the main soundtrack of Liverpool’s summer. Reliable reports in England and Spain say Liverpool will put a new contract on the table in the coming days and move to a sale if the defender declines. The urgency is fueled by a growing belief that Real Madrid has been exploring a move, either now for a modest fee or next summer when he could leave for free. 

Konaté’s current deal runs to 2026, which means Liverpool are approaching the final meaningful window to protect value. There has already been at least one offer that failed to convince his camp, with reporting in June describing the player as disappointed and talks stalling. Given how Liverpool recently lost Trent Alexander-Arnold at the end of his contract, the club is in no mood to let another cornerstone asset run down his deal. 

Why Liverpool are pressing now

There is a clear strategic logic behind the club’s hurry. Arne Slot wants clarity on his back line, and Liverpool’s recruitment steps hint at contingency planning. Reporting in Spain and England in the past week has linked the club with center backs Marc Guehi and Giovanni Leoni, moves that would both bolster depth and ensure against a high-profile exit. The Guehi pursuit, in particular, has been framed as a priority fit for Slot’s build-up demands and succession planning with Virgil van Dijk now in his mid-thirties. 

Parallel to that, the Madrid angle has hardened. Spanish outlets say Madrid admires Konaté’s profile and would ideally bring him in on a free next summer, while leaving room for a late move this window if the price falls into the mid-20s of millions in euros. That scenario only strengthens Liverpool’s incentive to force a decision now. A renewal secures a prime-age centerpiece for Slot. A refusal triggers a sale while a fee is still on the table. 

What Real Madrid want and why Konaté is on their list

Real Madrid’s center back picture helps explain the timing. Antonio Rüdiger remains elite, Éder Militão has returned from a long layoff, and the club have been integrating younger options. Even so, Madrid are preparing for the medium term with a physically dominant defender who can play a high line, recover in space, and defend the box against elite European forwards.

Recent roundups in Spain and in the United States-based coverage have consistently placed Konaté among the names Madrid is tracking closely. The through line is simple. He fits their athletic and stylistic criteria and comes with contract leverage that could make him unusually attainable for a Champions League superclub. 

From Liverpool’s perspective, selling to Madrid is never ideal, yet it is pragmatic compared to losing a first-choice defender for nothing. Madrid’s preference to wait for a free would pressure Liverpool to accept a relatively modest fee now. Spanish reporting has even floated figures in the 25 million euro range if a late summer compromise appears. That number only becomes realistic if Liverpool have settled their incoming business and Konaté has made clear he will not extend. 

Three Scenarios From Here

One. Konaté signs a new deal and becomes a defensive pillar under Slot.

This is Liverpool’s preferred outcome. A fresh contract through the back half of the decade would stabilize the axis with van Dijk and allow Guehi, if signed, to bed in without immediate pressure. It would also end Madrid’s leverage and reset Konaté’s valuation at a level befitting a top-tier Premier League center back. Reports indicate Liverpool are preparing exactly this push with a new proposal now. 

Two. He refuses, and Liverpool cashes in before the window shuts.

This is the cleanest business decision if the renewal answer is no. A sale now would likely finance at least one of the targeted arrivals and keep the squad balanced for a season in which Liverpool expect to defend domestic honors and contend in Europe. The short-term hit would be real, since Konaté’s aerial presence and recovery speed are central to the way Liverpool defends big spaces. Yet, the club would avoid a repeat of the recent free departure that bruised planning and finances. 

Three. No agreement and no sale, leaving a free transfer in play for 2026.

This is the scenario Liverpool want to avoid. It keeps a top defender for another year, which has on pitch value, yet it hands the negotiating power to Madrid and any other suitor come January. The Guardian’s reporting in June made clear the club’s frustration with stalled talks, a tone that suggests they will not accept drift this time. An ultimatum of renew or be sold would be entirely consistent with that stance. 

What makes Konaté so attractive in this market

Konaté is 25 and already proven in the Premier League and Champions League. He blends stride length and strength with a front foot style that suits teams who want to hold a high line and compress the field. Slot’s blueprint at Liverpool requires exactly that. Madrid’s model has also favored center-backs who can defend wide channels and win duels against transition-heavy opponents. In both settings, a healthy Konaté is a plug and play fit.

Availability is the one asterisk that clubs have to price in. He has had stop-start spells due to muscular issues earlier in his Liverpool tenure. The counterpoint is that he logged significant minutes last season, part of a title-winning campaign, and performed at a standard that kept him on the radar of elite clubs. That blend of profile and contract situation is why this has become one of the defining transfer storylines of August. 

Final Thoughts

Liverpool’s message is direct. Sign the new contract in the coming days or face a sale while the market is still open. Real Madrid’s position is opportunistic. Monitor the stalemate and strike when the numbers tilt in their favor, whether now for a modest fee or next summer on a free. The next week or two should force clarity, not least because Liverpool are advancing center back targets that align with Slot’s plan and reflect the reality that the club cannot let another star asset run down his deal. 

For all parties, the cleanest solution is a renewal that rewards a defender entering his best years and gives Slot the platform he wants. If Konaté’s ambition is to make Madrid his next step, the cleanest solution is a sale that lets Liverpool rebuild on their timeline and terms. The clock is ticking, and this time Liverpool intend to control it. 

This article first appeared on Total Apex Sports and was syndicated with permission.

More must-reads:

Customize Your Newsletter

Yardbarker +

Get the latest news and rumors, customized to your favorite sports and teams. Emailed daily. Always free!