Real Madrid raid the Premier League as Bernardo Silva joins Mourinho and Cucurella deal is agreed
Main stories
Real Madrid confirmed the free-transfer signing of Bernardo Silva after his Manchester City contract expired, ending a nine-year stay at the Etihad. The 31-year-old Portugal midfielder has signed a two-year deal, with the appointment of compatriot José Mourinho cited by Sky Sports and ESPN as decisive in tilting the move towards Madrid over rival interest.
Anthony Gordon completed a move from Newcastle to Barcelona, with the fee reported by ESPN and Sky Sports at around £69.3m (€70m plus add-ons) on a five-year contract. The 25-year-old England winger, who scored 17 goals across last season, is Newcastle's marquee sale of the window.
Real Madrid also reached an agreement with Chelsea for left-back Marc Cucurella, according to ESPN and Sky Sports, in a deal reported at roughly €55m plus add-ons on a six-year contract. The agreement was struck on June 14 and is expected to be formalised after Spain's World Cup run; it is agreed rather than fully completed.
Transfer and squad notes
Tottenham continued a free-agent rebuild, adding defender Marcos Senesi from Bournemouth and Andy Robertson from Liverpool, both on free transfers, per Sky Sports' window tracker.
Brentford strengthened at the back, signing centre-back Jannik Schuster from Red Bull Salzburg for a reported £16.5m.
Liverpool's senior clear-out continued: Mohamed Salah departed via mutual termination and Ibrahima Konaté left as a free agent, according to ESPN's confirmed ins-and-outs tracker.
Elliot Anderson was reported to be closing in on a move to Manchester City, per Sky Sports, though no agreement has been confirmed; treat the destination as unconfirmed until the clubs announce it.
What it means for the league
The early window has reversed the usual flow of money, with Mourinho's Real Madrid pulling two senior Premier League names — Bernardo Silva on a free and Cucurella by agreement — toward the Bernabéu. Newcastle banked a major fee for Gordon, while Tottenham leaned on the free market and Liverpool shed long-serving players. With the window open since June 15 and much of the squad pool away at the World Cup, clubs are front-loading business before the tournament's later rounds reshape valuations.