According to The Athletic, 19-year-old Ivorian winger Yan-Diomande has become a transfer focus this summer. Liverpool's €100 million bid was rejected by RB Leipzig, whose asking price far exceeds that figure. His value has skyrocketed in one year, with his outstanding performance helping the team qualify for the Champions League. Several major clubs are interested, and transfer fees for top young stars in today's football market generally need to exceed €100 million.

Yan-Diomande is undoubtedly the primary focus of the summer transfer window.
Paris Saint-Germain remains interested in acquiring the Ivorian winger from RB Leipzig. Diomande is currently competing in the World Cup and will represent his country against Germany, but PSG has yet to make an official offer. At this stage, Liverpool is the most active club pursuing the 19-year-old.
The Athletic reported on Thursday that the Premier League giant has submitted a second offer to Leipzig, totaling close to €100 million (equivalent to £86.8 million, $115 million). However, Leipzig has clearly stated that this offer does not meet the club's asking price. Outsiders expect Liverpool not to give up the pursuit. The following details the complete ins and outs of this transfer.
Diomande's career has been on a rapid upward trajectory. In just two years, he progressed from the United Super League, to Leganés in Spain, to the Bundesliga, and now has received a nearly €100 million offer from Liverpool—a remarkable leap in his career.
Football Star: Yan-Diomande (Ivory Coast)
His speed is incredible, making him one of the hottest young prospects in global football.
This transfer saga traces back to January, when major clubs inquired with Leipzig about Diomande's availability. Only a handful of top teams did not extend an offer.
In addition to the clubs currently vying for his signature, Manchester United and Tottenham Hotspur made exploratory inquiries, but neither submitted an official offer. The €100+ million asking price deterred many teams, and Leipzig was firm in their stance, refusing to sell in the winter window.
There has been considerable controversy surrounding Leipzig's asking price, with some finding it outrageous. Last summer, Leipzig spent only €20 million to sign him from Leganés, and Diomande had played fewer than 50 first-team league matches, never appearing in the Champions League or any European competition.
However, Leipzig's pricing logic is understandable.
Last summer, RB Leipzig acquired Diomande from Leganés for €20 million. At that time, The Athletic interviewed several internal club staff anonymously, who revealed that the team had a clear plan to push his market value beyond €100 million within two years. Many insiders corroborated this internal valuation target. No one expected Diomande's growth to far exceed expectations, reaching the €100 million standard in just one year.
Early in the Bundesliga season, Diomande quickly adapted to the league's rhythm, making an immediate impact on the field and capable of changing the course of games with his individual ability. By mid-season, he delivered match-winning performances in tough fixtures against Stuttgart and Eintracht Frankfurt, establishing himself among the key players who can influence outcomes.
His outstanding performance prompted major clubs to inquire about a transfer during the winter window, a situation Leipzig had anticipated. The club's sporting director Marcel Schäfer openly stated in an interview that the core reason the club immediately activated Diomande's release clause at Leganés was that management had predicted major clubs would compete for him later. By securing the deal quickly, they had a chance to sign this young talent.
The team's scouting data observed Diomande for only half a Spanish season before confidently predicting his future value would skyrocket; other major clubs preferred a longer observation period.
Now Leipzig's decisive move has paid off.
Over the past six months, the club's valuation of Diomande has steadily increased. In January, Leipzig's stance was that they would not sell, regardless of price.
In the 2024-25 season, Leipzig finished seventh in the Bundesliga, their worst record since joining in 2016, missing European competition and its associated revenue.
The financial deficit forced the team to initiate a major clearout, with Benjamin Sesko, Loïs Openda, and Xavi Simons all departing. In the summer of 2025, the team began a major rebuild with the core goal of returning to the Champions League. This is why Diomande was unsellable in the winter window—he was essential to that push.
This season, Leipzig secured third place in the Bundesliga, behind Bayern and Dortmund, earning a Champions League spot. The financial pressure eased, and the team gained more leverage in transfer negotiations. This is one core reason why Leipzig's asking price rose from €100 million to nearly €130 million.
Another crucial reason is Diomande's explosive performance this season.
By the end of his first complete Bundesliga season, he had recorded 20 direct goal contributions (12 goals, 8 assists). For a non-Bayern player, this is top-tier, and he was also named the Bundesliga's best young player of the season.
His increased value is only natural. The massive spending by Premier League clubs in recent years has made nine-figure transfer fees commonplace. Diomande will not turn 20 until November, and his World Cup performance further confirms he is already a world-class young talent. Liverpool has completed several major signings in recent years: Ekitiké for €95 million, Florian Wirtz for €125 million, and Alexander Isak for €145 million.
This 19-year-old Leipzig winger possesses exceptional dribbling talent and can break through tight defenses with ease.
When asked about rumors that Real Madrid was interested in French forward Michael Olise, Bayern honorary president Uli Hoeneß firmly stated that even if offered €200 million, Bayern would never let go of this key player.
There have always been controversial voices in football: some question whether players' transfer values match their on-field abilities, some believe the Premier League's participation record inflates market prices excessively, and others debate how to price young players' unfulfilled potential. However, in today's transfer environment of constant overvaluation and expanding bubbles, these controversies seem insignificant.
Transfer market conditions have fundamentally changed. If the target is a top young star under contract with extremely high potential, the minimum threshold for transfer fees has long crossed the €100 million mark.
Therefore, any club eager to sign the exceptionally talented, fast, and skilled winger Yan-Diomande must be prepared to offer a transfer bid far exceeding €100 million to have any chance of convincing RB Leipzig to complete the deal.
