Arsenal learns asking price for Manchester United superstar Marcus Rashford

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Manchester United have slapped a £40 million price tag on Marcus Rashford, and Arsenal appears to be among the clubs paying close attention. The valuation comes after Barcelona, who hosted Rashford on a season-long loan, declined to activate a £26 million purchase option, essentially telling United the player wasn’t worth that price on their terms.

The numbers behind Rashford’s availability

Here’s the thing about the £40 million figure: it reportedly aligns with a secret release clause embedded in Rashford’s contract. United appear to be pricing Rashford at exactly the threshold where they’d lose control of the deal anyway, signaling they’d rather manage the exit on their own terms than have a club trigger the clause and bypass negotiations entirely.

The bigger number looming over this deal isn’t the transfer fee. It’s Rashford’s reported weekly wages of £325,000. That’s roughly £17 million per year, a figure that puts him among the highest-paid players in English football. For any club considering a move, the transfer fee is just the cover charge. The real cost is the multi-year salary commitment that comes with it.

United, for their part, seem motivated to move Rashford on regardless. The club is looking to refresh its squad ahead of the upcoming season, and shedding £325,000 per week from the wage bill would create significant financial headroom for reinvestment.

Arsenal’s interest and the competition

Arsenal have been repeatedly linked with Rashford in media speculation this summer, though no formal bid or official confirmation of interest has surfaced. The Gunners’ involvement at this stage appears to be more monitoring than pursuing.

They’re not alone in watching the situation. Tottenham and Newcastle have also been connected to Rashford, creating a dynamic where multiple Premier League clubs could end up competing for his signature. That’s useful for United, who need at least two interested parties to avoid being dragged into a one-on-one negotiation where the buyer holds all the leverage.

For Arsenal specifically, the wage demands alone would make Rashford one of the highest earners at the Emirates, and Arteta’s squad has thrived partly because there isn’t a massive disparity between top earners and the rest of the group.

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