Swedish striker prioritises London move as United and Juventus wait in the wings

Viktor Gyökeres has made it clear he wants to join Arsenal, despite interest from Manchester United and Juventus, with the Sporting CP striker continuing to push for a move to north London.
According to A Bola, Gyökeres has expressed a strong preference for Arsenal, and that position has effectively sidelined Manchester United’s pursuit for now. The report states United would only enter formal negotiations if Arsenal pull out of the race entirely, a scenario that is not on the table, with the Premier League runners-up preparing a fresh round of talks with Sporting next week.
Arsenal’s initial offer, a structured €55 million plus €10 million in bonuses (£54 million total), was not enough to move Sporting, who are reportedly holding out for €80 million (£67.5 million). However, the Gunners are expected to return to the table with improved terms. The Lisbon-based club have not yet received a formal bid meeting their asking price, but Jornal de Notícias reports another meeting has already been arranged between Arsenal and Sporting’s director general, Bernardo Palmeiro.

Sporting president Frederico Varandas has made it clear that he is not bound to the €100 million release clause but will not accept what he views as cut-price deals. Tensions have also escalated over a clause in Gyökeres’s contract, which would entitle his agent Hasan Cetinkaya to a 10 percent commission on any offer above €60 million, regardless of whether Sporting accept it.
That condition has hardened the club’s position, and if the clause is triggered, Sporting now threaten to revert to the €100 million release figure as the only negotiation point.
Andrea Berta, the club’s new sporting director, has been leading talks and remains in close contact with Gyökeres’s camp. The player’s desire to play in the Premier League, and specifically for Arsenal, remains central to the north London club’s confidence in reaching an agreement.

Juventus are monitoring the situation closely, while United, whose interest dates back to Rúben Amorim’s time at Sporting, are not expected to advance discussions unless Arsenal step away. Both clubs are aware of the forward’s stance and are reportedly reluctant to waste resources pursuing a player who, at present, is fully focused on a move to Arsenal.
There is cautious optimism at Arsenal that a deal can still be done. The coming week, which includes a second round of direct talks, could be decisive.