Arsenal are demanding up to £20m for Gabriel Jesus, and that figure is the clearest sign this is about squad planning as much as any individual sale. Jesus has 14 Premier League appearances, 3 goals and a 6.59 rating in 2025/26. That is enough involvement to matter, but not enough to make a £20m valuation look inflated.
Why Arsenal's price makes sense
The BBC Sport gossip column says Arsenal are asking for up to £20m for the Brazil striker this summer. It also says the club have conducted extensive preparation for a deal to sign Morgan Rogers, which is the part that tells you where the summer is headed.
Jesus has not been a peripheral figure, but the numbers are fairly plain. Fourteen league appearances and three goals suggest a useful player, not a player whose value is protected by elite output. If Arsenal do move him on, they are not selling from a position of panic. They are setting a price that fits his season and their wider rebuild.
The same gossip round-up underlines that this is part of a broader market shuffle, not a one-off story. Arsenal look active, and Jesus' valuation is one of the cleaner indicators of that.
What else the gossip column says
The other main football line from the BBC is about RB Leipzig and Yan Diomande. Leipzig are adamant the 19-year-old winger is going nowhere this summer after qualifying for next season's Champions League. They finished third in the Bundesliga with 65 points, which helps explain why they are in no mood to sell.
There is also Liverpool-related movement elsewhere in the round-up. The BBC says Liverpool want to keep Alisson for another season, leaving a summer move to Juventus in doubt. It also reports that Liverpool and Inter Milan officials have met over a potential move to Italy for Curtis Jones. Those are not done deals, just the kind of summer chatter that usually hangs around until clubs start making decisions.
For Arsenal, the headline remains the same. Jesus at £20m looks like a player whose sale would fit a wider reshuffle, not a striker being forced out because he has become unusable. If the club do push ahead with other attacking business, the valuation starts to look more like a market choice than a sporting emergency.
Written by Jack Mercer with AI-assisted research, cross-checked against 2 outlets. How we work →


