Yan Diomande wants Paris Saint Germain, but RB Leipzig are still refusing to sell him this summer. Liverpool have already put in a £67 million (€80m) bid plus significant add-ons, while Manchester United and Manchester City are still hovering in the background. Diomande himself has said, "I expect to leave the club," and Fabrizio Romano has reported that he wants PSG.
Leipzig's stance
Leipzig's line has not moved much at all. The club want €120 million to part ways with Diomande and are still running a no-sale strategy this summer. They have also proposed a deal in which PSG buy him now and immediately loan him back for the 2026/27 campaign.
That arrangement tells you where Leipzig stand. They are not treating this like a sale they need to finish quickly, and they are not under any pressure to accept Liverpool's offer just because it arrived early.
PSG's pull and Liverpool's problem
Romano said, "There is a clear decision from Yan Diomande. He wants to join Paris Saint-Germain." He also added that Liverpool believed they had a chance through their project, financial package and long-term vision, but PSG's latest approach proved decisive.
That still leaves a live race, because Romano also said you should never say never about Liverpool re-entering it. PSG are ahead on the player's preference, though, and Leipzig's valuation makes the English clubs' task harder rather than easier.
The numbers help explain why the interest is so strong. Diomande scored 13 goals and added 10 assists in 36 appearances last season, production that has made him one of the more interesting young attacking names on the market.
PSG's own wing situation is part of the story too. TEAMtalk say Bradley Barcola finished last season as PSG's fourth-choice wide forward behind Ousmane Dembele, Khvicha Kvaratskhelia and Desire Doue, and that Barcola has paused talks over a contract extension. The same report says Maghnes Akliouche's expected arrival from Monaco would only add more competition.
For now, the cleanest read is that Diomande wants PSG, Leipzig want their price, and Liverpool, United and City are still trying to find a way through. The next move sits with the clubs, not the player, and Leipzig's €120 million demand is the number that will decide whether this turns into a sale or another season in Germany.
Written by Sam Whitfield with AI-assisted research, cross-checked against 4 outlets. How we work →




