A Tempting Offer Hard to Refuse
Diaz wasn’t a player Liverpool intended to sell this window. However, when Bayern Munich kept increasing their offer—eventually reaching £70 million—FSG chose to accept. That’s nearly double the £37 million Liverpool paid to sign him from Porto in 2022, making it a highly profitable move.

More importantly, Diaz’s demand for a wage increase—exceeding £10 million per year—clashed with FSG’s strict wage policy. Since 2023, Diaz and his representatives had repeatedly pushed for a contract extension, but Liverpool remained firm with their salary cap. This stance had previously led to the departures of key players like Sadio Mane, Roberto Firmino, and Georginio Wijnaldum.

Michael Edwards, FSG’s CEO of Football, is known for his principle of “no emotional influence in financial decisions.” In the eyes of Edwards and new Sporting Director Richard Hughes, Diaz had reached the final peak of his career. Selling him when his market value was at its highest was a way for Liverpool to refresh the squad without disrupting the wage structure.
A Profitable Policy

This strategy has historically worked well for Liverpool: selling Philippe Coutinho to Barcelona for £142 million or profiting from players no longer in the plans like Jordon Ibe, Mamadou Sakho, Danny Ings, and Rhian Brewster. Thanks to these deals, the club has consistently reinvested in the squad while maintaining financial balance—a crucial aspect in an era of strict financial regulations in football.
The Lesson of Mane
Sadio Mane is the prime example of Liverpool’s transfer discipline. Despite being a legend at Anfield, he was sold to Bayern Munich at age 30. His £20 million annual wage no longer aligned with expected performance levels. A year later, Bayern sold him at a loss to the Saudi Pro League—proof Liverpool sold at the right time.

Diaz, while energetic and committed, also follows this logic. He will be over 30 when his Bayern contract ends, while Liverpool retain financial flexibility to invest in younger, long-term targets.
Risks and Replacements
Of course, selling Diaz comes with risks. He was a crucial winger, bringing pace and unpredictability. Fans will quickly judge the success of this deal based on the quality of his replacement.

Liverpool have already signed Florian Wirtz in the summer of 2025—likely a move to replace Diaz.
Smart Business, Proven Track Record
Still, history suggests Liverpool tend to get these decisions right. From Coutinho to Mane, high-profile exits never weakened the team—instead, they allowed smart restructuring.

Today, Liverpool aren’t just a footballing success story, but a model of financial governance in modern football. If there’s ever a new chapter in “The Art of Negotiation,” figures like Michael Edwards, Richard Hughes, and Chairman Mike Gordon deserve to be featured as transfer market masterminds.
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