Paul Pogba: Why Juventus don't have to sell to Manchester United, despite buying Gonzalo Higuain

We look at why the Serie A champions may or may not let Pogba return to Old Trafford

Mark Critchley
Wednesday 27 July 2016 14:21 BST
Comments
Higuain and Pogba may not be Juventus teammates for long
Higuain and Pogba may not be Juventus teammates for long (Getty)

Gonzalo Higuain’s £75.3m move from Napoli to Juventus, the third most expensive transfer in history, staggered some and excited others.

The logic is that, having shelled out a monumental sum on 2015/16’s Capocannoniere winner, the Serie A champions will only balance their books if they sell Paul Pogba.

That will be music to the ears of those Manchester United fans who are desperate for the latest line on this summer’s longest-running transfer saga.

Summer 2016 Transfer Window - Done deals and rumours

The question is, do Juventus really have to sell?

Why Juventus have to sell…

It makes sense financially

The most convincing argument is sometimes the simplest one.

£75.3m is a phenomenal amount of money for most clubs and even at Italy’s most successful, it is not merely a drop in the ocean.

Juventus just spent around 30 per cent of their annual turnover on Higuain. One way or another, it would make sense to get that money back.

It’s an excellent deal

Juventus have perhaps set the standard for transfer dealings among European football’s elite for several seasons now.


 Khedira is one of several recent bargain buys by Juventus 
 (Getty)

Andrea Bazargli, Sami Khedira, Patrice Evra, Andrea Pirlo, Alvaro Morata and Pogba himself have all moved to Turin as part of cut-price deals over the last few years and enjoyed success.

The opportunity to make a profit of more than £99m on the France international is not one to be sniffed at.

It could allow for more excellent deals

Comparisons have been made between Zinedine Zidane’s departure to Real Madrid in 2001; the first (and, so far, only) time that Juventus were the beneficiaries of a world record transfer fee.

With the Zidane money, Juventus bought Pavel Nedved, Lilian Thuram and Gianluigi Buffon, who has stood between i Bianconeri’s posts to this day.

Those acquisitions were the foundation of Juventus’ team for the following seasons, right up until the Calciopoli scandal. The windfall from Pogba’s sale could allow for similarly astute signings.

Why Juventus don’t have to sell…

There are other fringe players who can leave


 Zaza could be on his way out of Juventus 
 (Getty)

Simone Zaza, of stuttering penalty run-up fame, is just one of several fringe players that Juventus could allow to leave in order to recoup the money spent on Higuain.

Roberto Pereyra has been linked with Watford, Stefano Sturaro with Southampton, while Hernanes could be in line for a move to Benfica.

The sale of all four would return a sizeable chunk of Higuain’s fee and make keeping Pogba a more feasible prospect.

Pogba is settled at Juventus

For a player in the middle of a long-running, acrimonious transfer saga, Pogba has been notably composed about the whole situation.

There have been no transfer requests, no come-and-get-me pleas and the only significant comments from his camp have come from his agent, Mino Raiola.

That may be because, as suggested by Mina Rzouki on BBC Radio Five Live on Tuesday, Pogba is not desperate to leave Juventus.

Although open to United’s advances, he loves Juventus. His remarkable, yet still raw talent has been nutured with patience in Turin. He may not receive the same treatment elsewhere.

Juventus have bucketloads of ambition

At one point, it seemed as though Calciopoli and the relative weakness of Serie A would banish Juventus from European football’s top table forever.

They have, however, finally clawed their way back to elite level, and have outperformed almost every English club of a similar stature in recent seasons.

Juve want to do better still, they want to go even further. Holding firm in these negotiations and keeping Pogba would be a major statement of intent.

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in