The clock is ticking on Julian Alvarez's future at Atletico Madrid. Once Argentina's World Cup campaign concludes โ whether that comes via England in the semi-final or after the final itself โ the Argentine forward's situation will demand immediate resolution from Los Rojiblancos.
Atletico have drawn a firm line: they will not sell Alvarez to LaLiga rivals Barcelona. They've also been stung by Real Madrid's reported approach for the diminutive attacker. Yet the player himself has made his desire to leave abundantly clear, with Barcelona standing as his preferred destination.
The manner in which Alvarez has handled the situation hasn't sat well with Diego Simeone or the club's hierarchy, but that's become a secondary concern. The fundamental question now is whether Atletico should retain a player whose heart lies elsewhere or accept the inevitable and let him depart.
Barcelona president Joan Laporta has added further pressure by indicating that the Catalan club's offer won't remain open indefinitely, creating a genuine standoff between all parties involved.
Arsenal Enter the Frame
Should Atletico accept that moving Alvarez on is necessary โ given an otherwise untenable situation โ they would naturally prefer selling him outside Spain's top flight. Arsenal could prove to be the ideal solution.
Reports indicate that the Gunners, who have maintained a relatively long-term interest in the Argentine, are willing to explore using Viktor Gyokeres as a makeweight in any potential deal.
The Swedish international finished as Arsenal's leading scorer during the 2025/26 campaign, netting 21 goals in all competitions โ at least 10 more than any teammate. However, his overall contribution beyond goals has repeatedly fallen short of expectations under Mikel Arteta.
Gyokeres' Troubling All-Round Numbers
Among Arsenal's regular starters, Gyokeres attempted far fewer passes than anyone else, managing just 486. For context, even players who missed time through injury or limited selection surpassed him โ Mikel Merino registered 731 passes and Gabriel Martinelli recorded 613.
His pass completion rate of 63.79% was the worst in Arsenal's entire first-team squad, offering no reprieve in this area of his game.
While only four Arsenal players contested more one-on-one duels than Gyokeres' 351, his success rate of 33.62% was again the lowest of any player in the squad.
Aerial duels painted an equally unflattering picture. Of 138 attempted โ only Martin Zubimendi, Gabriel Magalhaes, and William Saliba tried more โ Gyokeres won just 44. The 94 aerial duels lost was a figure no teammate could match.
A Telling Lack of Defensive Effort
His tackle success rate of 62.5%, the third best in the squad, might initially suggest decent work rate off the ball. The reality is less flattering: Gyokeres attempted just eight tackles across the entire 2025/26 season, winning five. Only Ethan Nwaneri matched that meagre output, though the youngster had the mitigation of playing just 515 minutes compared to Gyokeres' 3,479.
The suggestion that Gyokeres has functioned as a goalscorer and little else would be a fair assessment of his contributions last season.
Negotiations Remain in Their Infancy
Given that Simeone has previously worked with Alexander Sorloth at Atletico, it remains unclear whether the club would consider replacing the Norwegian with Gyokeres or deploying the Swede alongside him in Alvarez's vacated role.
Significant discussion is still needed before either club can advance negotiations, which are understood to be at the earliest possible stage. There is also no indication yet that Gyokeres himself would welcome a move to the Spanish capital โ though, as most players recognise, once a club begins entertaining offers and discussions about you, the message is clear.
Alvarez's work rate far exceeds that of Gyokeres, and while signing the Argentine would mean Arsenal shifting their attacking approach, his movement, desire, and end product may align far more closely with what the North Londoners demand from their main striker.