Marcus Rashford’s Barcelona adventure is already a rollercoaster. When he arrived on loan from Manchester United, expectations were sky-high. Instead, La Liga has exposed a worrying gap: too timid, too inaccurate, not the spark Barça hoped for. Camp Nou patience? Already wearing thin.
At 28 in October, Rashford doesn’t exactly scream “long-term project.” His deal includes a €30m buy option, but both Laporta and Deco had their doubts from day one. Nico Williams and Luis Díaz were higher on their wishlist. Hansi Flick pushed for Rashford, convinced he could revive him.
And then came the Newcastle game. Two goals, a Champions League statement, and Flick’s faith suddenly looks less misplaced. “I begged Deco: find me a player like Rashford,” the coach admitted. “He’s fantastic, his finishing is top. I told him: I need you in my team.”
Barça thinking of paying to cut loan shot
Still, the numbers don’t lie: Barça could cut the loan short in January for €5m if Rashford slips back into anonymity. For now, the message from Barcelona’s board is clear — not ready to sell just yet, but the clock is ticking. Rashford must turn flashes into consistency, or this story ends as quickly as it began.
Rashford’s Barça career is on a knife’s edge: savior one night, scapegoat the next.
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