Manchester United have placed a £40 million valuation on Marcus Rashford, with sources confirming to ESPN that the club will not sanction a move to either Liverpool or Manchester City — even at that price. This Marcus Rashford transfer saga has taken another sharp turn after Barcelona opted against triggering their €30 million purchase option to make his loan deal permanent.
Marcus Rashford Transfer: Barcelona Walk Away, United Hold the Cards
Rashford, 28, delivered the goods in Spain. Fourteen goals and fourteen assists across 49 appearances for Hansi Flick’s Barcelona side — numbers that helped fire the Catalans to the LaLiga title. Not bad by anyone’s measure. Yet, as so often in football, money talks louder than performances. Barcelona’s £69.3 million swoop for Newcastle United’s Anthony Gordon earlier this month effectively killed any hopes Rashford had of making his Camp Nou stay permanent. The door is shut. He heads back to Old Trafford.
Right now, the Manchester-born forward is in the United States with England’s squad, preparing for their World Cup opener against Croatia in Dallas on Wednesday. Club business will wait. But it won’t wait forever.
Liverpool and City Ruled Out — The Rivals Clause That Changes Everything
Here’s where it gets properly interesting. Sources indicate that Rashford himself would rather run down his £350,000-a-week contract — which has two years remaining — than engineer a move to another Premier League club. United, for their part, are willing to let him go domestically, but there is one hard line they will not cross: Liverpool and Manchester City are completely off the table, regardless of the £40 million fee.
That stance carries serious historical weight. No player has moved directly between United and Liverpool since the 1960s, and the Mancunian divide has its own precedent — Carlos Tevez remains the last major name to cross it, leaving Old Trafford for the Etihad back in 2009. United aren’t about to rewrite that history for anyone, not even at £40 million.
Consequently, Rashford’s future feels oddly suspended. A player with over 400 senior appearances for the club, a man who made his debut under Louis van Gaal in February 2016, now waiting to see which door actually opens this summer. The next few weeks, once England’s World Cup campaign concludes, will be decisive.

























