Nottingham Forest retain firm interest in Garner despite his January contract extension

Garner’s first senior England cap has only widened the pool of clubs taking notice

Everton’s ability to keep him long-term depends on what they build around him this summer

The contract extension was the right move. Nobody is arguing otherwise. But a piece of paper only tells part of the story.

James Garner signed a new deal at Everton in January, committing to the club until 2030. Four and a half years. David Moyes was effusive. Garner himself talked about wanting to be here for a long time. It felt, for once, like Everton had got ahead of a situation rather than behind it.

Then the international break happened, Garner earned his first senior England cap, and the usual suspects started circling again.

Nottingham Forest’s interest (again) has been confirmed by Mick Brown, the former West Ham scout, speaking to . Brown was candid about why.

Forest tracked Garner for months hoping to sign him on a free. That plan is dead. But the admiration remains, and Brown’s reading of the contract extension is instructive — he sees it as a tactical move to ensure a fee rather than a declaration of permanent intent. Whether or not that is entirely fair, it is the kind of interpretation that keeps a story alive.

Beyond Forest, Manchester United have continued to scout Garner despite his January extension, according to TEAMtalk. The interest from multiple directions reflects what Everton already know — that they have one of the most complete midfielders outside the top six, and the rest of the Premier League has noticed.

Why Everton’s strongest argument for keeping Garner has nothing to do with his contract

The contract means Everton are in a strong position. A bid would need to be significant — most estimates put the threshold somewhere north of £35m — before it would warrant serious consideration. Everton have no plans to sell and Moyes views Garner as central to what he is building. All of that is true and all of it matters.

But contracts, as Evertonians know better than most, do not always mean what they appear to mean.

Garner has been outstanding. Thirty-four starts last season, three goals, six assists, now recognised at full international level. The best players attract attention; that is simply the reality. What determines whether he stays is not the length of his contract but the ambition of the project around him.

What Everton’s 2026 summer transfer window must deliver to keep Garner at Hill Dickinson Stadium

If this summer delivers real, credible signings that suggest Everton are genuinely moving forward, Garner will not be looking for the exit. A player of his intelligence and commitment to the club — born in Birkenhead, with Evertonian family members, who signed that extension when he did not have to — is not going anywhere if the evidence around him suggests progress.

If it delivers another window of hesitation and compromise, no piece of paper changes the conversation that follows. The contract bought Everton time and leverage. What they do with both over the next eight weeks is the real story.

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