Manchester City has put a significant contract offer on the table for Rodri, the reigning Ballon d’Or winner whose current deal expires in June 2027. The two sides haven’t reached an agreement yet, and without one, the Spanish midfielder could walk away as a free agent next year.
The deal on the table
City has reportedly offered Rodri an extension that would keep him at the Etihad through 2029. The proposal has been described as “weighty.”
Reports on how close the two sides actually are vary considerably. Some sources suggest the gap between City’s offer and Rodri’s expectations remains significant. Others claim an agreement is nearly done, with the midfielder simply needing time to make his decision.
Negotiations have been ongoing since at least 2025. The fact that it’s dragged into mid-2026 without resolution tells you something about the complexity of the discussions.
Rodri won the 2024 Ballon d’Or, football’s most prestigious individual award. Adding pressure to the situation: Real Madrid’s name has surfaced intermittently as a potential suitor.
City isn’t sitting idle while the talks play out. The club has reportedly explored contingency options, including interest in Sandro Tonali, as a hedge against the possibility that Rodri’s situation doesn’t resolve favorably.
Why crypto watchers should care
City’s partnership with OKX, which has served as sleeve sponsor since 2023, is one of the highest-profile crypto sponsorship deals in global sports. Regulatory frameworks in the UK have been tightening around how crypto firms can market themselves through sports partnerships. Several deals across the Premier League have been restructured or quietly wound down as compliance requirements have evolved.
What this means for investors
The direct market impact of a single football contract negotiation on crypto prices is negligible. But the crypto industry has poured billions into sports sponsorships over the past several years. As UK regulators continue to scrutinize how crypto brands interact with sports audiences, teams like City may need to renegotiate the terms of these arrangements.
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