Spanish outlet Fichajes recently reported that Real Madrid could be open to selling centre-back Dean Huijsen for approximately £54m, just £4m above the fee they paid Bournemouth last summer. The report, which CaughtOffside picked up, arrives with plenty of intrigue, given that Arsenal transfer news linked the club to Huijsen barely twelve months ago.
Real Madrid May Cash In On Huijsen, but Do Arsenal Actually Need Him?
Fabrizio Romano confirmed last summer that Liverpool, Arsenal, and Chelsea all pushed hard to sign the Dutch-born Spain international before Madrid swept in and triggered his £50m release clause. Huijsen, who was born in Amsterdam but grew up in Marbella and committed his international future to Spain, chose the Bernabéu over every Premier League option, telling reporters he wanted to join from the moment Madrid called.
Since signing a five-year contract and arriving in the Spanish capital, the 20-year-old has made 27 appearances across all competitions, bagging one goal and two assists according to Real Madrid’s official website. However, he also accumulated five yellow cards and one red card in La Liga, which shows he still has a reckless streak at the elite level.
Fichajes doesn’t name any specific clubs pursuing him yet, but because of those strong Premier League connections from a year ago, it is hard to believe Arsenal transfer news won’t eventually circle back to Huijsen if Real Madrid genuinely lower the asking price.
The timing matters here. Xabi Alonso took Madrid through a period of managerial transition and squad reshaping, and Huijsen arrived in the middle of that turbulence. The fact that the centre-back, who stands 1.96m tall, had a slight wobble in his debut season at one of world football’s biggest clubs is hardly a reason to panic and sell.
Does The Huijsen Situation Genuinely Concern Arsenal Transfer News Planners?
Honestly, Arsenal do not need Huijsen right now, and the evidence from this season proves that. Arteta currently fields Saliba, Gabriel, Piero Hincapié, Cristhian Mosquera, and versatile operators like Timber and Calafiori across a well-stocked defensive unit. The Gunners sit five points clear atop the Premier League, and their backline, despite injuries to several players at various points, has held together well enough to sustain a serious title charge, which shows just how deep the squad is.










