- Everton have reportedly been told £30m could secure Hayden Hackney.
- Boro valuation would make him one of the club’s biggest buys in recent years.
- The Friedkin Group’s response may reveal the scale of their summer plans.
Everton supporters have spent the last few years hearing the same message.
Be patient.
Whether because of PSR concerns, ownership uncertainty or the need to balance the books, major spending has rarely felt straightforward at Goodison Park and now the Hill Dickinson.
That is why the latest update surrounding Hayden Hackney feels more significant than a typical transfer rumour.
According to Football Insider, Middlesbrough could be willing to accept an offer in the region of £30m for the midfielder.
The figure itself is what makes the story interesting.
Not because Hackney lacks the quality to justify serious interest, but because agreeing to a deal at that level would tell Everton supporters far more about The Friedkin Group’s plans than it would about the player himself.
The fee is the real story
Hackney has developed into one of the Championship’s standout midfielders.
At 23, he fits the profile of player many Everton supporters have been calling for. Young enough to improve, experienced enough to contribute immediately and capable of becoming part of the club’s medium-term future.
The question is whether Everton are prepared to pay the premium that comes with securing that profile.
For much of the last four years, the club’s transfer activity has been shaped by financial limitations. Recruitment has often focused on value opportunities, loan deals or short-term solutions.
A £30m investment would represent something very different.
It would suggest Everton are willing to spend big when they identify a player they believe can become a key part of David Moyes’ plans.
That distinction matters.
The best-run clubs do not necessarily buy the cheapest players available. They identify targets early, decide their worth and act decisively when the opportunity arises.
If Everton view Hackney as a future cornerstone of their midfield, paying closer to Middlesbrough’s valuation could ultimately be viewed as a sign of conviction rather than extravagance.
Friedkin’s first major statement?
Supporters are still trying to understand exactly what Friedkin ownership will mean for Everton’s future.
The early signs have been encouraging. Moyes has restored stability, optimism has returned and attention is turning towards building a squad capable of progressing rather than merely surviving.
That is why Hackney’s situation feels like an intriguing test case.
Everton have several positions requiring attention this summer and every pound spent will need to be justified.
Yet there is also a wider message at stake.
Meeting a valuation close to £30m for one of the Championship’s most highly-rated midfielders would signal a willingness to invest in the future rather than simply patching holes in the present.
Hackney alone would not transform Everton.
However, a deal of that magnitude would demonstrate that The Friedkin Group are prepared to back Moyes when the recruitment department identifies a player capable of shaping the club’s next chapter.
For that reason, the most important question may not be whether Everton want Hayden Hackney.
It may be how far their new owners are willing to go to get him.








