Ndiaye, his agent, and the summer that could define Everton’s ambitions

Gary GowersGary Gowers· Updated
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Ndiaye, his agent, and the summer that could define Everton’s ambitions
  • Football Insider say Ndiaye’s agent is already speaking to interested clubs
  • That moves this well beyond a contract standoff — this is an exit push
  • And the World Cup stage he’s about to perform on won’t help Everton one bit

There is a version of this Iliman Ndiaye story that Everton have been comfortable telling. He is contracted until 2029. They have priced him at £69m. No bids have been accepted, because no bids have been submitted. Everything is fine.

Football Insider have just put a dent in that.

Their report that Ndiaye could push for an exit if a top Premier League club comes calling is not, on its own, a surprise. What matters is the detail sitting behind it – that his agent is already believed to be in conversation with interested clubs. That doesn’t sound like a player sitting back and seeing how the summer unfolds. They appear to have an end goal in sight.

There is a world of difference between those two things.

When an agent starts working the phones, the clock is already ticking

Everton have handled the public-facing side of this well. The £69m asking price was clever – a number designed to deter casual interest and force any suitors to be serious. The relaxed messaging from the club has been right in terms of tone. And contractually, they hold every card. No release clause. No immediate deadline. And no obligation to sell.

But agents do not wait for the club to catch up. When a representative begins sounding out clubs — testing wage structures, logging genuine interest, quietly building a picture of what is available — they are not waiting for permission. They are creating options. By the time a formal bid arrives, the player’s head is usually already out the door. That is just how these things go.

Ndiaye’s World Cup timing makes Everton’s position more fragile, not less

The World Cup started yesterday. Ndiaye will represent Senegal over the coming weeks in front of the largest audience in football. Every good performance, every dropped shoulder, lands directly in front of clubs who are already interested and an agent who is already busy.

Everton paid £15 million for him two summers ago. That looks like extraordinary business now, which is precisely why keeping him matters so much — and why losing him would sting on every level. The money, yes. But more than that, the signal it sends about where this club is in the football food chain.

The contract standoff was one thing. An agent already working the phones is something else. Everton need to be clear-eyed about which story they’re in.

Gary is editor for ReadMotorsport, ReadNorwich, and ReadEverton. He has many years experience of sports writing behind him after deciding (belatedly) that the world of accountancy wasn't for him. His work has been featured on (among many others) BBC Sport and The Metro. He has written on many sports, but considers himself an expert in football and F1. When not writing and editing he likes to go to the cinema and sip a lovely cold pint of Guinness (not always at the same time).

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