Nicolas Jackson Completes Dramatic Deadline Day Move To Bayern Munich
Bayern Munich aims to strengthen its offense by loaning Senegalese forward Nicolas Jackson from Chelsea, adding depth to a squad heavily reliant on Harry Kane, sources said.
- On Monday, the German transfer window closed without immediate confirmation that Bayern Munich signed Nicolas Jackson on loan from Chelsea Football Club.
- Facing differing demands, Bayern Munich pushed for a loan while Chelsea Football Club reportedly wanted a permanent transfer, aligning with Uli Hoeness's advice last month.
- Injury interrupted negotiations as an injury to Liam Delap on Saturday halted proceedings, and reports said Chelsea Football Club asked Nicolas Jackson to return to London while holding for a permanent move.
- Jackson would add depth to an attack reliant on Harry Kane, reflecting Uli Hoeness's loan-first stance that shaped Bayern's approach last month.
- Leverkusen also retooled its squad amid summer turnover, illustrating league-wide upheaval as Bundesliga clubs continued transfer activity on Saturday.
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There has never been such a loan business before: Bavaria pays 16.5 million to Chelsea – first of all. The circumstances of the deal that Eberl had to enter show that Munich can hardly sustain its self-image.
He hasn't even been on the pitch yet, but there's already a lot of talk about a new Bayern star. Nicolas Jackson's loan is going to be expensive.
It is a poker with many twists. The change of Senegalese attacker Nicolas Jackson from Chelsea FC to Bayern seems to fail on the last push at the veto of his club. But after the two days of confusion, both clubs finally agree.


Nicolas Jackson wraps up deadline day move from Chelsea to Bayern Munich
The prolonged switch was finally resolved on Monday night.
Shortly before the expiry of the changeover period and after a transfer saga full of twists FC Bayern München has now committed striker Nicolas Jackson of Chelsea. The German football record champion lends the 24-year-olds until the end of this season, the Munich announced on late Monday evening. The loan fee should amount to 16.5 million euros, as several media reported in agreement. Whether a purchase option exists, the club did not inform. "N…
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