Isak trains with Sweden after record Liverpool move

World Cup - UEFA Qualifiers - Sweden Training - Boson, Lidingo, Sweden - September 2, 2025 Sweden's Alexander Isak during training Jonas Ekstromer/TT News Agency via REUTERS

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Alexander Isak was finally back on the
training pitch on Tuesday following his 125 million pounds ($168.86 million)
move to Liverpool that made him the most expensive player in Premier League
history on Monday.
Sent to train on his own by former club
Newcastle United while the uncertainty over his move to Liverpool rumbled on,
Isak smiled and laughed as he warmed up with his Sweden teammates in Stockholm
ahead of their World Cup qualifiers against Slovenia and Kosovo.
There were no signs of fatigue on Tuesday
morning, despite it being well past midnight when the white car containing the
25-year-old swept quietly into the parking garage of the team's Stockholm
hotel, bringing to an end a long day and an even longer transfer saga.
"That's what you want," fellow
striker Viktor Gyokeres, who went through a transfer tug-of-war of his own
during the summer, told reporters when asked if he was relieved that the whole
thing had been resolved and the transfer window had closed.
"It's not really something you want to
be stuck in forever, (playing) is what we all live for, and we're looking
forward to the games we have now."
Both Isak and Gyokeres, who moved from
Sporting Lisbon to Arsenal in a deal worth up to a reported 63 million
pounds, did their best to get their former clubs to grant their wishes for a
move, provoking disapproval from their former fans and accusations that players
have too much power.
"I think the clubs have the most
power," he said. "When it's a player that's not wanted at a club,
it's the total opposite. He doesn't have any power, and the club can do whatever
they want."
Sweden now have the luxury of two of the
world's best strikers as they start their World Cup qualifying campaign away to
Slovenia on Friday.
Though he declined to elaborate on how Isak
would be used, Sweden coach Jon Dahl Tomasson has said he could be a
"game-changer".
Whatever happens, Gyokeres is looking
forward to teaming up with Liverpool's new number nine again.
Both Isak and Gyokeres, who moved from
Sporting Lisbon to Arsenal in a deal worth up to a reported 63 million
pounds, did their best to get their former clubs to grant their wishes for a
move, provoking disapproval from their former fans and accusations that players
have too much power.
"I think the clubs have the most
power," he said. "When it's a player that's not wanted at a club,
it's the total opposite. He doesn't have any power, and the club can do
whatever they want."
Sweden now have the luxury of two of the
world's best strikers as they start their World Cup qualifying campaign away to
Slovenia on Friday.
Though he declined to elaborate on how Isak
would be used, Sweden coach Jon Dahl Tomasson has said he could be a
"game-changer".
Whatever happens, Gyokeres is looking forward to teaming up with Liverpool's new number nine again.
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