Catalan summer

Rashford, Díaz, and García in focus

July 16, 2025

Flick’s vision for Barça

Hansi Flick’s first summer at Barcelona is already shaping up to be one of ambition and recalibration. The Catalans are targeting a trio of high-impact signings — Marcus Rashford, Luis Díaz, and Joan García — as they look to reshape their attack and add depth in goal. The common thread: directness, aggression, and physical presence. After a season that saw brilliance on display but a lack of consistency, Flick’s plan is to raise the floor of the team while keeping its explosive ceiling intact.

Reinventing Rashford?

After a turbulent spell at Manchester United, Marcus Rashford has found a new lease on life at Aston Villa under Unai Emery. Now 27, the England international is being courted by Barcelona — a move that both suits Flick’s vertical approach and fits the club’s economic realities. Despite playing only 1552 Premier League minutes in 2024–25, Rashford still scored 6 goals and added 3 assists in 16 starts. His underlying numbers tell a better story: 83rd percentile for key passes, 76th for non-penalty xG + xA, and 93.6th for combined expected output. Barça want a loan deal with an option to buy, and Rashford is reportedly willing to take a significant pay cut to make the move happen. His decision to only consider Barcelona puts United in a weak negotiating position — which suits the Catalans just fine.

Luis Díaz: Flick’s new wing weapon?

Luis Díaz has long been admired by Flick, and it’s no surprise Barcelona are pushing hard for the Colombian winger. With 13 goals and 5 assists in 28 league starts for Liverpool last season, Díaz adds raw pace, goals, and duel-winning ability that few in Europe can match. His percentile rankings are elite: 94th for non-penalty goals, 97th for xG + xA, and 89th for key passes. In terms of style, he’s a high-volume runner and risk-taker — 3.8 duels won and 1.5 successful dribbles per game. For comparison, that puts him between Lamine Yamal (4.6 dribbles/game) and Raphinha (1.4). Barça’s forward line, often accused of being too static without Lewandowski firing, could benefit enormously from Díaz’s chaos. The winger checks all the boxes for a worthy Nico Williams substitute, who the club were desperate to bring in this summer. The deal however, did not materialize.

Joan García: The challenger between the posts

Barcelona’s only confirmed signing so far is Joan García, the Espanyol keeper brought in to push Marc-André ter Stegen. With the German returning from a long injury layoff and Szczesny extending his contract, García offers long-term competition with upside. García led La Liga in saves last season (146), playing all 38 matches for Espanyol and helping them avoid relegation. He outperformed ter Stegen in several key areas: 87.5% save percentage (vs 85.4%), 98.1st percentile in aerial duels (vs 19.7), and 73.8th percentile in interceptions (vs 4.5). Passing remains a gap — García completes just 22.5% of long passes compared to ter Stegen’s 69.4% — but at 24, he has room to improve.

Barça’s recalibration takes shape

From Rashford’s versatility to Díaz’s dynamism and García’s growing presence, Flick’s summer wishlist highlights a pivot in Barça’s priorities: verticality over possession, physicality over finesse, thought not necessarily to rework the first team. The Catalans are chasing players who can hurt teams — with or without the ball. With more depth coming in with these potential signings, the club aims to promote competition. With a young crop of players set to take over Europe, competition within the young team will only improve Flick’s side.