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Barcelona poised to revisit Lucas Beraldo move: left‑footed anchor tailor‑made for Flick

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12 Oct, 2025 07:12 GMT, US

Spanish reports indicate that last summer PSG offered Lucas Beraldo to Barcelona, with initial reluctance from sporting director Deco and coach Hansi Flick. Since then, the Brazilian left-footed centre-back has settled at PSG, showing calm in build-up and versatility in a high line. With Barça still seeking a progressive, left-sided defender to complement Araújo, Koundé and Cubarsí, indications now point to the Catalans revisiting the opportunity. Structurally, Beraldo ticks the boxes for Flick’s positional play: clean passing lanes, early switches and aggressive rest-defense. If conditions align, this is a move that makes both football and financial sense for Barcelona in the next window.

Barcelona poised to revisit Lucas Beraldo move: left‑footed anchor tailor‑made for Flick

According to coverage in Spain, PSG made Lucas Beraldo available to Barcelona in the previous summer window, but the proposal did not fully convince key decision-makers at the time. The landscape has evolved: Hansi Flick has refined Barcelona’s build-up structure and the need for a left-footed centre-back to balance the first phase remains a priority. Meanwhile, Beraldo’s integration at Paris under a possession-based, high-line approach has strengthened his case.

With market dynamics shifting and Barcelona exploring cost-effective targets who fit the model, the Brazilian is again being discussed internally as a strong tactical match if financial terms can be structured sensibly.

❗️Last summer, PSG's Beraldo was offered to Barcelona, but he doesn't convince Deco or Hansi Flick. — @mundodeportivo

@BarcaUniversal

Impact Analysis

Beraldo’s attraction for Barcelona is framed by three pillars: footedness, progression, and defensive timing in a high line. As a natural left-footer, he opens the field on the outside in the first pass, reducing the reliance on a right-footed CB playing across body. That small structural change accelerates exits to full-backs and wingers, allows the left 8 to position higher, and improves the angles for goalkeeper distribution. In Flick’s system—where rest-defense is built on compact distances and immediate pressure after loss—a centre-back who is calm under pressure and can pass vertically through the first line is critical.

From a squad-building perspective, Beraldo would complement Ronald Araújo’s aerial dominance and Jules Koundé’s hybrid full-back tendencies, while easing the development burden on Pau Cubarsí by providing a profile closer to his, but with different physical traits. Financially, Beraldo remains within a tier that Barcelona can approach via amortized payments, potential add-ons, or a loan-plus-obligation structure—all aligned with La Liga’s spending controls. PSG, for their part, may consider a sale only if they can replace seamlessly, but the player’s age, salary band, and stylistic fit make him a rare, realistic target compared to pricier Premier League options.

Reaction

Fan discourse is split. A portion of Barcelona supporters remain skeptical, questioning Beraldo’s ceiling and top-level readiness—one sentiment effectively asking “who is Beraldo?” reflects unfamiliarity outside Ligue 1 followers. Another strand bluntly labels him below Barça’s standard, arguing that the club should prioritize a more established Premier League defender, with Marc Guéhi frequently cited as a ‘plug-and-play’ option. There’s also a faction that simply says the player does not convince them—mirroring early internal doubts—and prefers to allocate a limited budget to midfield or full-back depth.

Interestingly, the conversation on broader social channels quickly veers into superstar-led debates (Ronaldo/Messi records, Mbappé’s streak), diluting the transfer discussion but revealing a familiar pattern: algorithm-driven threads often turn into tribal cross-talk. Among those focused on tactics, the tone is more measured—advocates point to Beraldo’s left foot, composure, and PSG schooling as indicators he would thrive under Flick. Overall, the mood is cautiously optimistic among data-inclined fans, while casual timelines skew dismissive or distracted.

Social reactions

Lol Beraldo is washed

Drø regen 🌴 (@dr0yszn)

Who is Beraldo. I mean what is Beraldo??

Cinna Kyd🇨🇲💙❤️🚀 (@cinna_kyd)

He doesn’t convince me either Gueilhi will be perfect

Skillie (@KwabenaKissi28)

Prediction

Two clear scenarios emerge. Scenario A (most likely): Barcelona pursue Beraldo aggressively for the January window via a structured deal—loan with a conditional obligation or staggered payments—keeping within La Liga cost controls. This path hinges on PSG’s willingness to negotiate if they secure defensive cover. The sporting logic is strong: a left-footed CB would immediately smooth exits and stabilize rest-defense in knockout matches. Expect intensified scouting through December, with signals from the player’s camp pivotal.

Scenario B: PSG hold firm mid-season, pushing talks to the summer. Barcelona then revisit with more flexibility, potentially leveraging outgoing sales and salary space to present a cleaner offer. If the operation is delayed, Barça maintain a shortlist including a Premier League option and one Bundesliga profile. However, Beraldo remains the most system-specific fit—young, technically secure, tactically aligned—making him the favorite if finances cooperate. Probability snapshot: 55% January structured deal, 30% summer revisit, 15% pivot to an alternative target.

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Conclusion

Strip away the noise and a simple truth remains: Barcelona need a left-footed centre-back who can pass under pressure and defend space behind an advanced line—Beraldo checks those boxes. Early skepticism from decision-makers is not unusual; elite recruitment is iterative and context-dependent. Since the initial proposal, the player has accrued more high-level minutes and refined precisely the attributes Flick values in first-phase construction and transition control.

If PSG open the door to a sensible structure, Barcelona should move decisively. The fit is tactical, the age curve is ideal, and the cost—properly amortized—can be balanced against competitive upside in La Liga and Europe. Expect Barça to re-engage: the data argues for it, the squad profile needs it, and the timing, ahead of a decisive second half of the season, could be perfect.

David Wilson

David Wilson

Sports Analyst

A KOL and data analysis expert known for providing reliable and insightful assessments.

Comments (10)

  • 12 October, 2025

    Drø regen 🌴

    Lol Beraldo is washed

  • 12 October, 2025

    Cinna Kyd🇨🇲💙❤️🚀

    Who is Beraldo. I mean what is Beraldo??

  • 12 October, 2025

    Donald

    Beraldo No o

  • 12 October, 2025

    Skillie

    He doesn’t convince me either Gueilhi will be perfect

  • 12 October, 2025

    NANA

    Nice one

  • 11 October, 2025

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  • 11 October, 2025

    KOMBO™

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  • 11 October, 2025

    Berneese

    Hi😘

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    Kylian Mbappé has reached a streak of scoring in 10 consecutive games. The longest record belongs to Lionel Messi who scored in 21 consecutive games in 2012/13! ✨🇦🇷

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