Football
Cavani is leaving Europe! He will wear the new jersey of the successful Argentine club
The former Napoli, PSG and Manchester United striker will leave European territory, as Edinson Cavani will not continue with his current employer Valencia and will move to Boca Juniors!
The former Napoli, PSG and Manchester United striker will leave European territory, as Edinson Cavani will not continue with his current employer Valencia and will move to Boca Juniors!
Cavani started his football career in his native Uruguay, but in 2007 he moved to European soil, where of course he experienced the best years of his professional football career.
Over the years he has played for several big European clubs – Napoli, PSG and Manchester United. It was from the English Premier League that the thirty-six-year-old forward left for Valencia last August, but he won’t add another season there.
As already reported by renowned journalist Fabrizio Romano, Cavani will join his future at Boca Juniors.
According to the Transfermarkt website, he has one more year left on his contract at the Spanish club, with a current market value of €3 million.
However, based on reports from the aforementioned well-known and trusted journalist, he will leave Valencia for free. The two clubs have reportedly already reached an agreement between them, with Cavani also agreeing personal terms.
The Salta native will thus certainly leave Valencia, the transfer will be officially confirmed within the next few dozen hours. According to the agreed contract, he should be in the Argentine top flight until December 2024.
Cavani at Valencia
As we wrote above, Cavani transferred to the Spanish club last August as a free agent. During that time, he played a total of 28 competitive matches for Valencia, scoring seven goals and assisting two more.
Valencia finally saved themselves in La Liga last season, but Cavani didn’t add any trophy there. His most successful engagement remains PSG, where he won six league titles and was twice the top scorer in Ligue 1.
Sources: Ligue 1, Twitter – Fabrizio Romano, Transfermarkt