Erling Haaland’s price tag means he is an unrealistic transfer target for Bayern Munich, according the club’s chief executive Oliver Kahn.
With Bayern’s own star striker Robert Lewandowski linked with a move to Spain ahead of his contract expiring in 2023, it has been suggested that Die Roten could make another raid on rivals Dortmund, just as they did when bringing Lewandowski to the club in 2014.
Haaland has scored 18 goals in 20 Bundesliga appearances this season, 14 fewer than Lewandowski, albeit having played nine games fewer than the 33-year-old.
A host of Europe’s top clubs expected to make serious attempts to sign the Norwegian come the end of the season. However, Kahn says Bayern do not have the finances to make a deal work.
“I don’t think we would be doing our job well if we didn’t deal with a young striker,” Kahn told German TV channel Sport1.
“He’s shown his performances too, at BVB he’s an excellent striker. He’s also a very interesting player for the future.
“There is always talk of the ‘Haaland package’. [But] these are areas that are very, very far away from what we imagine [financially].”
Haaland has averaged a goal every 86.78 minutes in the Bundesliga this season, the third-best rate amongst players to have hit double figures, behind only Lewandowski (a goal every 78.22 minutes), and Bayer Leverkusen’s Patrik Schick (every 83.35 minutes).
Since making his Bundesliga debut on January 18, 2020, Haaland has scored 58 goals in 63 league games, a tally only bettered by Lewandowski’s astonishing return of 88 goals in 72 games during that time.
The 21-year-old scored twice as Marco Rose’s side hammered Wolfsburg 6-1 on Saturday, with team-mate Tom Rothe becoming the youngest player to score on their Bundesliga debut (aged 17 years and 169 days) as BVB look to deny Bayern a 10th consecutive title.