Signing Sébastien Haller is Good Business for West Ham – Even at £45m

 West Ham unveil their new record signing Sébastien Haller. (West Ham United via Getty Images)
West Ham unveil their new record signing Sébastien Haller. (West Ham United via Getty Images)
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Signing Sébastien Haller is Good Business for West Ham – Even at £45m

 West Ham unveil their new record signing Sébastien Haller. (West Ham United via Getty Images)
West Ham unveil their new record signing Sébastien Haller. (West Ham United via Getty Images)

So, it’s official. West Ham have broken their transfer record for the third consecutive summer with the arrival of French striker Sébastien Haller from Eintracht Frankfurt. The 25-year-old has the task of replacing Marko Arnautovic, another forward who was once their most expensive signing.

Haller was apparently not the club’s first choice – Maxi Gómez chose Valencia over West Ham so he could play in the Champions League – but missing out on the Uruguayan forward may prove a blessing. Haller is nearly three years older than Gómez, but he is a much more complete striker and is better equipped to make an immediate impact.

In fact, West Ham have pulled off a real coup. Following on from the signing of attacking midfielder Pablo Fornals from Villarreal, it is another significant statement of intent from a club whose target should be to narrow the gap to the top six. The same clubs have monopolized the top six places in the league for the last three seasons, but that could be about to change.

The battle for the European places should be fierce this season. Wolves, Everton and Leicester City separated West Ham from Manchester United in sixth last season. However, signing Haller for £45m and Fornals for £24m shows Manuel Pellegrini’s side mean business – and mean business is exactly what their new targetman should prove to be. We ranked him as the fifth most effective player in the Bundesliga last season – and for good reasons.

At 6ft 3in, he is a real handful and he used his physicality to bully defenders in the Bundesliga last season. More than that, though, Haller is a highly intelligent and unselfish focal point to the attack, capable of bringing the best from those around him. He formed a great relationship last season with Luka Jovic, whose fine form for Eintracht Frankfurt earned him a move to Real Madrid this summer. Of the 17 league goals the young Serbian scored last season, 14 came in the 15 matches he played alongside Haller.

Haller was also prolific last season. As well as scoring 15 league goals himself – from a modest 2,181 minutes of action (the equivalent of 24 games) – the Frenchman laid on nine assists (only five players in the whole division set up more goals). Not only will Haller score goals for West Ham but he will also set them up for anyone willing to offer support runs. Andriy Yarmolenko and Manuel Lanzini missed large parts of last season due to injury, but Haller’s arrival should help them return to form.

A man mountain in the air, he won 8.3 aerial duels per 90 minutes in the league last season – comfortably the most in the Bundesliga – at a success rate of 59 percent. Flick-ons and lay-offs are his forte. There are similarities to be drawn with Olivier Giroud in the way he wins headers and links up play around the box.

Crucially for West Ham, Haller is a more clinical finisher than Giroud. Last season he averaged a modest 2.2 shots per 90 minutes (Giroud’s average was 3.5 and Jovic’s was even higher at 3.9). Haller certainly isn’t one to attempt pot shots. As such his conversion rate was excellent; he scored with more than a quarter of his shots (28 percent) and missed the target with just 16 of his 54 attempts (29 percent). He attempted just two shots from outside the box, showing a willingness to bring teammates into play rather than waste possession and go for glory himself.

Haller is also the epitome of a team player who leads from the front. It should take no time for his new fanbase to fall in love with him. No Bundesliga striker made more tackles per 90 minutes than Haller last season and in that sense he is a real departure from his predecessor Arnautovic. While the Austrian had no shortage of quality, his attitude was questionable to say the least. In Haller, West Ham have not only signed an upgrade in terms of teamwork and application, but a striker capable of turning the club into genuine contenders for a European finish.

The Guardian Sport



Mastantuono’s Move to Real Madrid Was Premature, Says River Boss Gallardo

Franco Mastantuono #30 of CA River Plate looks on during the FIFA Club World Cup 2025 group E match between CA River Plate and Urawa Red Diamonds at Lumen Field on June 17, 2025 in Seattle, Washington. )Getty Images/AFP)
Franco Mastantuono #30 of CA River Plate looks on during the FIFA Club World Cup 2025 group E match between CA River Plate and Urawa Red Diamonds at Lumen Field on June 17, 2025 in Seattle, Washington. )Getty Images/AFP)
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Mastantuono’s Move to Real Madrid Was Premature, Says River Boss Gallardo

Franco Mastantuono #30 of CA River Plate looks on during the FIFA Club World Cup 2025 group E match between CA River Plate and Urawa Red Diamonds at Lumen Field on June 17, 2025 in Seattle, Washington. )Getty Images/AFP)
Franco Mastantuono #30 of CA River Plate looks on during the FIFA Club World Cup 2025 group E match between CA River Plate and Urawa Red Diamonds at Lumen Field on June 17, 2025 in Seattle, Washington. )Getty Images/AFP)

Franco Mastantuono's transfer to Real Madrid came too soon, while the 17-year-old was still developing and pivotal to River Plate's future, said coach Marcelo Gallardo ahead of the Argentine team's Club World Cup match against Monterrey.

Gallardo acknowledged Mastantuono's departure will leave a void in his squad after the Spanish giants completed a deal worth around $45 million with River for the teenager earlier this month.

For the Argentine manager, the midfielder still needed more time to grow at the club, but he acknowledged the early transfer as an understandable part of modern football.

"It's natural, we train players for the world. Everything is happening earlier, young players are leaving faster, and I understand that those are the rules of the game," Gallardo told ESPN on Friday.

"Our sporting project for the year was with him. We have to readjust, because there are players who, by their nature, are difficult to replace.

"We knew that Mastantuono was going to leave at some point, but fans don't enjoy it that way. The market dictates the timing."

Gallardo said he's urging Mastantuono to stay focused on the tournament despite the noise around his move.

"All I want is for him to play naturally, to try to forget about everything that's going on, which is very difficult," he said.

"I don't talk to him about where he's going to live or anything like that. I want him to play, which is what he knows how to do."

River began their Club World Cup campaign with a 3-1 win over Japan's Urawa Red Diamonds, a result Gallardo described as key to easing early nerves.

"We are happy to be able to be in a competition like this, a new one," he said. "I'm excited about how it's going, it was essential to start with a win and get over the nerves.

"Now we're preparing for the match in Monterrey, which is a different level of difficulty."

Following Saturday's game against the Mexican team in Pasadena, River will face Champions League runners-up Inter Milan on Wednesday.