Arsenal Land Gyokeres After £210m Summer Spend
After years of searching for a true centre-forward, Arsenal have finally added a prolific number nine to their ranks—Viktor Gyokeres, the Swedish striker who has been scoring at a ferocious rate for Sporting.
Gyokeres, now 27, arrives at the Emirates carrying the weight of 97 goals and 26 assists from 102 matches in Portugal. He becomes the marquee name in an off-season where Mikel Arteta’s side have invested £210 million, their highest summer outlay under the Spaniard.
Joining a summer recruitment group that includes Martin Zubimendi, Christian Norgaard, Kepa Arrizabalaga, and Noni Madueke, plus Valencia centre-back Cristhian Mosquera, Gyokeres is expected to fill a void that’s lingered since Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang departed in 2022. Aubameyang was the last to notch 20 league goals in a season for the club back in 2019-20.
Kai Havertz, the top league scorer for the Gunners last term, managed just nine. Arsenal still finished just behind champions Liverpool in the table, but their reduced goal tally and Champions League semifinal exit to PSG underscore why a reliable goalscorer was crucial.
“‘The difference between Arsenal winning the league or winning these ties is just a centre-forward,’” said Micah Richards, speaking on BBC Sport last year.
Names like Ollie Watkins, Benjamin Sesko, and Alexander Isak were considered. But in the end, it’s Gyokeres who has been trusted to lead the line.
His numbers in Portugal were eye-watering. The Swede netted 39 goals in the 2024-25 Primeira Liga season, 12 of them from the penalty spot, and still outscored every other player in Europe’s top 10 leagues, even excluding spot-kicks. On top of that, he created chaos in the box, with 327 touches inside the opposition penalty area and 139 shot attempts—one every 20 minutes.
He wasn’t wasteful, either. Removing blocked and penalty shots from the data, he converted at a rate of 27.3%, ahead of the likes of Mohamed Salah (21.1%), Erling Haaland (21.6%), and Alexander Isak (26.4%). Only Nottingham Forest’s Chris Wood had a better return in England’s top flight.
Gyokeres also topped the scoring charts in the latest UEFA Nations League campaign, bagging nine for Sweden, including four in one match versus Azerbaijan.
Yet, he remains untested in Europe’s top five leagues. Born in Stockholm and once on Brighton’s books, he failed to make the grade there before growing his profile at Coventry City, where he scored 38 times over two full seasons, resulting in a move to Lisbon for £20.5 million.
The Portuguese top flight ranks just eighth globally in data from Opta, coming in behind Belgium’s Jupiler Pro League and even the English Championship.
Recent examples from Portugal show mixed results in England. Darwin Nunez struggled to replicate his form at Liverpool, but others—such as Bruno Fernandes and Ruben Dias—have thrived.
Gyokeres won’t be asked to just poach goals. With a 6ft 2in frame, strong link-up play, relentless off-ball movement and a willingness to run at defenders, he adds variety to Arteta’s attack. He’s a forward who scores and creates—an attacking profile Arsenal have lacked.
Now, expectations shift. The squad has been strengthened. The spending has been done. And after three second-place finishes in a row, Arsenal have their striker.
They’ll soon discover if he’s the one who finally ends their wait for silverware.