Cowardly Alexander Isak blows hot on Tuesday to force Liverpool move

The deteriorating relationship between Alexander Isak and Newcastle United has reached its nadir, with the Swedish striker now refusing to play for the club again in a desperate attempt to force through a move to Liverpool.
According to David Ornstein of The Athletic, Isak has made it unequivocally clear that he considers his time on Tyneside over—regardless of whether the transfer window closes without an agreement.
His outright refusal to reintegrate with the squad marks a shocking new low in what has become one of the most acrimonious transfer sagas of the summer.
Isak’s conduct over the past weeks has been nothing short of disgraceful. Skipping preseason, training alone, and now completely shutting the door on reconciliation demonstrates a staggering lack of professionalism.
This is not ambition—it is petulance. Newcastle took a £63 million gamble on him when he was an unproven talent at Real Sociedad. Eddie Howe molded him into one of the Premier League’s deadliest strikers.
The fans adored him. Yet his response? A brazen betrayal, discarding the club like a stepping stone the moment a bigger opportunity arose.
Liverpool must also shoulder some blame. Their £110 million bid falls short of Newcastle’s valuation, yet Isak’s tantrums suggest he expects the Magpies to roll over.
If the Reds truly want him, they must meet the asking price—not rely on their target to bully his current club into submission.
What makes this situation particularly galling is the sheer disrespect. Contracts are not suggestions; they are commitments. Isak signed his deal willingly, reaped the rewards of Newcastle’s faith, and now refuses to honor it.
His legacy, once that of a hero, now lies in tatters. Even if a move materializes, this episode will stain his reputation. For a player of his talent, that’s an unforced error of unforgivable proportions.
Newcastle, however, hold all the leverage. Isak has three years left on his contract. If Liverpool won’t pay up, the club can afford to bench him indefinitely. No player is bigger than the institution—a lesson Isak is learning the hard way.