Real Madrid are pushing to sign Rodri Hernández in what would be one of the most significant midfield transfers in years – and for the first time, the door is genuinely open. Pep Guardiola’s confirmed departure from Manchester City at the end of the 2025/26 season has dissolved the personal loyalty that kept this move firmly in the realm of fantasy, and reports from Spain suggest the Ballon d’Or winner is now actively warming to the idea of a return to his home city. With Toni Kroos retired and Madrid’s midfield still searching for an answer, the timing feels less like coincidence and more like inevitability.
A Window Opens – and Madrid Are Already Listening
Reports from Spain, led by Marca, have framed Guardiola’s exit as the single most significant shift in this saga in years. For as long as the Catalan manager was at the Etihad, Rodri’s future was effectively settled – Guardiola did not just manage him, he built the most dominant Manchester City side in history around him. That bond made any conversation about leaving feel almost disloyal. Now, with the mentor leaving, the calculus has changed entirely.
Rodri’s own words have done nothing to cool the speculation. Speaking to Spanish radio station Onda Cero, the 29-year-old was candid: “I would like to return, yes… You can’t turn down the best clubs in the world.” He also addressed his Atlético Madrid past directly, stating that a prior connection there “would not prevent me from playing for Real Madrid.” That is not a throwaway comment – that is a player leaving a door wide open while standing right in front of it.
Both Rodri and Guardiola are contracted to City until 2027, but with Guardiola’s exit now confirmed, the question of whether Rodri follows suit into a new chapter is accelerating fast. The summer window will answer whether City move to extend his deal or face a very expensive standoff.
The Kroos Blueprint – and Why Rodri Fits It Perfectly
The retirement of Toni Kroos left a gap in Real Madrid’s midfield that no one at the club has genuinely filled. Kroos was irreplaceable not because of raw athleticism but because of what he did to a game’s tempo – the way he slowed it, controlled it, and made every move feel pre-ordained. Madrid’s subsequent midfield transfer strategy has acknowledged this void without fully solving it.
Rodri is the closest thing world football has to that profile right now. A screening pivot who sits deep, protects the defensive structure, dictates tempo, and reads the game two or three moves ahead – he is not a player who runs games through volume or energy, but through intelligence and positioning. The best in the world at controlling pace and winning the ball through anticipation rather than aggression. That is exactly the profile Madrid have been missing.
Federico Valverde and Aurélien Tchouaméni offer genuine quality and physical intensity, but Madrid’s midfield has shown its structural fragility repeatedly – the defensive balance is wrong, the build-up lacks fluidity, and there is no natural anchor to organise it all. Rodri, standing 6’3″ and combining that physical presence with elite technical awareness, would fix multiple problems in a single signing. Standing at the Bernabéu level of ambition, that is not a luxury – it is a necessity.
The £100m Question – and Whether City Will Sell
Nobody at Manchester City is rolling out the welcome mat for this conversation. Rodri is under contract until 2027, his value is north of £100m given both his status and his age profile, and City have no sporting obligation to sell a player widely considered one of the two or three best midfielders on the planet. The reported details of Rodri’s openness to a Madrid move will not have gone unnoticed at the Etihad, but acknowledgement is a long way from acceptance.
There is also a medical dimension that Madrid cannot ignore. Rodri missed the majority of last season with a serious knee injury – a factor that will complicate any due diligence process and give City additional leverage if they choose to use it. A player of his importance, returning from significant rehabilitation, represents a calculated risk at that price point. Madrid will have to decide how much risk they are prepared to absorb.
The Market Consequence – Who Else Is Watching
It will not have escaped the attention of Bayern Munich and Paris Saint-Germain that one of world football’s elite midfielders is entering a period of genuine uncertainty over his future. Both clubs carry the financial firepower to threaten any deal Madrid construct, and neither would hesitate to position themselves as an alternative destination if City decide to sell but Madrid balk at the fee. This is not a transfer that will sit quietly on the back pages for long.
The Verdict – What Happens Next
What is certain is that the landscape has shifted irreversibly. Guardiola’s departure removes the one personal factor that made this deal feel impossible, Rodri’s own comments have put his intentions on record, and Real Madrid’s midfield need is not going away. What is not yet resolved is whether City accept the situation or dig in for a contractual standoff that could define their entire summer.
This is not a story that resolves itself quietly.






























