
Khephren Thuram has publicly backed the idea of Karim Benzema joining Juventus, calling the Ballon d’Or winner capable of making a difference anywhere. With the Frenchman’s Saudi contract running out and Juve still hunting for firepower, the timing is curious.
Khephren Thuram knows a thing or two about Juventus DNA. His father Lilian wore the black and white stripes from 2001 to 2006, winning two Scudetti and reaching a Champions League final. So when the younger Thuram tells La Gazzetta dello Sport that Karim Benzema would “make the difference at Juventus,” it feels like more than idle chat.
What Thuram actually said
In an interview published today, the French midfielder was asked about veteran players still capable of performing at the highest level. His answer was unequivocal.
— TheFJEN View on X
“Football is changing and now champions play until 40,” Thuram said. “Benzema is 38, but he knows how to score and he’s won the Ballon d’Or. He would make the difference at Juventus, in Serie A and in every competition in the world. The same goes for Kanté.”
This isn’t just teammate loyalty talking. Thuram has carved out a reputation for measured words since arriving from Nice. The fact he’s putting Benzema’s name out there publicly, unprompted, feels deliberate.
Juventus’ striker problem
Here’s where it gets interesting. Juve spent last summer loading up on attacking options. Juventus signed Lois Openda from RB Leipzig and brought in Jonathan David on a free from LOSC Lille. On paper, that’s two proven goalscorers who should have solved Thiago Motta’s goalscoring issues. In practice? Neither has clicked.
Openda has looked uncomfortable in Luciano Spalletti’s system since the Italian replaced Motta in October. David works hard but lacks the physical presence to lead the line alone. Dusan Vlahovic, still technically on the books, is sidelined until March with an adductor injury and widely expected to leave when his contract expires.
Spalletti himself acknowledged the problem after today’s 3-0 win over Napoli. “David is fine for scoring goals,” he told DAZN, “but when you look further, you also need someone who battles physically with the centre-back.”
The club’s first-choice solution was Youssef En-Nesyri, but according to director Giorgio Chiellini, the Moroccan has rejected Juve’s loan approach, preferring a permanent move. Jean-Philippe Mateta was explored before that. Neither panned out.
Benzema’s situation in Saudi Arabia
Benzema’s Al-Ittihad contract runs out in June 2026. He’s been coy about his future—deliberately so, one suspects. “I’m completely focused on football,” he told French media in December. “Some people are better placed to talk about all that.”
Al-Ittihad sporting director Ramon Planes insists Benzema wants to stay, telling ABC that the Frenchman “is keen to continue in Saudi Arabia.” But Planes would say that. The reality is more complicated. Benzema has scored 16 goals in 20 appearances this season, proving he can still perform. The question is whether he wants to prove it somewhere that matters more.
A return to European football has long felt like unfinished business. Lyon president John Textor publicly expressed interest last year. Real Madrid reportedly has a standing offer for an ambassadorial role. The options are there if Benzema wants them.
Would it actually work?
Let’s be honest: the financial obstacles are enormous. Benzema earns somewhere between €50 million and €100 million annually at Al-Ittihad, depending on which reports you believe. Even a fraction of that would make him Juventus’ highest-paid player by a distance. The Bianconeri aren’t exactly swimming in cash after years of bloated wage bills and FFP scrutiny.
Then there’s the tactical fit. Spalletti’s preferred 3-4-2-1 requires a striker who can hold the ball up and link play—precisely what David struggles with. Benzema does that instinctively. At 38, he’s lost some pace, but his positioning, first touch, and vision remain elite. He’d slot in as a pivot rather than a target man, bringing Kenan Yildiz and David into play behind him.
But this all assumes Benzema wants to leave guaranteed money for a relegation-scarred club rebuilding its identity. That’s a big assumption.
The Thuram connection matters
There’s something symbolic about Khephren floating Benzema’s name. His father joined Juve alongside Gianluigi Buffon in 2001 for a then-record fee for a defender. Lilian Thuram-Ulien—to use his full name—became part of one of Europe’s most formidable backlines alongside Fabio Cannavaro and Gianluca Zambrotta.
Khephren grew up around Juventus. He remembers visiting Turin as a child, meeting players like Alessandro Del Piero at his father’s home. When he says Benzema would fit at the club, he’s not just being polite. He’s speaking from a family understanding of what it means to wear that shirt.
Is this enough to make a deal happen? Probably not. Benzema’s wages, age, and apparent contentment in Jeddah make a January move virtually impossible. A summer free transfer is marginally more plausible, though still unlikely.
But Thuram’s comments do one important thing: they plant the seed publicly. If Benzema is watching—and in football, everyone is always watching—he now knows there’s a welcome mat waiting in Turin.
Whether he chooses to walk through that door is another matter entirely.

Khephren Thuram has publicly backed the idea of Karim Benzema joining Juventus, calling the Ballon d’Or winner capable of making a difference anywhere. With the Frenchman’s Saudi contract running out and Juve still hunting for firepower, the timing is curious.
Khephren Thuram knows a thing or two about Juventus DNA. His father Lilian wore the black and white stripes from 2001 to 2006, winning two Scudetti and reaching a Champions League final. So when the younger Thuram tells La Gazzetta dello Sport that Karim Benzema would “make the difference at Juventus,” it feels like more than idle chat.
What Thuram actually said
In an interview published today, the French midfielder was asked about veteran players still capable of performing at the highest level. His answer was unequivocal.
— TheFJEN View on X
“Football is changing and now champions play until 40,” Thuram said. “Benzema is 38, but he knows how to score and he’s won the Ballon d’Or. He would make the difference at Juventus, in Serie A and in every competition in the world. The same goes for Kanté.”
This isn’t just teammate loyalty talking. Thuram has carved out a reputation for measured words since arriving from Nice. The fact he’s putting Benzema’s name out there publicly, unprompted, feels deliberate.
Juventus’ striker problem
Here’s where it gets interesting. Juve spent last summer loading up on attacking options. Juventus signed Lois Openda from RB Leipzig and brought in Jonathan David on a free from LOSC Lille. On paper, that’s two proven goalscorers who should have solved Thiago Motta’s goalscoring issues. In practice? Neither has clicked.
Openda has looked uncomfortable in Luciano Spalletti’s system since the Italian replaced Motta in October. David works hard but lacks the physical presence to lead the line alone. Dusan Vlahovic, still technically on the books, is sidelined until March with an adductor injury and widely expected to leave when his contract expires.
Spalletti himself acknowledged the problem after today’s 3-0 win over Napoli. “David is fine for scoring goals,” he told DAZN, “but when you look further, you also need someone who battles physically with the centre-back.”
The club’s first-choice solution was Youssef En-Nesyri, but according to director Giorgio Chiellini, the Moroccan has rejected Juve’s loan approach, preferring a permanent move. Jean-Philippe Mateta was explored before that. Neither panned out.
Benzema’s situation in Saudi Arabia
Benzema’s Al-Ittihad contract runs out in June 2026. He’s been coy about his future—deliberately so, one suspects. “I’m completely focused on football,” he told French media in December. “Some people are better placed to talk about all that.”
Al-Ittihad sporting director Ramon Planes insists Benzema wants to stay, telling ABC that the Frenchman “is keen to continue in Saudi Arabia.” But Planes would say that. The reality is more complicated. Benzema has scored 16 goals in 20 appearances this season, proving he can still perform. The question is whether he wants to prove it somewhere that matters more.
A return to European football has long felt like unfinished business. Lyon president John Textor publicly expressed interest last year. Real Madrid reportedly has a standing offer for an ambassadorial role. The options are there if Benzema wants them.
Would it actually work?
Let’s be honest: the financial obstacles are enormous. Benzema earns somewhere between €50 million and €100 million annually at Al-Ittihad, depending on which reports you believe. Even a fraction of that would make him Juventus’ highest-paid player by a distance. The Bianconeri aren’t exactly swimming in cash after years of bloated wage bills and FFP scrutiny.
Then there’s the tactical fit. Spalletti’s preferred 3-4-2-1 requires a striker who can hold the ball up and link play—precisely what David struggles with. Benzema does that instinctively. At 38, he’s lost some pace, but his positioning, first touch, and vision remain elite. He’d slot in as a pivot rather than a target man, bringing Kenan Yildiz and David into play behind him.
But this all assumes Benzema wants to leave guaranteed money for a relegation-scarred club rebuilding its identity. That’s a big assumption.
The Thuram connection matters
There’s something symbolic about Khephren floating Benzema’s name. His father joined Juve alongside Gianluigi Buffon in 2001 for a then-record fee for a defender. Lilian Thuram-Ulien—to use his full name—became part of one of Europe’s most formidable backlines alongside Fabio Cannavaro and Gianluca Zambrotta.
Khephren grew up around Juventus. He remembers visiting Turin as a child, meeting players like Alessandro Del Piero at his father’s home. When he says Benzema would fit at the club, he’s not just being polite. He’s speaking from a family understanding of what it means to wear that shirt.
Is this enough to make a deal happen? Probably not. Benzema’s wages, age, and apparent contentment in Jeddah make a January move virtually impossible. A summer free transfer is marginally more plausible, though still unlikely.
But Thuram’s comments do one important thing: they plant the seed publicly. If Benzema is watching—and in football, everyone is always watching—he now knows there’s a welcome mat waiting in Turin.
Whether he chooses to walk through that door is another matter entirely.































