Robert Lewandowski has entered that intimate territory where legendary goalscorers choose how they want the last chapter to be written. His contract expires at the end of 2025-26 – June 2026 – and today, as La Posesión has learned, his compass points first to Barcelona. He and his family feel at home. So much so, that the idea of moving to an exotic league in exchange for a huge check, through Arabia, does not move the needle. Her priority is to continue living here. And, if possible, to continue playing here.
The paradox is that the calendar is running and Barça have not yet made a decision. In the offices two photographs coexist. The first: a striker who responds. He has had “five little moments” as a starter – dosed management, they say – and has seven goals, the team’s top scorer ahead of profiles such as Fermín, Ferran Torres or Marco Urgancho. The second: a salary plan that, if Lewandowski were to leave in June, would open up space to incorporate a ’9’ for the future. Football and economics, you know, with the calculator always at hand.
There is the twist that many did not expect: retirement is no longer a taboo. If he can’t continue at Barça and no external proposal fulfills him – in sporting and family matters – hanging up his boots is a real scenario. It is not a pose or a campaign; It is the conclusion of those who measure wear and tear honestly and weigh legacy, body and ambition.
