Liverpool have tabled a $33 million bid for Bologna center-back Sam Beukema and are conducting parallel discussions on Borussia Dortmund midfielder Julian Brandt and Benfica striker Gonçalo Ramos as the January window enters its final 96 hours. The Beukema offer represents Arne Slot's first defensive-profile pursuit since the club walked away from negotiations with Marc Guehi in August over Crystal Palace's $75 million ask.
Bologia rejected the opening bid within six hours, according to Italian sources, and are holding out for $44 million — the release clause Liverpool's data team flagged when Beukema signed from AZ Alkmaar for $15 million in July 2023. The 26-year-old Dutchman has started 22 consecutive Serie A matches and ranks second among European center-backs in progressive carries per 90 this season. Bologna's negotiating position is straightforward: pay the clause or wait until summer when Juventus and Tottenham re-enter. Liverpool's counter-argument hinges on Bologna's fourth-place position slipping — they're winless in five — and the club's historic willingness to cash out before value peaks.
The Brandt inquiry is more textured. Dortmund are willing to move the 28-year-old for $22 million as they clear space for Bayer Leverkusen's Florian Wirtz pursuit, but Brandt's $180,000-per-week salary sits $40,000 above Liverpool's current midfield ceiling set by Alexis Mac Allister's summer extension. Slot worked with Brandt during their overlapping AZ tenure and rates his half-space movement, but FSG's wage discipline has held firm since the Coutinho sale model reset the club's pay bands in 2018. The deal only advances if Brandt accepts a shorter-term structure — three years instead of four — that keeps annual salary growth predictable.
Ramos is the least probable of the trio. Benfica are asking $88 million after PSG's $77 million bid collapsed in December when Luis Enrique shifted focus to Milan's Rafael Leão. Liverpool's interest appears tactical: Michael Edwards is known to test market pricing on second-tier striker targets to establish benchmarks before committing to tier-one pursuits in summer windows. Darwin Núñez's agent has been in sporadic contact with Saudi clubs since November, and Liverpool's data models suggest his sell-on value peaks this summer at age 25. The Ramos discussions give Edwards a live comparable if Sporting's Viktor Gyökeres or Napoli's Victor Osimhen become available in June.
The three-target structure matters because it signals Liverpool's resource-allocation philosophy shifting back toward defensive spine investment after two summers of midfield overhaul. The club spent $189 million on Mac Allister, Dominik Szoboszlai, Wataru Endō, and Ryan Gravenberch between May 2023 and August 2024. Virgil van Dijk turns 34 in July; Ibrahima Konaté has missed 41 matches in three seasons. Beukema's age profile — entering prime years — and left-foot dominance fit Slot's build-out patterns better than late-window panic buys.
What matters for front-office operators: Liverpool are running dual timelines. The January moves are system-fit additions, not marquee restructuring. The real capital deployment comes in June when Edwards has a full window to execute on striker replacement and potentially a Van Dijk succession plan if the Dutchman doesn't extend past 2025. Sponsors watching activation calendars should note Liverpool's social engagement typically jumps 18-22% in windows where defensive signings arrive, per historical platform data — fans treat backline reinforcements as title-push validation.
Watch Bologna's next two fixtures before the window closes: Monza away on February 1, then Hellas Verona at home February 8. If they drop points in both, the Beukema asking price softens. Brandt's decision window closes by Tuesday evening if Liverpool want him registered for the weekend. And Ramos discussions will resurface in May when Benfica's Champions League status clarifies and Edwards begins his summer striker matrix in earnest.
The cleanest outcome is Beukema at $38-40 million with performance adds, Brandt on a condensed wage structure if he prioritizes playing time over guarantees, and Ramos filed as June intelligence. Liverpool haven't completed a January defensive signing above $10 million since Van Dijk in 2018. Breaking that pattern now tells you how Slot views the Konaté injury risk through the run-in.