Arsenal have completed the signing of Spain international Mikel Merino from Real Sociedad.
The midfielder has signed a four-year deal at the Emirates Stadium, with the option for a further 12 months. Arsenal will pay an initial £27.4m with a further £4.2m in add-ons.
Merino becomes Arsenal’s fourth signing of the summer, following the arrivals of Tommy Setford and Riccardo Calafiori, as well as the permanent acquisition of David Raya.
Merino featured in every one of Spain’s matches as they won Euro 2024, including scoring a 119th-minute winner in the quarter-final against Germany after appearing as a substitute.
The 28-year-old’s combative playing style was a major part of his attraction to Mikel Arteta – Merino won more duels than any other player in Europe’s top-five leagues last season – along with his winning mentality.
Merino joined Real Sociedad from Newcastle six years ago and went on to make 242 appearances for the club, helping them win the Copa del Rey in 2020.
Merino, who also won European Championships with Spain’s U19s and U21s in 2015 and 2019, spent just one season at Newcastle under Rafael Benitez, starting only 14 Premier League games.
Merino came through the ranks at Osasuna before joining Borussia Dortmund in 2016, where he won the DFB-Pokal under Thomas Tuchel.
Analysis: From Shelvey back-up to Euro winner and Arsenal signing
Sky Sports’ Nick Wright:
“When I lose a duel, I am upset,” yelled a furious Mikel Arteta at his players following an FA Cup loss to Nottingham Forest in 2022. The dressing-room scene, captured in All or Nothing, has been circulating again amid Arsenal’s interest in Mikel Merino.
Arteta has of course succeeded in raising the side’s competitive standards in the intervening years. But the qualities mentioned in that explosive dressing-down at the City Ground – commitment, focus, combativeness – remain his non-negotiables.
And they are typified by Merino.
The 28-year-old, a European Championship winner with Spain this summer, specialises in winning duels. In fact, nobody even got close to his total of 326 with Real Sociedad last season.
Merino is technically sound and, standing at 6ft 2ins, continuing a theme of Arsenal signing physically imposing players, boasts formidable aerial strength as well as duel-winning ability, and should slot in on the left-hand side of Arteta’s midfield.
Where will Merino fit in?
Merino mostly featured on the left of a midfield three for Real Sociedad.
He is expected to compete for same role at Arsenal, filling the position vacated by Granit Xhaka following his departure to Bayer Leverkusen last year.