Marcus Rashford’s first months in Barcelona have been about more than goals and assists. Since arriving on loan last summer, the England international has embraced both the sporting challenge and the social
side of life at the club, quickly becoming involved in community projects through the Barça Foundation while also carving out an important role under Hansi Flick.
Rashford has long been committed to charitable work, something he credits to his upbringing in Manchester. In a recent interview, he explained that he first got involved in social initiatives as a teenager, inspired by his mother’s habit of helping the homeless, especially around Christmas. What began locally later expanded across the UK through partnerships with organizations working with vulnerable communities. He has also focused on school meal programs, drawing on his own childhood experience, and on projects that promote reading among young people, an area he discovered relatively late himself but now considers essential.
That background made his recent visits to schools and community centers in Barcelona feel natural rather than symbolic, according the forward. He said that encouraging teammates to get involved matters to him, although he believes genuine motivation has to come from within. For him, helping others is simply normal, something he has seen his whole life.
On the pitch, the adaptation has been equally smooth. Rashford says he felt welcomed from the moment he arrived and is comfortable both in the dressing room and in the city. His focus, he insists, is not individual security but collective success. “Of course I want to stay at Barça,” he said, adding, “but the reason I work hard is to win titles with Barça.” He has also been clear that the pressure at the club is a positive force, describing it as the kind of demand he has always wanted as a player.
Those words match his impact so far. Used by Flick on the left wing and through the middle, Rashford has become a regular option in the attacking rotation. He has contributed seven goals and eleven assists across all competitions, numbers that have helped restore his standing at club level and reopen the door to the England national team ahead of next summer’s FIFA World Cup under Thomas Tuchel.
Internally, Flick’s growing influence is shaping how Barça view Rashford’s situation. According to reports, the club’s confidence in the German coach has strengthened to the point that an extension beyond his current deal is being prepared, an unusual move given Barça’s traditional caution. That stability has benefited players like Rashford, whose role is clearly defined within the system.
Barcelona hold an option to buy the forward for around 28 to 30 million euros, depending on the source, and the likelihood of triggering it has increased in recent weeks according to Mundo Deportivo. Still, patience remains the official stance. Sporting director Deco has said it is “not the moment to take any decision about Rashford’s future,” while stressing that the club is happy with his contribution.
Several factors will weigh into the final call. The club reportedly wants to see continued improvement in Rashford’s work without the ball, particularly his pressing and defensive intensity, even if there have been signs of progress. Financial considerations are just as important. Rashford would need to accept a significant salary reduction compared to what he earned at Manchester United in order for a permanent deal to fit Barça’s economic limits.
Meanwhile, his resurgence has not gone unnoticed elsewhere. Reports in France and England suggest that Paris Saint-Germain are monitoring his situation and could be prepared to offer substantially more than Barça’s option fee if he returns to the market, although questions remain about how well he would fit Luis Enrique’s demands off the ball.








