Yan Diomande’s backstory is already well told. The Ivorian winger achieved a quantum leap in football, moving from a Daytona Beach youth academy and the United Premier Soccer League, to the Spanish second division, and on to RB Leipzig in the German Bundesliga, all within the space of a year.Between the lines of his story are all sorts of anecdotes — of unsuccessful trials in the Premier League and Scottish Premiership, of agents declining the opportunity to represent him and MLS clubs failing to notice him.Liverpool lead a list of top clubs who would like to sign the 19-year-old forward this summer. Diomande is now worth an ungodly amount of money and yet, in that early stretch of his career, when the Champions League he has just qualified for and the Bundesliga Rookie of the Season trophy he has just won must have felt a million miles away, he seems to have suffered from others’ lack of faith.That was never the case in Leipzig. Diomande moved to Leganes in late 2024, debuting for the club’s second team (in the second division) before making a handful of appearances for the senior side in La Liga. That was enough time for his measurables to ping on the Red Bull radar and earn a “sign him, sign him now” recommendation from Leipzig’s data scouts.The Athletic spoke to Marcel Schaefer, the club’s sporting director, early in 2026. He was frank about Diomande, admitting that there was no real negotiation with Leganes in the summer of 2025. The winger had a release clause of €20m (£17m; $23m) in his contract and the choice was either to pay it or to see Diomande sign elsewhere and play for someone else.They paid it.Yan Diomande in action for Leganes (Aitor Alcalde/Getty Images)Internally, there was a lot of excitement. Several Leipzig employees The Athletic spoke to last summer highlighted Diomande’s potential. They predicted that he would take the Bundesliga by storm and, as a result, be worth €100m (£86m; $116m) within the next few years.At the time, those comments drew a raised eyebrow. It’s not unusual for clubs to give the hard sell, particularly when their mission statement involves identifying talent early before sending it on, to the summit of the game. It’s their job to build reputations and hype everybody they sign, and to talk effusively of brilliant performances in training sessions and inexhaustible work ethic.It happens all the time and, more often than not, it’s nothing but bluster and hype. Diomande was not. Summer training camps attract all sorts of people and many of those who flowed through or around Leipzig’s five days in Switzerland last July were just as impressed.Inevitably, he broke into the mainstream in October, following a destructive performance against Augsburg. He scored one goal after knifing through a flimsy defence, before creating two others in a 6-0 victory, generating momentum that he would ride — more or less — for the rest of the season.He was player-of-the-match against Stuttgart a week later. Seven days on, he twisted Hoffenheim into a big knot down in Sinsheim. Before Christmas, he scored his first senior hat-trick in another 6-0 destruction, this time of Eintracht Frankfurt, in a game he dominated and for which Bild, Germany’s biggest tabloid, awarded him a Note 1 — a perfect match rating.When the Winterpause arrived and Diomande headed off to Morocco for the Africa Cup of Nations, he was already a star. In fact, it was a measure of his progress in his first season that by the time the January transfer market opened, every major club in Europe had become interested and several had even enquired about signing him there and then.Ultimately, they were put off by Leipzig’s demands — €100m or forget it — and all decided to keep their powder dry until summer.By the time the season ended, Diomande had recorded 12 goals and 8 assists., but that raw data hardly describes the essence of the player. Diomande is two footed. He can beat a defender to the left or the right, and with technique or raw thrust. He can shoot (and score) with placement or power, and can plot his way to goal or otherwise force his way there.Yan Diomande is part of Ivory Coast’s World Cup squad (Franck Fife/AFP via Getty Images)In time, he will surely become one of those players who poses a threat any time he touches the ball. What must be terrifying for any defender facing him, particularly one-on-one, is just how quickly Diomande is capable of changing speed. He was measured this season as the fifth-quickest player in the Bundesliga — above Karim Adeyemi, Said El Mala and Bazoumana Toure — but he has the kind of acceleration that allows him to jump up through the gears, even from a standing start, making it extremely difficult to subdue him when he has the ball.So, a flash of lightning. As it turns out, those members of staff at Leipzig were conservative in their estimates. Rather than becoming a €100m player within two years, Yan Diomande might well have already reached that level.May 23, 2026Connections: Sports EditionSpot the pattern. Connect the termsFind the hidden link between sports terms