Bayern Munich Secures Harry Kane Future, Olise Not for Sale
Bayern Munich are already plotting the next chapter of Harry Kane’s time in Bavaria – and slamming the door on any club eyeing Michael Olise.
Karl-Heinz Rummenigge has confirmed the German champions will open formal contract talks with Kane once the season is over. The England captain, 32, is tied to Bayern until 2027, but the club want his long‑term future nailed down well before that deal enters its final stretch.
“Getting Harry Kane to Munich was an important coup in the history of the club,” Rummenigge told t-online, underlining just how central the striker has become.
Kane had a release clause available, but chose not to use it and has made clear he intends to stay in Munich. As agreed, Bayern’s sporting leadership will sit down with him after the campaign to discuss an extension.
While Bayern prepare to reward their No 9, they are flatly refusing to even listen when it comes to their No 10-style winger.
Olise, in electric form during a season in which Bayern are chasing a treble, has drawn serious attention from the Premier League. Liverpool, searching Europe for a potential long-term successor to Mohamed Salah, are among the clubs tracking the Frenchman.
They can stop looking at Munich.
Rummenigge’s stance on the former Crystal Palace star could hardly be clearer: there is no bid big enough. He hailed Olise as “a wonderful player”, praising not only his almost magical influence on the pitch but also his quiet, media-shy personality – a combination he considers rare in the modern game.
To explain Bayern’s position, Rummenigge reached back to 2009 and an enormous offer from Chelsea for Franck Ribéry, one that would have set a new world transfer record. He recalled taking that proposal to then CFO Karl Hopfner and Uli Hoeneß, and the trio spending two hours wrestling with the decision. Out of that meeting came a guiding principle: Bayern would no longer sell any player they would truly miss on the pitch.
That unwritten rule, Rummenigge stressed, still governs the club today. Olise firmly belongs in that category. For him, there is “no price tag” that would even make Bayern hesitate.
The message is echoed at the very top. CEO Max Eberl has already brushed off the idea that an extraordinary offer could test Bayern’s resolve. Olise is under contract until 2029 and has produced the numbers to match the hype this season, with 19 goals and 26 assists driving Bayern’s campaign and turning him into one of the most coveted attacking talents in Europe.
Coveted or not, he is going nowhere.
With the hierarchy aligned – Kane to be tied down, Olise ring‑fenced – Bayern’s rivals will have to redraw their transfer plans and look elsewhere for a marquee forward.
For now, both players have a different stage in mind. Kane and Olise are set to lead Bayern’s charge in Paris on Tuesday night, when they face PSG in the first leg of a Champions League semi-final that could define this era in Munich.




