Being a Newcastle United fan has never been easy. We are dreamers by nature, optimists by necessity, and experts in emotional rollercoasters. This summer feels like all three rolled into one.
Twelve months ago, we watched Alexander Isak leave for Liverpool.
It was a gut punch. He wasn’t just our best striker; he was the player that made you believe anything was possible when he picked up the ball. Every defence feared him. Every fan loved him. Losing him hurt, but many of us begrudgingly came to accept the argument that the money could be reinvested and that the club was thinking long-term.
Now, a year later, we’re saying goodbye to Sandro Tonali.
That somehow feels different. Tonali wasn’t just a great footballer; he embodied everything Newcastle fans admire. He worked relentlessly, played with passion, and seemed to genuinely understand what it meant to wear the black and white shirt. Seeing him go leaves a hole that will be difficult to fill, both on and off the pitch. We shared his emotional journey, his ban, his amazing season, his life.
And yet, despite the sadness, there is still hope. And hope is what Newcastle fans do best.
The reality is that Newcastle remains in a far stronger position than it was a few years ago. We have ambitious ownership, a world-class atmosphere, plans afoot for a new or revamped stadium, Champions League aspirations, and a manager who has won silverware and repeatedly improved players and exceeded expectations.
There is excitement about what might come next.
The money generated from major sales gives Newcastle the ability to reshape the squad. Fans are already dreaming about the next generation of stars. Every rumour sparks debate. Every social media update sends supporters searching for flight trackers and transfer clues. The possibility of uncovering the next Isak or the next Tonali is enough to keep optimism alive.
There is also renewed faith in the recruitment strategy.
For too long Newcastle United have been associated with panic buys and short-term fixes. That is no longer the case. The club have put in place a management structure that handles transfers correctly, that plans and scouts. Fans want players who fit the culture, the intensity and the ambition of the club. They want young hungry footballers who see Newcastle as a destination, not a stepping stone.
But alongside all that sits a growing fear.
The biggest fear is simple: are Newcastle United returning to a club that develops elite players for others?
When Alexander Isak leaves for Liverpool and Sandro Tonali departs for Spurs a year later, supporters inevitably start asking difficult questions. Can Newcastle truly compete with the very biggest clubs financially? Can they keep hold of world-class talent when the traditional heavyweights come calling?
Those questions have always been uncomfortable because nobody wants us to go back to being a selling club. Waddle, Gascoigne, Supermac – the list is long.
There is also concern about replacing quality with quantity. Newcastle may have significant funds available, but football history is littered with examples of clubs spending huge sums and ending up weaker. Replacing one world-class player is difficult enough. Replacing two in consecutive summers is even harder.
Then there is the fear of falling behind.
The Premier League has never been more competitive. The clubs around Newcastle United are spending aggressively. Qualification for Europe is no longer an achievement that is a given, for ANY club. One poor recruitment window can undo years of progress, two can destabilise a club.
Supporters know that this summer cannot simply be about balancing books or making profits. It must be about once again building a team capable of challenging the top. This summer’s signings will define how this period is remembered.
But perhaps the overriding emotion among Newcastle United fans today is determination. We work best when we are under pressure, the us v the rest has never been truer.
We’ve seen relegation battles. We’ve seen years of stagnation. We’ve seen top players leave before. What makes this era different is that there is still genuine belief in the future.
Nobody enjoys seeing big stars depart. Nobody wanted Alexander Isak to leave. Very few want Sandro Tonali to go. Yet Newcastle United remains bigger than any one player.
The challenge now is proving that those departures are not the end of the project, but the start of its next chapter, the start of “Takeover Newcastle” v2.0
As supporters, we’ll do what we’ve always done. We’ll analyse every rumour, argue over every potential signing, convince ourselves that a random player is arriving on planes spotted near Newcastle Airport and it’s definitely a new signing, argue over who the PiF should be signing, arguing about potential signings we have no chance of signing, but discuss the merits of their talent in the team anyway.
Then as always we’ll arrive at St James’ Park with hope and expectation and bring the noise when the season starts all over again.
Because that’s what being a Newcastle United fan is all about. The hope, the noise, the passion, and aye, the arguing too.
No matter how many setbacks come our way, we always believe with absolute certainty, that the greatest team ever is just around the corner. Next season.
And this summer, more than ever, we’re hoping we’re right.
NEWCASTLE, UNITED, WILL NEVER BE DEFEATED.