Liverpool
Slot: Squad Quality Intact but Injuries Have Forced Selections
Slot: squad is sufficient; injuries have reduced availability and fuelled Liverpool’s slide. and more
Arne Slot has been clear: he does not view Liverpool’s options as deficient. His recent public criticism was aimed at availability issues rather than a lack of quality after what the club spent in the summer transfer window to bolster a title-winning squad.
Slot pushed back against suggestions he doubted the squad, instead pointing to injuries and disrupted pre-season preparation as the root cause of the current difficulties that have seen Liverpool drop from first to seventh in a matter of weeks.
“We miss nothing,” he began. “I am happy that you asked this question because I am completely happy with the team and with all the quality that we have and I am also completely convinced by the strategy and the policy that we have but that makes the issue—if you call it an issue—is not all of them have had a proper pre-season or have been injured.
Slot explained how absences reduce the effective squad size and force the same players into heavier workloads. “When three or four are injured you go back to 16 players. I am a firm believer that 20 or 21 player is enough but you have to keep them fit as we did last season. We are struggling a bit more to keep them fit, in my opinion, for obvious reasons.
He used individuals to underline the point: “Alex [Isak] is a great example of this. A few others have missed out on pre-season or had injuries during pre-season. It has been more difficult than last season to keep them all available and then if a few of them are not available, it comes down a lot to the same players. Maybe last season we were more lucky and now we are more unlucky.”
The manager was adamant that injury problems should not be an excuse for poor results. “No excuses for our results before people say this,” he clarified. “It is nothing to do with the squad depth, it is how we’ve gone throughout the season in terms of injuries and availability.”
Slot acknowledged he must sometimes take risks to build match fitness, citing his decision-making over player minutes. “Let me use Alex as an example,” he continued. “He had to do a pre-season inside the season and then people will argue, ‘Why do you play him?’ But if I don’t play him, I don’t have him available and we need to have him available or then we have to play Hugo [Ekitiké] every single game.
He also referenced workload comparisons and named players who have been in and out with injuries: “I was with Owen Hargreaves when he made the comparison between the two of them and he showed that one played 34 games last season and the other played 34 and we play 60 over here. That is why I need to get Alex as soon as I can into playing as many games as he can. That has been something not only with him but with a few others as well.
“Jeremie Frimpong has been in and out with injuries quite a few times, same with Conor Bradley so if one is out the other has to play more and that is why I’ve had to play Dominik Szoboszlai a few times in that position.
“That has been something what every team has, so it is not an excuse, but what was a bit different than last season. Last season, they all had one year Premier League experience as a minimum, they were all fit when we started and they stayed fit. Now, they weren’t all fit from the start and some players have to play more than you want them to do and that is a risk of them getting injured as well.
“That is just the situation as it is and we have more than enough good players available to play the game on Saturday, Tuesday and Sunday but I have to take care of them and that’s why I made the decision to not play some a few days ago.”
Liverpool
Salah Calms Team After Public Complaint; Club and Player Seek Longer-Term Solution
Salah’s comments were personal, not aimed at teammates; talks will continue during AFCON in private
Mohamed Salah’s recent public complaint about his situation at Anfield prompted concern inside Liverpool’s dressing room, but team staff and players say the matter has been managed and negotiations will continue. Opinion was divided when Salah spoke out while the team were struggling, and some feared a split would develop between supporters of the forward and those unhappy with the timing of his remarks.
After being dropped for one further game, Salah was reinstated to the matchday squad for the win over Brighton & Hove Albion, and he broke the Premier League’s single-club goal contribution record in an all-smiles performance that appeared to ease tensions.
Curtis Jones, speaking to Viaplay after the game, said:
“We all love Mo. I love Mo,” Jones told Viaplay after the game. “At my hardest times at the club, you know, he was always one of the ones who was there, I could always speak to. And it’s exactly the same now.
“Mo’s his own man, he’s got his own opinions. And, you know, I don’t think his intentions were to affect the team or anything like that. It was just a personal thing. And as everybody knows, the team, the fans, the staff, we all love Mo. He’s a great guy.
“I don’t really like to speak on another man’s issues or his business and stuff. That has to do with Mo. But at the end of the day, I think the important thing that Mo made clear was that it’s not against the team or anything like that, just a personal issue, and that’s it.”
Club and player held private talks and the immediate tension has subsided, but further negotiations between Liverpool and Salah’s entourage are expected during the winger’s time away at the Africa Cup of Nations as both sides seek a long-term resolution that works for everybody, including manager Slot. Slot has said he has “no reason” to want Salah to leave in January, while Virgil van Dijk and Ibrahima Konaté backed the forward to play for Liverpool again upon his return.
Interest from the Saudi Pro League and several Middle Eastern clubs remains, and reports suggest a summer move is more feasible than a mid-season exit. Salah is under contract until 2027 after signing an extension in April, meaning any interested club will still need to negotiate with Liverpool to reach a deal in the next 18 months.
Liverpool
Van Dijk and Konaté Back Salah as Future at Liverpool Remains Uncertain
Van Dijk and Konaté back Mohamed Salah at Liverpool amid AFCON call-up and transfer uncertainty now.
Two senior Liverpool defenders have publicly backed Mohamed Salah while acknowledging the forward’s future is unsettled. Virgil van Dijk and Ibrahima Konaté offered measured support after Salah returned to the squad and helped the team in a 2–0 victory on Saturday.
Slot recalled Salah to his squad against Brighton & Hove Albion, and the winger, who snagged an assist off the bench and made Liverpool history in doing so, received strong backing from team-mates and supporters.
Van Dijk said: “We showed this week that we are absolutely united. We go forward as one,” following the win. He added: “Mo is going to AFCON and we all hope that he’ll be successful there and he’ll come back and be important for us for the rest of the season.
“The other side of it is that we all know football and we have no idea what is going to happen. I hope that he stays because he is one of my leaders and still very important for the football club. But there’s more parties to this situation.”
Konaté echoed that stance and predicted Salah would see out his contract, which runs to the end of next season. He said: “Personally, no, I don’t think [Salah has played his last game for Liverpool]. You saw how much he loves this club,” the France International told Canal+.
He continued: “What happened with him you have to understand the frustration sometimes felt by players who have such a career, who have done so much. He is a player that everyone loves, the coach loves, he loves the coach, everyone loves each other at this club.”
The comments come amid wider uncertainty. Continued interest from the Saudi Pro League and a highly publicised dispute after Salah was benched for three consecutive games have fuelled debate. The 33-year-old, the reigning PFA Player of the Year, is now set to join up with Egypt for the Africa Cup of Nations while his long-term future at the defending English champions remains unclear.
Liverpool
Slot issues cautious update after Szoboszlai forced off with ankle concern
Arne Slot expressed concern after Dominik Szoboszlai left with an ankle problem against Brighton…
Arne Slot offered a worrying assessment after Dominik Szoboszlai left Liverpool’s win against Brighton with an ankle problem.
The Hungary international, who has spent much of his time at right back this season, also started against Brighton on the right wing in place of Mohamed Salah. Despite that defensive usage, Szoboszlai leads the Liverpool squad for shots on target in the Premier League and tops the team in progressive passes, crosses and tackles.
Szoboszlai moved back into defence when Joe Gomez could not continue, then went down in the 70th minute following a collision. Medical treatment allowed him to continue for about 10 more minutes, but he limped off before the final whistle.
“Dom, it was his ankle,” Slot confirmed immediately after the 2–0 win. “It didn’t look great when I just saw him.” Slot added: “He has unbelievable mentality so let’s hope for the best,” acknowledging the player’s resilience and the need for further testing.
Slot has started Szoboszlai in all 22 of Liverpool’s Premier League and Champions League fixtures this season, deploying him in six different positions. Last season the player was only sidelined by a bout of illness, and it has been almost two years since his most recent muscle injury.
There is a realistic chance Szoboszlai could return for Liverpool’s next match, a trip to Tottenham Hotspur next Saturday, but the appearance of another injury in training or during the game has increased uncertainty.
That uncertainty extended to Joe Gomez, whose fitness remains a concern. Gomez missed 28 games last season with two serious hamstring issues and had been reintegrated cautiously. He had made four starts in two weeks before the Brighton game, but did not last 25 minutes on Saturday.
“If I have a player who goes off with a muscle injury like Joe, that’s normally not a positive thing,” Slot mused postgame. “I would not expect him to be in the squad next week.”
