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Slot: Squad Quality Intact but Injuries Have Forced Selections

Slot: squad is sufficient; injuries have reduced availability and fuelled Liverpool’s slide. and more

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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.

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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.

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“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.”

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Liverpool

Isak Ruled Out of Derby as Liverpool Rework Attack for Man Utd

Alexander Isak ruled out with a groin injury, forcing Arne Slot to reshuffle Liverpool forward line.

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Alexander Isak was ruled out of Sunday’s derby against Manchester United with a groin injury, prolonging a difficult debut campaign at Liverpool. Isak had been eased into first-team action during his first three months at the club before suffering a broken fibula against Tottenham Hotspur in December. He did not make another appearance until April and had started to regain form, scoring a well-taken goal against Crystal Palace last weekend, but that momentum was halted.

Arne Slot named a 4-2-3-1 for the trip to Old Trafford: Freddie Woodman; Curtis Jones, Ibrahima Konaté, Virgil van Dijk, Andy Robertson; Alexis Mac Allister, Ryan Gravenberch; Jeremie Frimpong, Dominik Szoboszlai, Florian Wirtz; Cody Gakpo.

Substitutes: Armin Pecsi (GK), Joe Gomez, Milos Kerkez, Federico Chiesa, Trey Nyoni, Kieran Morrison, Rio Ngumoha, Mor Talla Ndiaye, Will Wright.

With Hugo Ekitiké and Mohamed Salah also sidelined, Slot again adjusted his selection. Curtis Jones, Dominik Szoboszlai and Jeremie Frimpong are all capable of filling the right-back role for Liverpool, while Szoboszlai and Frimpong have also been used further up the right flank. Cody Gakpo is expected to resume an unloved central striking role, though Slot could deploy Florian Wirtz and Dominik Szoboszlai in a dual-false-nine setup he used sporadically last season.

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First-choice goalkeeper Alisson did not overcome his fitness issue for the trip, and with Giorgi Mamardashvili also unavailable, Freddie Woodman started in goal once more.

At this late stage of the season a relatively minor muscle strain can end a campaign, and with a World Cup on the horizon there is added incentive for players and staff to take a cautious approach to rehabilitation and recovery.

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Salah on leaving Liverpool: the private warning, fitness verdict and possible return

Salah confirmed a private January talk with Gerrard and vows he still feels physically capable. too.

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Mohamed Salah guarded his words with the same care he has shown across a high-profile Liverpool career, but his interview with Steven Gerrard for TNT Sports delivered several clear signals about his future.

Salah revealed a private January meeting with Gerrard that shaped his thinking at a turbulent point. “People didn’t know you came to my house, we had a good conversation,” Salah revealed, inspiring a bashful smirk from Gerrard. “You said your opinion and I really appreciate it. I am glad I am leaving now through the big door.

“That is something you mentioned to me, just leave on your terms, I still remember those words. I am happy about it. Everything that is going on this season makes me think, ‘No it’s time to go.’”

On what comes next away from Liverpool, the 33-year-old remained undecided but emphatic about his condition. “Honestly physically I feel I have a lot to give,” he said, then added: “I played many games this season. I haven’t decided what I am going to do yet, I have a lot of good options. Physically I feel fine, I feel what I did over the years paid off, I feel good.”

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He was equally forthright about fitness. “I feel good, body wise I feel all right,” Salah insisted. “Last season I had this incredible season, I think I have a lot to give and I will see what is the best for me.”

Salah acknowledged interest from a range of suitors, from Saudi Arabia to MLS, while leaving open whether a European elite side will match his view of his own fitness.

Injury and availability were discussed. The forward damaged his hamstring at the end of April, ruling him out of the trip to Man Utd and possibly the Chelsea game, but he left room for a return later in the month. When Gerrard suggested he might miss the final weekend, Salah replied: “Yeah, yeah, for sure.” He added: “The injury is fine,” he explained. “Probably it will be before that.”

Salah also responded to a message from Jürgen Klopp with a light jab. “I was so happy last year that I win the Premier League ,” the top-flight champion smiled, “then I can tell him that, ‘I have two Premier Leagues and you have one.’”

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Remaining fixtures cited in the interview were: Sunday, May 3 v Man Utd (Old Trafford); Saturday, May 9 v Chelsea (Anfield); Sunday, May 17 v Aston Villa (Villa Park); Sunday, May 24 v Brentford (Anfield).

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Derby Highlights: Five Recent Meetings Between Manchester United and Liverpool

Five recent derbies between Manchester United and Liverpool, from cup chaos to narrow league margins

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Manchester United and Liverpool have produced a sequence of fixtures rich in drama and sudden swings of fortune. Michael Carrick set the tone ahead of his first meeting with the rival: “There’s big games and big rivalries that we have with other teams,” Manchester United manager Michael Carrick mused before his first managerial meeting with Liverpool, “but certainly this one is right up there in the history.”

One FA Cup quarterfinal captured that chaos in microcosm. Scott McTominay opened inside 10 minutes, only for the contest to unravel at the back for the hosts late on. In the closing stages United’s right winger Antony was deployed at left back beside Bruno Fernandes, who ended up orchestrating play from a deep defensive position. Antony forced extra time with an 87th-minute intervention after Liverpool had gone 2–1 up on the cusp of half time. Harvey Elliott nudged the visitors back in front, Marcus Rashford restored parity, and Amad Diallo snatched victory in the 121st minute. Diallo was shown a red card in the 122nd minute after collecting a second booking for taking his shirt off to celebrate the winner.

Less than a month later United applied a major dent to Liverpool’s Premier League hopes and ensured Jürgen Klopp would not have a happy sendoff. United were only denied all three points by Mohamed Salah’s late penalty. “It feels like a loss,” Virgil van Dijk lamented after the final whistle.

Arne Slot’s first visit to Old Trafford brought a different story. Liverpool ran rampant, Luis Díaz struck a first-half brace and Mohamed Salah added a further goal as the Theatre of Dreams emptied at half time. Casemiro was withdrawn at the interval by Erik ten Hag. Slot later explained how he outsmarted Ten Hag in his postmatch interview with Sky Sports.

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January 2025, amid a Merseyside blizzard, arrived when Manchester United were fragile after four straight defeats and seven unanswered goals conceded. Under Ruben Amorim the visitors produced arguably their best performance of his doomed reign: Lisandro Martínez gave United an early lead, Cody Gakpo and Mohamed Salah replied quickly, and Amad Diallo’s 80th-minute equaliser preserved pride.

Even the more recent meeting in October 2025 held a twist. United’s wait for an Anfield victory had stretched to nearly a decade by the time Harry Maguire thundered in the winner in a 2–1 win after an opening goal inside 63 seconds and a Cody Gakpo leveller in the 78th minute.

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