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Liverpool

Arne Slot Urges Patience as Florian Wirtz Adapts, Citing Kevin De Bruyne Example

Slot urges patience for Florian Wirtz, pointing to Kevin De Bruyne’s early career difficulties. Soon.

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Arne Slot has publicly defended Florian Wirtz amid calls for change after Liverpool endured a run of three successive defeats before the international break. The manager insisted it is premature to judge the 22-year-old following a summer move that carried a reported fee of £116 million ($155.6 million).

Slot pointed to the practical signs of adjustment rather than headline numbers. “If you’ve been brought in for so much money, people look mainly at goals and assists, but I can tell you he could be on six or seven assists already,” Slot argued to Sky Sports . “He’s been a bit unlucky with the finishing when he’s given his teammates chances but, in general for a 22-year-old, it’s quite normal that you have to adjust to going to another country let alone going to the Premier League.”

He invoked Kevin De Bruyne’s early difficulties in England as context. “Maybe I’m now underestimating the best midfielder who has ever played in the Premier League, Kevin De Bruyne, he was 21 or 22 when he went to Chelsea [and struggled],” Slot noted. “Give him a bit of time, I would say. I’m definitely going to give him a bit of time and in the meantime, he’s been unlucky.”

Slot made clear his selection intentions. “He has to play and he’s played a lot,” the Dutch boss explained. “Because he’s come from a different league and played so many games, it’s quite normal that once in a while he needs a game where he doesn’t play like I’ve done with Mo Salah and many others.

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“To get the best out of him, it’s of course necessary for him to play and that’s what he did and what he’s going to do in the upcoming weeks.”

The context is visible in the numbers. In 2025–26 Wirtz, aged 22, has made 10 appearances for Liverpool, totalling 734 minutes, with 0 goals, 1 assist and 2 yellow cards. By comparison, Kevin De Bruyne at Chelsea in 2013–14, aged 22, recorded 9 appearances, 426 minutes, 0 goals, 1 assist and 1 yellow card.

Jamie Carragher was among those who suggested Wirtz might be removed from the starting lineup, while other voices have urged a measured appraisal of his adaptation to a new country, team and system. Virgil van Dijk offered a personal perspective on settling after a big transfer. “The main thing is when new players are coming in, as when I came in for a lot of money, is that you feel welcomed, you feel calm, your home situation is sorted, your family is happy,” the Dutch defender outlined. “If that is good, then you’ll be able to excel. ]

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Brentford

Henderson urges patience as he assesses Liverpool after Brentford victory

Henderson urged patience, calling Liverpool a world-class side despite recent poor results. Be calm.

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Jordan Henderson used his post-match briefing after Brentford’s result against Liverpool to offer a measured assessment of his former club and to appeal for patience from their supporters.

Having faced Liverpool for the first time since leaving the club in 2023, Henderson encouraged backing for Arne Slot’s side while acknowledging their recent run of poor results. He stressed his view that quality remains across the Liverpool squad.

“You look all over the pitch, there’s not much to go at, they’re all quality players,” he said. “I don’t really see a weakness in the team.

“I know there’s been results of late that haven’t been great for them but, for me, they’re still top players and a top, top team and it’s a matter of time before they get in a rhythm and get going.

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“I think there’s been reasons why they haven’t hit the heights from last season but they’re still a world-class team and wherever you look on the pitch there’s world-class players, so it’s always going to be difficult but I thought the [Brentford] lads dug deep, stuck together and caused some problems on the counter.”

Henderson’s own history with Liverpool framed his comments. His first meeting with Liverpool took place in March 2011 when he was at Sunderland; he moved to Anfield that summer and remained there for 12 years, a period that produced Premier League and Champions League success.

Reflecting on that time, he said: “I had been at Liverpool for so long,” the midfielder reflected. “It’s always deep inside me forever now as it was my life for 12 years.

“It was a little bit strange but as soon as the whistle went, it was business as usual and I was ready to go and I’d be in the right frame of mind, which I was.

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“I was fully in and felt as good as I ever have. I was there 12 years, dedicated a lot of my life to it. My kids were born there. It holds a special place in my heart.

“I still want Liverpool to do well—of course not when we’re playing them—but overall. That will never change. The fans have always been amazing. It was nice to see a few of them, I know a few of them left a bit early because of the result. But it was nice to see them again.”

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Liverpool

Van Dijk: ‘Look in the mirror’ as Liverpool seek answers after fourth straight league defeat

Van Dijk urged teammates to ‘look in the mirror’ after Liverpool’s fourth straight league loss. late

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Liverpool captain Virgil van Dijk issued a stark call for collective responsibility after the Reds fell 3–2 away to Brentford, a result that extended their league losing run to four matches. Van Dijk was one of several players who struggled during the game, with the towering centre back unable to contain Igor Thiago’s physical game and conceding a second‑half penalty which the Brazilian converted.

Speaking to TNT Sports after the match, Van Dijk was blunt. “The fact is that we didn’t keep clean sheets for nine games. It’s easy then to blame a particular person or the back line or set pieces, but it’s a collective thing in the end as well. Everyone has to look in the mirror, including myself.

“That’s what we all do and that’s what we all have discussed as well. I’m sure we will get out of this, but we don’t get out of this just by talking about it ,” Van Dijk stressed.

“We’ll try to improve, that’s what we work on; it’s not that we’re doing nothing in training or nothing behind the scenes. We all want to improve, that’s why we’re on the pitch as well. But it’s tough at the moment.

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“We need each other, we need the support, we need the people that were celebrating with us as well last year to be there for us now even more, and then I’m very confident that we will get out of this because we have the quality offensively, defensively.

“But the reality is we are looking for a clean sheet but definitely for a win again. That’s the reality.”

The numbers underline the concern. Liverpool have conceded 21 goals across 14 matches this term, compared with nine at the same stage last season. Over the last four games the defending champions have shipped eight goals. Opponents have adopted a clear long‑ball tactic against Liverpool this season: the Reds have faced 710 long balls, representing 23% of opponent passes, the highest total and ratio in the top flight.

As Arne Slot noted, the one side that did not play long, Eintracht Frankfurt, were beaten in midweek. “It is definitely that teams have a certain playing style against us; it is a very good strategy to play. We have not found an answer yet,” he admitted. “Going 1–0 down does not help after five minutes. We are still, even today, when we don’t play well, able to score two goals.

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“But you cannot compete, which we don’t do at the moment, because we concede too many goals. That is not only the defence you do it with 11 players together.”

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Brentford

Robertson: Liverpool Lacked Structure and Grit in 3-2 Defeat to Brentford

Andy Robertson vowed the team must ‘work harder’ after a 3-2 defeat by Brentford at the weekend. ok.

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Andy Robertson delivered a blunt assessment after Liverpool’s 3–2 defeat to Brentford, arguing the side failed to follow the game plan and did not show the necessary fight. Milos Kerkez reduced the deficit for Liverpool, but Brentford held a two-goal cushion before Igor Thiago converted a 60th-minute penalty. Mohamed Salah’s late goal proved only a consolation.

Robertson said the team were simply “not good enough.” He singled out defending from set plays and the battle for second balls as decisive weaknesses. “We didn’t do enough off the ball,” Robertson fumed. “They’re always going to be ready to put bodies in the box when it comes to set pieces, put the balls in behind, pick up second balls. You know what you’re going to come to, here. They’re always the same and they’re so good at it.

“It felt to me like we were just a yard off it in terms of that. They picked up so many second balls, and then the balls in behind.”

The opening Brentford goal came from a Michael Kayode long throw, and Ouattara’s swipe was the sixth set-piece goal Liverpool have conceded this season. Only West Ham United have shipped more set-piece goals.

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Robertson continued to emphasise tactical preparation and work-rate, noting Arne Slot had focused on long throws in training: “the only thing we did yesterday on the training pitch.” He warned that opposing teams always have a plan and highlighted Liverpool’s failure to impose their own. “We didn’t play ours at all. That makes it so difficult.”

He also called for greater physical commitment: “You have to fight for the control, you have to fight first of all,” he warned. “You have to fight for the second balls, fight for the first balls, and try and feel your way into the game. And then the quality will come through.”

With a congested schedule ahead, Robertson stressed the response must be practical. “We’ve got to work harder. In training, in games, recovering better. When you’re at this football club, people demand results. In a difficult moment, the only way to get out of it is to work even harder, run that bit more and look after yourself that bit better. And that’s what we’ve got to do.”

“There’s no time to re-group,” the fullback fretted. “We’ve got games, games, games. Sometimes it can be a good thing that you’ve got such a quick turnaround and we can go again.”

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