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Slot Says Injuries, Not Spend, Explain Liverpool’s Rocky Campaign

Slot: injuries, not spending, are the unseen story behind Liverpool’s inconsistent season. Read more

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Arne Slot has repeatedly drawn attention to an injury list he believes has been overlooked amid debate about Liverpool’s summer spending. The manager blamed those absences for a season that began with a seven-match winning run and then deteriorated into a historic slump. Slot’s side lost four successive matches for the first time in his managerial career and ultimately suffered nine defeats in 12 games, the club’s worst sequence in 72 years.

After a damaging 4–1 loss to PSV Eindhoven, Liverpool have since put together a seven-game unbeaten run. Slot accepted those displays remain inconsistent but insisted his available group deserve credit given the number of players missing. “If you look at our bench you didn’t see any player that is a midfielder that has played more than 10 minutes in the Premier League so far,” he sniffed, referencing the youthful substitutes who watched Liverpool narrowly beat Wolverhampton Wanderers on Saturday.

“That’s why I’m so pleased with our current results, because if we would’ve dropped points people would probably talk about the fact of how many players we miss.” he continued. “But we don’t drop points and that’s why no-one is talking about the players we miss. Maybe because they only talk about how much we spend!”

Liverpool were without the suspended Dominik Szoboszlai for the visit of the Premier League’s worst side, while Mohamed Salah was at the Africa Cup of Nations. Alexander Isak remains sidelined with a broken leg, forcing Slot to field £116 million ($156.3 million) summer recruit Florian Wirtz out wide alongside Federico Chiesa. Cody Gakpo, the club’s second top scorer this season, was used from the bench.

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“A way to have game management is also having the opportunity to make substitutions,” he fretted. “Maybe to bring an extra defender in or these kind of things. Last year a lot of times when we were 2–1 up, or one goal up, I brought Wataru Endo in. I already said, I don’t know if everybody notices it, but we miss quite a lot of players. That’s why it’s so special for these players [who] are fit that they are bringing these results in.”

Slot added: “Unfortunately, Giovanni Leoni, we won’t see him this season, and Alex [Isak] is going to take a long time before we see him again,” Slot mused. “You can do the numbers [about] how much money that is and if you combine that with how much we’ve sold, that’s maybe an interesting story to make.”

Slot has also pushed back on a one-sided focus on the club’s record summer spend of £415 million, noting the departures of Luis Díaz and Darwin Núñez to Bayern Munich and Al Hilal for around £110 million. Leoni and Isak account for around £151 million of Liverpool’s outlay and are likely to miss the majority of the campaign.

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Salah’s Season and Liverpool Farewell Put at Risk by Hamstring Issue

Salah limped off at Anfield with a suspected hamstring injury, leaving his Liverpool future unclear.

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Mohamed Salah left Anfield applauding all four sides after appearing to pick up a hamstring problem during Liverpool’s meeting with Crystal Palace. He pulled up shortly before the hour mark and was forced off, trudging from the pitch to a chorus of concern from the crowd.

Immediate fears surrounded the severity of the issue and whether the injury could end Salah’s season, and even his Liverpool career. With roughly one month remaining of the campaign, the forward faces a clear race against time if he is to appear again in a Liverpool shirt.

Liverpool have just four fixtures remaining this season. A trip to Manchester United next Sunday already feels too soon for Salah if he has injured his hamstring, while the extent of the blow will determine whether a return is possible before the end of the campaign.

Chelsea travel to Anfield on May 9 in a tense fixture in the race for Europe, and that will be the penultimate chance for Salah to play in front of a home crowd in a Liverpool shirt. Arne Slot’s side end the season at home to Brentford and Liverpool will undoubtedly use that fixture to pay tribute to Salah. Long-standing left back Andy Robertson can also expect a hero’s farewell, but fans will hope to see the Egypt international on the pitch one final time.

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Complicating the club situation is this summer’s World Cup. Salah will be keen to hurry back to action and bid farewell to his club, but he will not want to risk exacerbating a problem that could affect his involvement this summer in what is likely to be his final World Cup appearance.

The coming days and medical assessments will be decisive. Liverpool’s remaining schedule and the timing of recovery will decide whether supporters will witness Salah one more time at Anfield before the season closes.

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Slot Refuses to Rule Out Alisson Exit as Liverpool Weigh Squad Transition

Arne Slot would not rule out Alisson leaving in summer amid talk of Juventus and squad rebuild. move

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Arne Slot has refused to dismiss the possibility of goalkeeper Alisson leaving Liverpool this summer as speculation links the Brazil international with Juventus.

“Well, that is your opinion and I will bring that opinion to the ownership and to Richard Hughes,” Slot responded. He expanded on how decisions are made at the club: “I think the club is run in a certain way and we make decisions that the club thinks are in the best interests of the club. And it could mean this is the reason why. It could mean another good argument why we acted how we acted.

“I think the history of all the transfers shows that nothing was done without a purpose or without thinking about it. Look, the people who make these decisions take everything into account. They try to make the best decisions with the interest of the club.

“[Experience] is definitely one argument to keep him but there are other arguments. That is a decision the club has to make that is needed. In the end, he still has one year [on his contract].”

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Liverpool have been preparing for a potential departure for some time. The club completed the signing of Giorgi Mamardashvili from Valencia in the summer of 2024, with the 25-year-old brought in as the long-term option at Anfield. While there were no plans to immediately displace Alisson, the arrival made clear the club had one eye on the future.

At 33, Alisson remains among the world’s best when fit, but his availability has become a concern. Over the past three seasons he has missed 63 matches across all competitions, with hamstring injuries cited as the primary issue. That pattern of absences has left Liverpool weighing the risk of relying on him through a full campaign.

The broader question for the club is timing. Losing Alisson while Mohamed Salah and Andy Robertson also depart would leave the squad light on senior figures. Virgil van Dijk is expected to remain and provide experience in defence, and Joe Gomez, who joined in 2015, is currently the club’s longest-serving player, but there are no guarantees he will stay this summer either.

Liverpool’s recruitment and contract choices will determine whether the club accepts short-term risk in favour of retaining experience or pursues a clearer transition.

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Alonso on Leipzig radar as Liverpool’s managerial picture remains unsettled

Alonso is linked with RB Leipzig amid doubt over Ole Werner while Liverpool consider Slot’s future.

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Xabi Alonso has emerged as a potential target for RB Leipzig as uncertainty surrounds Ole Werner and speculation continues over Arne Slot’s future at Liverpool. Reports in Germany suggest Leipzig could look to Alonso if they move to appoint a successor to Werner.

Alonso’s availability follows a short spell at Real Madrid, where he was dismissed less than eight months into a three-year contract. The prevailing assessment has been that his brief tenure at the Spanish club represented an unfortunate mismatch rather than a lasting stain on his managerial reputation. That perception, combined with the ongoing debate over Slot’s position, has increased interest in Alonso’s services.

Sport Bild says Werner’s future depends in part on Champions League qualification. Leipzig sit third, five points clear of fifth-place Hoffenheim with only four matches to go. An evaluation of the wider progress of the team could also determine whether the 37-year-old is retained for a second season.

Should Leipzig seek a new head coach, Alonso is reported to be among a shortlist that includes outgoing Crystal Palace manager Oliver Glasner and Al Ahli’s Matthias Jaissle, formerly of Red Bull Salzburg. A common factor for the three candidates is Champions League experience. The Red Bull soccer operation’s ambition is underlined by the presence of Jürgen Klopp at its helm, a factor that adds appeal to the post for prospective candidates.

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For Alonso, a move to Leipzig would more closely resemble his arrival at Bayer Leverkusen, where he reshaped the team into briefly the best in Germany, than his spell at Real Madrid, which quickly faltered. Leverkusen had never been German champions before Alonso led them to an undefeated Bundesliga and DFB-Pokal double, the side only beaten in the Europa League final and denied a treble.

Any approach from Leipzig would become a Liverpool concern only if the club finds itself seeking a new manager. Supporters frustrated by Slot and still besotted by Alonso from his playing days might argue the chance to hire Alonso now, having missed out two years ago, is too good to ignore. That scenario would require dispensing with Slot a year early; the contract he signed to succeed Klopp in May 2024 runs until the end of next season.

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