Liverpool
Liverpool Officially Assigns Shirt Numbers to New Signings for 2025/26 Season
Liverpool assigns official squad numbers for Wirtz, Ekitiké, and new signings ahead of 2025/26 season.
Liverpool has released the squad’s official shirt numbers ahead of the 2025/26 Premier League campaign, coinciding with the launch of their new adidas home and away kits. Among the notable changes, Florian Wirtz has been handed the prestigious No. 7 shirt, previously worn by club legends including Kenny Dalglish and Luis Suárez. This number became available after Luis Díaz’s transfer to Bayern Munich.
Hugo Ekitiké will sport the No. 22 shirt this season. Historically, this number was assigned to reserve goalkeepers such as Simon Mignolet and Loris Karius but was worn by right back Calvin Ramsay during his two senior appearances since joining from Aberdeen in 2022.
New acquisitions Milos Kerkez and Jeremie Frimpong will wear numbers 6 and 30, respectively. Giorgi Mamardashvili takes the No. 25 shirt, while Freddie Woodman has been assigned No. 28 following his free transfer to the club. Youth goalkeeper Ármin Pécsi, signed from Puskás Akadémia, will wear No. 41.
Among existing squad members, Conor Bradley has moved up from the high number 84 to No. 12, stepping into a role left vacant by Trent Alexander-Arnold, marking the first time the No.12 shirt has been used since Joe Gomez in the 2021–22 season. Additionally, young midfielder Trey Nyoni has changed his number from 98 to 42.
The new squad numbers mark a fresh start for Liverpool as they prepare for the challenges of the current season with a blend of experienced and emerging talent.
Liverpool
Liverpool Draw a Line Over Salah After Benchings and Media Comments
Liverpool will not concede to demands as Salah’s benching and transfer saga heads into January. soon
Liverpool have taken a clear stance after Mohamed Salah’s recent public complaints and a spell out of the starting lineup. Manager Arne Slot left Salah out of the XI for three consecutive matches, the last of which was the Dec. 6 defeat to Leeds United. That sequence prompted Salah to tell the mixed zone he had been thrown “under the bus,” suggesting he felt scapegoated for the club’s malaise and implying his place should be unquestioned because of past contributions.
Slot then omitted him from the starting team for the Champions League trip to Inter in Milan and kept him among the substitutes for the subsequent victory over Brighton & Hove Albion. The manager’s selections have underlined Liverpool’s unwillingness to alter team selection in response to public pressure. Salah is currently away with Egypt for the Africa Cup of Nations, pausing the immediate fallout, but the issue is expected to resurface before January and will require a longer term resolution.
David Ornstein discussed the situation on NBC Sports and summarised the club’s position. “Liverpool fully intend to keep Mo Salah,” Ornstein said. “They want him to remain in the January transfer window and beyond—he’s under contract until the summer of 2027.” Ornstein added that the contract Liverpool offered was intended to make their intentions clear and noted that the player had on occasion used mixed zone interactions last season to put pressure on the club.
“That seems to be at the centre of discussion,” Ornstein added. He outlined the choices facing Salah: “If he really does want to go, is he going to come forward with some proposals? We know there will be conversations and there is no shortage of interest. We know Al Ittihad in the Saudi Pro League like him. Al Hilal are not so keen, but there would be admiration from all over Europe as well.”
For now, Liverpool’s message is firm: the club will not bind itself to personal guarantees and expects clarity on Salah’s intentions ahead of the January window.
Liverpool
Carragher urges Salah to finish the season amid stark view on his Liverpool future
Carragher urged Salah to stay this season to avoid missing FA Cup or Champions League finals. again.
Jamie Carragher has urged Mohamed Salah to remain at Liverpool for the remainder of the season, while accepting that the forward’s long-term future may already be decided beyond 2025–26. The former defender, who spent part of last week heavily critical of Salah, adopted a more conciliatory public tone on Monday Night Football.
Carragher acknowledged his earlier criticism of the player’s conduct during a poor run of form, describing that assessment as a “vicious dismantling” of what he called the player’s “disgraceful” behaviour. One week later, he advised patience and participation for the months still to come.
“Last week, I was giving advice to Mo Salah and his agent, and I’m going to do it again,” the former England international smiled on this week’s MNF. “Because what we saw at the end of the game against Brighton was Mo Salah, a lack of appreciation, if you like. A little bit emotional, you know, with the Kop. He’s probably not sure himself whether that’s his last time at Anfield.
“But, if he’s thinking about moving on, I would urge him to think again.
“And the reason I would say that is, if Mo Salah is to move on from Liverpool now, the talk is he would go to the Saudi league , which is talked about over there, but probably nowhere else—except when the transfer window’s open. Mo Salah’s not going to move and leave Liverpool to go to Barcelona or Real Madrid.
“Now, Liverpool, in the second half of the season, they could get to an FA Cup final. They could get to a Champions League final. Can you imagine Mo Salah, in Saudi playing for whatever team he’s playing for, watching Liverpool come out in Budapest in their Champions League final?
“You come back at the end of January, you’ve got three months. O.K., you might not get on with the manager. You’ll start some games. You’ll be subbed some games.”
Carragher was blunt about what he expects after those months. “I don’t see Mo Salah playing for Liverpool next season,” he declared.
Reflecting on Salah’s emotional celebration with the Kop after the Brighton win, Carragher said: “Does Mo Salah deserve more than that, as a Liverpool player?” Yes was his conclusion. “He deserves a guard of honour,” the former defender proclaimed. “He deserves a mosaic in the Kop. He deserves to be able to bring his family, his wife and his kids on the pitch in his last game and actually be celebrated for what he’s done as a Liverpool player.
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.
