Arne Slot sealed his own fate at Liverpool
If Liverpool had serious doubts, Arne Slot had to go now. Different people in the same roles here have made that mistake before, backing Brendan Rodgers in 2015 only to see things fall apart even more. A new manager deserves a preseason and this summer is going to be busy. What point backing a guy you aren’t sure you want?
More pertinently, Slot had seemingly become a manager many Liverpool players didn’t want either. The defining moment of his season wasn’t the team and Slot being booed, or any milepost during the lamentable title defence, but Mo Salah’s parting shot.
The talk of “heavy metal” football was a call-to-arms not about the results – although they were indeed poor – but the style, a clear nod to Slot’s predecessor and a demand for significant change. Implicitly it read like a message to Liverpool’s hierarchy and it was liked by Florian Wirtz, Dominik Szoboszlai, Curtis Jones, Hugo Ekitike, Andy Robertson and Jeremie Frimpong.
Those doubts were entirely valid. Although there will be censure towards the players and their performance, Liverpool became more muddled as Slot’s tenure went on, not less. For most of this season, they fell into an aesthetically displeasing sludge: made individual mistakes in defence, pedestrian in possession, failing to create enough chances and missing many of the ones they did create.

Yes, Liverpool qualified for the Champions League. Some will say that should be enough to merit extended faith. But even that was rather by technicality than proven aptitude, with the extra place needed and the joint-lowest points total in Premier League history required.
That speaks to the other justification for this move: this is hardly a rushed judgement, although it may feel like it in the immediate aftermath. After Liverpool had won their first five league matches of the season, the serious concerns first appeared in September: 1-2 at Palace, 1-2 at Chelsea, 1-2 against Manchester United and 2-3 at Brentford.
The raw numbers never improved enough. From the fifth game of the season onwards, Slot’s team earned a point more than Fulham and six more than Nottingham Forest and Leeds. They earned fewer than Brentford and 17 fewer than Aston Villa. It is that last figure that is most damaging, given the spend last summer.
The away leg at Paris Saint-Germain felt like a desperate low. Slot picked an entirely new formation and failed to have a single shot on target as Liverpool were entirely outclassed in every area of the pitch, subsequently losing the home leg by the same scoreline. Suddenly they looked like Champions League also-rans, and they cannot afford that to become the norm again.

Were this likely to be a quiet summer at Anfield, Slot could potentially ride out the storm as the continuity candidate to fit the mood. That’s the opposite of their reality. The best attacker in the club’s modern history is leaving. A starting central defender is leaving.
This season has caused significant damage to remaining key players and almost all of last summer’s transfer business was unsuccessful. How can you allow the same guy to play an integral role in more revolution when supporters and players have seemingly made up their mind and you’re not fully convinced either?
This is a ruthless decision, eventually. Slot won a league title a year ago, toppling Pep Guardiola in his debut campaign through perceptive tactical control and relentless consistency. He suffered the desperately tragic loss of a senior player and has been unfortunate with injury issues suffered by the two forwards that arrived last summer. As the club posted on X: “Arne helped us deliver our 20th title and we’ll always be thankful”.
But there was far more evidence that Liverpool were in danger of drifting further than there was to suggest Slot was likely to reinvent himself and the mood this summer. The defending looked broken. The balance looked broken. Morale in the dressing room looked broken and the spirit of supporters was quickly breaking too.
A sacking need not be a damnation of an entire reputation, but Slot was given eight months to offer proof that he could build a successful squad as successfully as he inherited one. The only obvious development was his best attacker becoming mutinous and other players deciding that they needed to leave. That’s no case for keeping your job.
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