Slot’s misplaced positivity does not tally with harsh reality of Liverpool’s season | Andy Hunter

The Guardian The Guardian

Return of Alexander Isak is all well and good, but it will not redeem a season of sustained underperformance

“The failure is big,” said Ryan Gravenberch as he digested the https://www.theguardian.com/football/2026/apr/14/liverpool-paris-saint-germain-champions-league-match-report">Champions League defeat by Paris Saint-Germain that ensured Liverpool’s season will finish trophyless.

It was a more appropriate description of the team’s plight than Arne Slot’s insistence the future looks bright and a reality the head coach cannot avoid whether Champions League qualification for next season is secured or not.

As it must be.

Failure is unthinkable for a club whose business model depends on its lucrative revenue streams and a team that, 12 months ago, was about to win the Premier League title at a canter and was then remodelled to the tune of almost £450m.

With the top five all qualifying, Chelsea fading from the conversation under Liam Rosenior and a five-point advantage over Brentford and Everton with six games to play, it would be a humiliating final blow for Liverpool to miss out.

Slot’s defence for getting a third season to manage Liverpool’s transition would be holed.

https://www.theguardian.com/football/2026/apr/15/arne-slot-misplaced-positivity-liverpool-alexander-isak-champions-league-psg">Continue reading...

Read full article at The Guardian →