
Papers: Arsenal's Champions League winning bonuses revealed
Arsenal players could earn £1.175 million if they win against PSG in the Champions League final.
Liverpool is advised to consider Brazilian wonderkid Endrick as a potential replacement for Mohamed Salah. The club's long-term planning is heavily influenced by Salah's future.
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Liverpool told to replace Mohamed Salah with Brazilian wonderkid
Liverpool’s search for attacking clarity feels increasingly important. Mohamed Salah’s future has framed so much of the club’s long-term planning, and any discussion around his eventual replacement carries weight, pressure and unavoidable emotion.
Michael Olise has often been discussed as a natural stylistic fit, a left-footed creator who can operate from the right and decide games with subtlety rather than volume. Yet Bayern Munich’s stance appears firm, and chasing an unavailable player rarely feels like the smartest route through a summer window.
That is why Malouda’s Endrick suggestion is interesting. Not because the Brazilian teenager should be seen as a direct Salah replacement, because very few players could wear that label without being crushed by it, but because he represents possibility.
Speaking about Endrick to Snabbare, via Liverpool Echo, Malouda said: “I think he has a challenge with Kylian Mbappe [at the Bernabeu] because as long as Mbappe is playing up front, it will be difficult for him to compete for this position. For me, he might need another loan in a more challenging league, and maybe the Premier League could be an option.
Liverpool is focusing on their long-term planning, and discussions about Salah's future have become increasingly significant.
The Brazilian wonderkid being considered as a replacement for Mohamed Salah is Endrick.
Salah's future significantly influences Liverpool's strategic decisions regarding their attacking lineup and overall team structure.
Liverpool is seeking attacking clarity and options, especially in light of potential changes in their forward lineup.

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“A move to a club like Chelsea? I think he might go somewhere else because he doesn’t really fit Chelsea’s style of playing. I would see him most probably at a club like Arsenal or Liverpool, most probably Liverpool, where he can have a more direct style of playing. He could be a star there.”
Those words carry the romance of transfer season, of course. Every gifted teenager becomes a potential superstar in May and June. Yet Endrick’s profile does make sense in parts. He can play centrally, drift right, attack space and bring the kind of directness Liverpool have often valued in forwards.
Malouda also said: “Michael Olise to replace Mohamed Salah? He is happy at Bayern. I think they also have talent to develop. They have Hugo Ekitike and Alexander Isak; they can find a solution internally.”
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That point matters. Liverpool do not simply need names. They need balance. They need forwards who fit Arne Slot’s structure, who can press, rotate, score and still leave room for others to grow.
Endrick’s loan at Lyon, where he has reportedly produced eight goals and seven assists in 19 appearances, suggests a player finding rhythm away from Real Madrid’s intense spotlight. The Bernabeu can develop stars, but it can also delay them.
For Liverpool, a loan move could be sensible if the terms are right. It would reduce financial risk, add elite potential and avoid the desperation of paying inflated fees for unavailable targets.
Still, there is danger in treating Endrick as a neat answer. He is 19. He is still learning. Premier League football is not gentle with young forwards who arrive carrying hype, expectation and YouTube compilations.
Liverpool’s priority should be building a forward line with enough depth to survive a long season, not gambling everything on one dazzling prospect. Endrick may be worth exploring, but only as part of a broader attacking rebuild.
From a Liverpool fan’s perspective, this is exactly the sort of rumour that pulls you in. Endrick has that rare sparkle, the name recognition, the Brazilian flair, the sense that something explosive could happen whenever he receives the ball. You can see why supporters would be tempted.
Yet the bigger concern is whether Liverpool are planning properly or simply reacting to the Salah-shaped hole on the horizon. Replacing Salah is impossible in a like-for-like sense. The goals, the assists, the durability, the aura, that cannot be bought off a shelf.
Endrick on loan would be exciting because it feels clever rather than reckless. If Real Madrid are unsure how to use him while Mbappe dominates the central spaces, Liverpool could offer a stage, a structure and a purpose. Slot needs more threat, more pace, more unpredictability.
Still, fans will want more than potential. Liverpool need proven output too. If Salah leaves, the club cannot go into next season hoping that young players simply catch fire. Endrick would be a fascinating piece of the puzzle, but supporters will rightly expect a serious, layered attacking plan.