
Hearts slam 'disgraceful' pitch invasion and report 'serious' abuse at Celtic Park
Hearts slam 'disgraceful' pitch invasion and report serious abuse at Celtic Park
Mohamed Salah has expressed concerns about Liverpool's direction under coach Arne Slot, urging a return to their aggressive, trophy-winning style of play. His comments reflect a deeper identity crisis within the club as they prepare for a crucial match against Brentford.
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Mohamed Salah Questions Liverpool Direction Under Arne Slot
Mohamed Salah has rarely needed volume to command attention. His numbers, his durability and his cold authority in front of goal have usually spoken loudly enough. Yet his latest Statement on Liverpool carried the force of something more personal, more wounded and more urgent.
As reported by Paul Joyce in The Times, Salah has delivered a fierce assessment of Liverpoolâs direction under Arne Slot, calling for a return to the âheavy metal attacking team that opponents fear and wins trophiesâ. For a player preparing for what may be his final appearance against Brentford, the words landed like a challenge to the clubâs soul.
Salah wrote:
âI have witnessed this club go from doubters to believers, and from believers to champions,â
âIt took hard work and I always did everything I could to help the club get there. Nothing makes me prouder than that.
âUs crumbling to yet another defeat this season was very painful and not what our fans deserve.
âI want to see Liverpool go back to being the heavy metal attacking team that opponents fear and back to being a team that wins trophies.
âThat is the football I know how to play and that is the identity that needs to be recovered and kept for good. It cannot be negotiable and everyone that joins this club should adapt to it.
âWinning some games here and there is not what Liverpool should be about. All teams win games.â
Mohamed Salah criticized Liverpool's current direction, calling for a return to the aggressive, trophy-winning style of play known as 'heavy metal football'.
Salah's statement highlights an identity crisis within Liverpool, suggesting that the team is straying from its successful playing style and may impact their performance.
By 'heavy metal attacking team', Salah refers to Liverpool's historically aggressive and high-pressing style of play that has made them a feared opponent.
Salah's critical remarks could influence his future at Liverpool, especially as he prepares for what may be his last game against Brentford, raising questions about his commitment to the club's current direction.

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Salah's outburst raises questions about Slot's future at Liverpool.

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This was not vague frustration. It was a precise criticism of standards, style and culture. Salah has seen Liverpool rise, and now he is watching a champion side scramble for Champions League qualification.
Photo: IMAGO
Joyceâs report captures the scale of the decline with one stark line: âHowever, there have been 20 defeats in all competitions, including the penalty shoot-out loss in the Community Shield, this term and Slot has been unable to halt a malaise which has been hampered by injuries to key players.â
That sentence tells the story. Injuries have mattered, of course. Yet Liverpool cannot hide behind absences alone. A team that won the Premier League in 2024/25 now looks drained of conviction and coherence.
Slotâs controlled football brought a title in his first season, which should not be forgotten. Yet control without incision can become sterile. Liverpool supporters were raised on energy, pressure, bravery and Anfield thunder. Salah clearly feels that edge has faded.
Curtis Jones liking Salahâs post and adding a hand clapping emoji, with Dominik Szoboszlai also liking it, gives this issue added significance. Social media gestures can be overplayed, but players know how such actions are read.
Joyce described Salahâs comments as âthe next instalment in the soap opera that Liverpool has becomeâ. That phrase feels painfully accurate. For a club that has prided itself on unity, Liverpool now look exposed, politically and emotionally.
Salahâs future also frames everything. Joyce reports that the forward sought the early termination of his ÂŁ400,000 a week contract and will leave on a free transfer. That gives his words the tone of a parting warning.
Photo: IMAGO
Liverpool still stand behind Slot, according to the report, with Richard Hughes and Michael Edwards preparing for a crucial summer. That work now feels enormous. A ÂŁ450 million spending spree has not removed design faults in the squad, and Champions League qualification remains essential to the self sustaining model.
Salah added:
âLiverpool will always be a club that means a great deal to me and to my family. I want to see it succeed for long after I have moved on.
âAs Iâve always said, qualifying to next seasonâs Champions League is the bare minimum and I will do everything I can to make that happen.â
That is the line that should echo inside Anfield. Bare minimum. Liverpool must beat Brentford, secure Europeâs elite stage and then confront the bigger issue. This club needs more than results. It needs its identity back.
For Liverpool supporters, Salahâs statement will feel uncomfortable because it sounds true. Fans can accept poor form, injuries and transition, but they struggle when the team stops looking like Liverpool. That is the real wound here.
Salah has earned the right to speak. He has carried the attack, delivered trophies and set standards few players in club history can match. Some may argue public criticism helps nobody, yet silence would have felt worse. His words reflect what many supporters have been saying for months, that Liverpool have lost menace, rhythm and conviction.
Slot deserves respect for winning the Premier League in his first season. That achievement cannot be dismissed. Yet this season has exposed problems that cannot be explained away by bad luck. Twenty defeats in all competitions is not noise, it is evidence.
The Brentford game now feels bigger than a fixture. It is a farewell, a judgement and a final chance to secure the Champions League. If Salah and Robertson are leaving, they deserve an Anfield send off with pride attached.
Liverpoolâs summer must be ruthless. Recruitment has to serve a clear football identity, not another round of expensive confusion. Salahâs message was emotional, but it was also strategic. Liverpool need to remember who they are.