Slot seeks solutions as Liverpool crisis deepens

Liverpool's Egyptian striker #11 Mohamed Salah reacts to their defeat on the pitch after the English League Cup final football match between Liverpool and Newcastle United at Wembley Stadium, north-west London on March 16, 2025. Newcastle won the game 2-1. (Photo by HENRY NICHOLLS / AFP)

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Liverpool's blip is becoming a full-blown crisis as manager Arne Slot urgently seeks answers after the Premier League champions suffered a fourth straight defeat for the first time in more than a decade.
The Reds lost 2-1 to Manchester United on Sunday - the first
time their bitter rivals have won at Anfield since January 2016.
Liverpool rode their luck in a seven-game winning run at the
start of the season, boosted by a flurry of late goals, but an expected
improvement in performances has failed to materialise.
They have now lost four consecutive games in all
competitions for the first time since November 2014 when Brendan Rodgers was
manager.
Citizen.Digital Sport looks at the serious issues that Slot
must address to save Liverpool's season.
Mohamed Salah looks a pale shadow of the man who terrorised
defences last season on his way to winning the Premier League's Golden Boot
award.
The "Egyptian King", so often the fulcrum of
Liverpool's attack, has scored just one goal from open play in the Premier
League this season, on the opening weekend.
On Sunday he was guilty of missing two big chances against
United.
The forward was left out of the starting line-up in the
recent Champions League defeat at Galatasaray and, starkly, was hauled off on
Sunday even as Liverpool chased an equaliser.
Slot will hope it is just a temporary loss for form for a
player who signed a new two-year contract in April but there must be concerns
that, at 33, his best days are behind him.
Former Liverpool defender Jamie Carragher, now a Sky Sports
pundit, says Salah should no longer have a guaranteed spot every week.
"I don't think Salah should be starting every game
right now, certainly away from home, with the form he's in," he said on
Sky.
"Would he be OK with that? Probably not. But when you
get to a certain age you have to understand that, especially when you're not
playing well, where's your argument?"
Slot chose to go big in the summer transfer window,
splashing out more than $450 million ($604 million) on new signings.
The club twice broke their own transfer record to bring in
playmaker Florian Wirtz from Bayer Leverkusen and forward Alexander Isak from
Newcastle.
Hugo Ekitike, another big-money arrival, has made a splash
but the Frenchman now appears to be behind the misfiring Isak in the pecking
order.
Liverpool's substantial spending on forwards was partly
driven by the death of Diogo Jota in a car crash in July.
His absence is the elephant in the room at a club still
coming to terms with the absence of the 28-year-old Portugal international.
At the other end of the pitch, new arrival Milos Kerkez has
struggled to settle at left-back, where he has been preferred to veteran Andy
Robertson, and Jeremie Frimpong has failed to nail down his spot on the other
flank.
Could Liverpool's failure to sign central defender Marc
Guehi from Crystal Palace on transfer deadline day cost them the Premier League
title?
Since the beginning of May, Liverpool have conceded two more
more goals in more Premier League games than any other side, doing so in eight
of their 12 league matches.
Slot's men have let in 11 goals in their eight league games,
in stark contrast to just three by Premier League leaders Arsenal.
Kerkez and Frimpong have struggled to fill the shoes of
Robertson and the departed Trent Alexander-Arnold in the full-back positions.
Centre-back Ibrahima Konate has come under sustained fire
for his poor performances and even the usually imperious captain Virgil van
Dijk was caught out in the build-up to Bryan Mbeumo's opening goal on Sunday.
Guehi has told Crystal Palace he will not sign a new deal at
the club, meaning he could leave in January or at the end of the season.
But even if the England defender chooses Liverpool over
other potential suitors, it could be too little, too late.
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