Well, it’s finally happened. On a Saturday morning that felt more like a funeral at Anfield than the start of a summer, Liverpool Football Club officially announced the sacking of head coach Arne Slot — just one year after the Dutchman delivered the club’s 20th league title. Let that sink in. One year. Champion to the unemployment line in twelve short months.
Football is truly a ruthless, beautiful, heartbreaking sport.
From Champion to Sacked in 365 Days

Cast your mind back to last season. Arne Slot, the relatively unknown Feyenoord tactician who had the unenviable task of replacing Jürgen Klopp — the most beloved manager in modern Liverpool history — had walked into Anfield and won the Premier League title in his very first season. The city of Liverpool was dancing. The doubters were silenced. Slot was a genius.

Fast forward to today, and the champagne has long since gone flat. Liverpool’s 2025/26 Premier League campaign was nothing short of a disaster. The Reds lost 19 games this season — a staggering number for a club with their resources and ambition. They stumbled, scraped, and limped to a fifth-place finish, collecting just two points from their final four matches. Champions of England just last year, now watching from the outside as rivals celebrated around them.
Worse still? They finished a whopping 25 points behind champions Arsenal. Twenty-five points. That’s not a gap — that’s a chasm.
The Salah Saga That Set Everything on Fire
If the results on the pitch were bad, the drama off it was even juicier. At the centre of the storm stood none other than Mohamed Salah, Liverpool’s Egyptian king, who had apparently seen enough.

In what became one of the most talked-about moments of the season, Salah took to social media with a pointed post calling for a return to the “heavy metal football” that defined the Klopp era — fast, furious, front-foot pressing that had the Premier League trembling. It was not subtle. It was not a cryptic hint. It was a flare gun fired directly at Slot’s dugout.

And when a superstar of Salah’s stature speaks, teammates listen. Reports emerged that several players were openly liking and sharing his stance. An insider close to the Egyptian revealed: “What he said about Liverpool’s current playing style caused a huge stir. Many players actively backed him.” That post, sources say, became the point of no return between Slot and the dressing room.
The Club Speaks — With Enormous Reluctance

To their credit, Fenway Sports Group did not throw Slot under the bus. Their statement was unusually warm and honest, acknowledging this was a decision made with “enormous reluctance” and that it didn’t feel entirely fair to a coach who had brought them glory. They called his contribution “significant, meaningful and — most importantly of all — successful.”
But sentiment doesn’t win football matches. The hierarchy decided the team needed to evolve back towards a more aggressive, urgent style of play — and Slot, brilliant as he is, was not seen as the man to deliver it.

Slot himself kept his distance from the squad during their final-day lap of honour at Anfield. A telling, melancholic image.
Who’s Next at Anfield?

The Liverpool rumour mill is already spinning at full speed. Andoni Iraola, the brilliant Spanish coach who guided Bournemouth into European football for the first time in their history, is the clear frontrunner according to transfer guru Fabrizio Romano. Germany boss Julian Nagelsmann and PSG’s Luis Enrique are also on the shortlist.

One name notably absent? Xabi Alonso — the fans’ dream candidate — who shattered hearts by signing for Chelsea just a fortnight ago. The timing of that particular move will sting Liverpool supporters for a very long time.
The Verdict
Arne Slot leaves Anfield with a Premier League title to his name and a legacy that will always earn him a warm reception on Merseyside. But football is unforgiving, and the 2025/26 season was simply not good enough for a club of Liverpool’s stature — not when you’ve spent nearly £450 million on new players and finished fifth.

The Slot machine has stopped spinning. Anfield needs a new dealer. And whoever walks through that door next carries the weight of history, expectation, and a fanbase that has tasted glory — and is very, very hungry for more.
Stay tuned for the latest updates on Liverpool’s managerial search.
SOURCE: Premier League












