
The Alonso dream may be over - but Salah's outburst keeps heat on Slot
Xabi Alonso may now be heading to Chelsea, but Mohamed Salah's outburst keeps the pressure on Arne Slot, writes Phil McNulty.
Aston Villa secure Champions League spot in win over Liverpool
Mohamed Salah's latest unprompted public outburst will ratchet up the pressure on struggling Liverpool head coach Arne Slot by several notches.
Salah first laid bare his frustrations with Slot and Liverpool after the 3-3 draw at Leeds United in December, claiming he had been "thrown under the bus" after being dropped following the Premier League champions' poor start to the season.
This time the Egyptian, who is scheduled to play his final game for Liverpool against Brentford at Anfield on the closing weekend of the season, took to social media after Friday's 4-2 loss at Aston Villa to launch a thinly-veiled attack on their style under Slot and the failures this season.
Slot has been losing credit fast since winning the Premier League in his first season after succeeding Jurgen Klopp.
The contrast was sharp between Unai Emery's vibrant Aston Villa - who confirmed Champions League football next season with victory at Villa Park and who are in the Europa League Final - and porous, weak Liverpool.
And then came the latest twist in this troubled, turbulent Liverpool season.
This sort of pronouncement could justifiably be seen as Salah repaying his head coach by throwing Slot under the bus, the breakdown of their relationship providing a fractious backdrop to a season in which Liverpool's title defence has disintegrated.
If Salah's attack clearly does not help Slot, who has lost the faith of many Liverpool fans as the Anfield atmosphere becomes increasingly toxic, then his analysis of "us crumbling to yet another defeat this season" hardly reflects well on his own team-mates either.
The sub-plot to Salah's post is that a large number of those same Liverpool supporters see Xabi Alonso as Slot's natural successor.
But the former Real Madrid manager now looks destined for Chelsea, who hope to announce the Spaniard as their new permanent head coach in the coming days.
Alonso has long been touted as a future Liverpool manager, having won the Champions League as a player and then impressed hugely during his time as Bayer Leverkusen boss.
Some hoped he would replace Klopp two years ago, but he instead opted to remain with Leverkusen and Slot came in instead.
It would seem again the timing just will not quite marry up for those dreaming of a fairytale return to Anfield.
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Salah's intentions in making this statement are unclear, although it plays to the gallery and the growing anti-Slot lobby, making life increasingly uncomfortable for the Dutch head coach.
And his words instantly won the approval of many Liverpool team-mates, with Andrew Robertson, Waturu Endo, Milos Kerkez, Dominik Szoboszlai and Ryan Gravenberch all liking the post, with former stars Jordan Henderson, Trent Alexander-Arnold and Jarell Quansah following suit.
Curtis Jones replied with a clapping emoji, while striker Hugo Ekitike posted a handshaking emoji.
This may simply be agreement with Salah's complaints about falling standards rather than rebellion in the ranks, but once again the narrative, plus the conclusions drawn from it, are spectacularly unhelpful for Slot.
The other side of the coin is that while Slot has been in the firing line, he could make a fair point himself by saying those players lining up to agree with Salah, especially the Egyptian himself, could also have done a lot better.
Salah's first attack in December was a clear criticism of Liverpool and how his relationship with Slot had broken down, although he only dropped the forward after a run of poor form and a dramatic decline from last season, when he seemed on a personal mission to bring the Premier League title back to Anfield, scoring 34 goals in 50 starts in all competitions.
Salah's latest 190-word statement is equally scathing, with an obvious reference to Slot's predecessor Klopp, as he wrote: "I 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.
"That 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."
It all amounted to a brutal critique of Liverpool's strategy under Slot this season, as well a offering up a signpost as to the style he feels they must approach after this disappointing season.
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Source: BBC Sport Football



