
Anfield Index
·18. Mai 2025
Liverpool Star Set to Receive Mural at Anfield Ahead of Premier League Title Lift

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Yahoo sportsAnfield Index
·18. Mai 2025
As the city of Liverpool prepares for its final Premier League match of a historic campaign, a familiar wall near Anfield is becoming home to something special. MurWalls—the artist collective responsible for several of Liverpool’s most cherished murals—has begun work on a new piece featuring club captain Virgil van Dijk.
Positioned on Coningsby Road, just a stone’s throw from Anfield and directly opposite the iconic Robbie Fowler tribute, the mural-in-progress has already begun drawing attention.
With the final fixture of the season looming—against Crystal Palace no less—Liverpool fans are poised to witness their side crowned champions. It’s no accident that this artwork is being completed just in time for the trophy lift.
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Van Dijk’s contribution to Liverpool’s latest title cannot be overstated. The Dutchman, wearing the captain’s armband in Arne Slot’s debut season, has been the bedrock of a defence that returned Liverpool to the Premier League summit. His calm authority, aerial dominance, and positional intelligence have long defined his style—but this season, leadership took centre stage.
Now, he joins an illustrious mural club already featuring Mohamed Salah, Alisson Becker, and Roberto Firmino—players who’ve helped define the modern Liverpool era.
The decision to paint Van Dijk isn’t merely aesthetic. It’s symbolic. This is a figure who, since arriving at Anfield, has redefined expectations of what a central defender can be. And now, in what could be seen as the final chapter of his Liverpool prime, he’s being immortalised quite literally into the bricks and mortar of the city.
While the mural may celebrate a player, its timing underscores a broader narrative: Arne Slot’s Liverpool have arrived. The Dutch manager—tasked with succeeding Jürgen Klopp—delivered the Premier League title in his first season at the helm. It’s a feat that even the most optimistic of Kopites might have viewed with cautious hope rather than expectation.
Slot’s success has revitalised Anfield. The atmosphere is electric again, the squad cohesive, and the football expressive. Van Dijk, as leader, has been both the face and the spine of this resurgence. That a mural is going up now—before the final whistle, before the champagne corks fly—tells you everything about how certain this club is about what it has achieved.
Photo: IMAGO
This mural has been years in the making—not in brushstrokes, but in meaning. From the moment Van Dijk arrived in January 2018, there has been a quiet inevitability about his place in Liverpool folklore.
“Van Dijk is set to lift the Premier League trophy against Crystal Palace and this artwork will be completed in time for the occasion—marking the perfect tribute at the perfect moment.”
The timing isn’t just poetic—it’s strategic. There’s poignancy here too. Trent Alexander-Arnold’s nearby mural remains untouched, for now, despite the defender’s mixed reception in recent weeks and impending departure on a free transfer. Murals, like memories, are vulnerable to change.
For now, however, Van Dijk’s face joins the Anfield walls not only as a reward for a brilliant season but as a declaration: Liverpool’s leaders don’t just play the game—they shape its history.