Anfield Index
·2 May 2026
“I want to be remembered” – Mohamed Salah opens up on his Liverpool exit

In partnership with
Yahoo sportsAnfield Index
·2 May 2026

Mohamed Salah has offered Liverpool supporters the reassurance they wanted, even if the broader reality remains heavy with emotion. His time at Anfield is moving towards its final chapter, but the Egyptian forward expects to wear the red shirt again before the season ends.
Salah suffered a minor muscle injury during Liverpool’s win over Crystal Palace at Anfield, forcing him off in the second half. That setback rules him out of Sunday’s Premier League meeting with Manchester United, a fixture he has so often shaped with goals, menace and ruthless timing.
Yet in conversation with Steven Gerrard for TNT Sports, Salah was upbeat about his recovery and the possibility of appearing on the final day against Brentford.
“Yeah, for sure.
“The injury is fine. Definitely. I probably will be [back] before that, probably.”
For Liverpool, that matters. Not because sentiment should dictate selection, but because Salah has earned the right to leave the stage on his own terms. His numbers this season, 39 appearances, 12 goals and nine assists, still point to influence, even in a campaign defined by the approaching end of a remarkable era.
Salah’s Liverpool record now sits in historic territory. Since joining in 2017, he has scored 257 goals, placing him third on the club’s all-time list, while also adding 119 assists. Two Premier League titles, the European Cup and nine major trophies tell part of the story. The other part lies in consistency, availability, mentality and appetite.
When Steven Gerrard asked him for the secret behind his success, Salah’s answer was revealing.
“I would say the desire,” he replied when Gerrard asked for the ‘secret’ to his success.
“I really want to succeed. I really want to be remembered in this club. After the first year, I would say I want people to remember me as if I’m one of the best. And somehow it got into my head I want people to remember me more than you [Gerrard], more than Kenny [Dalglish]. I’m not trying to be rude! They will not. But it doesn’t matter.
“For me, something drove me crazy and drove me to work hard, to be the first one in, to go to the gym, to do everything right, because I want people always to praise me through my work.
“It’s just the desire, I would say.”
That line about Gerrard and Kenny Dalglish was not arrogance. It was ambition, sharpened into routine. Salah did not simply want applause. He wanted permanence.

Photo: IMAGO
What makes this exchange significant is the interviewer. Steven Gerrard understands Liverpool legacy better than almost anyone. He knows the burden of being loved, judged and remembered by a fanbase that turns football into folklore.
Salah’s response showed how deeply that has affected him. He spoke not like a player ticking off achievements, but like one who understood the emotional contract at Liverpool. Performance matters. Effort matters. Honesty matters.
He said: “Incredible. I never imagined I would be close to somebody like this.
“I feel so emotional when I speak about them or about the city. The connection between us is incredible.
“If you give it all on the field, they will love you anyway. They know that I gave it all, I’ve been professional all my career and tried to encourage the guys: ‘Leave it all on the field and the fans will appreciate it.’”
Salah’s final Anfield weeks will invite comparison, debate and nostalgia. That is inevitable when a modern Liverpool giant prepares to depart. Yet the simplest judgement may also be the fairest. Mohamed Salah arrived as an elite attacker and became a defining figure in the club’s modern history.
Steven Gerrard helped draw that truth out. Salah’s greatness was built on desire, but sustained by discipline. If he returns before the final whistle of the season, Liverpool fans will not merely be watching a forward come back from injury. They will be saying goodbye to one of the finest players ever to wear the shirt.







































