Anfield Index
·12 July 2026
Report: Key Liverpool figure set to follow Michael Edwards out of the door at Anfield

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·12 July 2026

Liverpool have spent years trying to present themselves as a club built on order, planning and calm heads. That is why this latest report lands with such force. According to the Daily Mail, Richard Hughes is now expected to follow Michael Edwards out of the door, leaving Anfield facing another senior reset before the season has properly settled.
That matters, because this is not about one executive changing jobs. It is about Liverpool’s football structure, the part of the club that is supposed to protect continuity when managers come and go, suddenly looking fragile. Edwards stepping down was already enough to rattle supporters. The suggestion that Hughes could soon be on his way to Al Hilal adds another layer of uncertainty at exactly the wrong time.

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Hughes was brought in to help shape major decisions and, by all accounts, he worked closely with Edwards at the top of the operation. The report says the pair were involved in the decision to move on from Arne Slot after his dramatic drop-off following the Premier League title win in 2024-25, and then in appointing Andoni Iraola. That tells you where Hughes sat in the chain of command, and why his possible departure would not be a minor administrative change.
Liverpool have never looked entirely comfortable when rebuilding the power structure behind the scenes. For all the talk of succession planning, replacing one key operator is difficult. Replacing two in quick succession is something else entirely. Even if much of the groundwork for the season has been done, the timing still feels awkward, especially with transfer business never quite as tidy in practice as it looks on a planning document.
The wider issue is what this says about Fenway Sports Group. Edwards had returned on a three-year deal in March 2024, yet there had long been a sense he might not complete it. Now the multi-club plan that helped bring him back has been shelved after a review of more than 25 options, with cost concerns and UEFA regulations playing their part. That leaves the impression of a strategy revised on the hoof rather than one followed through with conviction.
Mike Gordon is expected to take on a more hands-on role, while Julian Ward could be moved into greater prominence. Both may help steady things. Yet supporters have heard enough corporate reassurance over the years to know words are cheap. Stability at a club like Liverpool is earned through smart decisions, clear leadership and evidence that the people upstairs know exactly where they are taking the place.
At the moment, this Richard Hughes report makes that picture feel far less settled than it should.
Here we go again. Every time you think Liverpool might get a clean run at building something, the noise starts upstairs. The people running the football side are meant to remove chaos, not create more of it. Supporters can cope with change if there is a plan. What they struggle with is the sense that the plan keeps changing halfway through.
If Hughes goes, after Edwards has already gone, then fans are entitled to ask what exactly is happening at boardroom level. You cannot keep talking about elite structures and best-in-class thinking when senior figures seem to be passing through so quickly. Liverpool are too big, and the stakes are too high, for this to be brushed off as normal movement in modern football.
There is also the familiar FSG concern here. When an idea stops suiting them, it appears to get dropped, and everyone else is left to tidy up the mess. The failed second-club project now looks like another grand concept that never truly got off the ground. Fine, plans change. But Liverpool should never feel like the bit that has to absorb the aftershock.
Andoni Iraola deserves a proper platform. So do the players. So do the fans, who have already lived through enough turbulence in recent years. The club need to stop congratulating themselves on process and start proving that the people in charge can build something that lasts. Until then, the anxiety will remain, and supporters will have every right to feel fed up with it.
Source: Daily Mail







































