Report: Liverpool considering move to sign Brazilian defender | OneFootball

Report: Liverpool considering move to sign Brazilian defender | OneFootball

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·15 January 2026

Report: Liverpool considering move to sign Brazilian defender

Article image:Report: Liverpool considering move to sign Brazilian defender

Liverpool on Alert as Vanderson Emerges as Right-Back Solution from Monaco

Liverpool’s season has taken on an unexpected subplot. Not one defined by silverware or tactical evolution, but by fragility. The right side of the defence, once a position of creative certainty and structural balance, has become a recurring concern. Injuries have intervened, plans have been disrupted, and certainty has been replaced by improvisation.

It is in that context that the name Vanderson has resurfaced. The Monaco right-back, long admired across Europe, is again being discussed as Liverpool weigh short-term necessity against long-term planning. According to TeamTalk, the Brazilian has emerged as a viable option at a moment when the margins of the season feel increasingly thin.


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Right-Back Uncertainty Shapes Liverpool Thinking

Liverpool’s issues at right-back have been layered rather than sudden. The club entered the season believing the position was covered, even after a summer of transition. Faith was placed in youth, adaptability, and squad depth. Yet football has a way of exposing assumptions.

A serious knee injury to Conor Bradley, sustained in the goalless draw against Arsenal, has altered the picture dramatically. Surgery has ruled the Northern Irishman out for the remainder of the campaign, removing not just a player but a strategic pillar of Liverpool’s succession planning.

Jeremie Frimpong, signed from Bayer Leverkusen, has also struggled with fitness, leaving Arne Slot with limited orthodox options. The result has been a series of tactical compromises: midfielders repurposed, centre-backs shifted wide, and a constant sense of recalibration. It is not a crisis, but it is an irritation. And irritations, over time, become problems.

Vanderson Profile Fits Liverpool Needs

Vanderson’s appeal lies in balance. At 24, he sits neatly between potential and experience. He has played at a high level in Ligue 1, competed in Europe, and represented Brazil internationally. His game is built on athleticism and timing rather than flamboyance, a quality that tends to age well.

At Monaco, he has been trusted in demanding tactical systems, asked to defend large spaces while contributing in transition. He is comfortable overlapping, disciplined when holding position, and aggressive without being reckless. These are attributes Liverpool value, particularly under a head coach who prizes structure and control.

Injuries have disrupted Vanderson’s current season, limiting his continuity and, perhaps, accelerating Monaco’s willingness to listen to offers. Under contract until 2028, he is not a distressed asset, but he is a movable one. That distinction matters.

Article image:Report: Liverpool considering move to sign Brazilian defender

Monaco Situation Opens January Door

Monaco’s position is pragmatic. The club have a history of selling at the right moment, and Vanderson fits the profile of a player whose peak value may be approaching. Signed from Grêmio in 2022 for around £10m, he would now command a fee closer to double that figure.

Reports cited by TEAMtalk, suggest that Liverpool have been made aware of his availability, alongside assessments of other options across Europe. The Brazilian is understood to be open to a Premier League move, an important detail in a market where willingness often dictates pace.

For Liverpool, the January window is traditionally conservative. The message from the club has been consistent: no panic, no reactionary spending. Yet football rarely respects messaging. When needs align with opportunity, principles are tested.

January Choice Reflects Wider Strategy

Any move for Vanderson would say as much about Liverpool’s philosophy as it would about their squad. This would not be a vanity signing or a short-term fix. It would be an acknowledgement that depth matters, that seasons are marathons shaped by attrition as much as brilliance.

Slot’s Liverpool have been defined by control and clarity. A specialist right-back restores both. It allows players to return to natural roles and systems to settle into rhythm. Vanderson would not arrive as a saviour, but as a stabiliser, a subtle but significant upgrade in reliability.

Whether Liverpool act now or wait until summer remains open. But the logic is increasingly clear. When uncertainty grows loud enough, even the most patient clubs begin to listen.

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