Anfield Index
·27 November 2025
Steven Gerrard: Pressure is building on ‘unstable’ Liverpool

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Yahoo sportsAnfield Index
·27 November 2025

Liverpool’s defeat to PSV Eindhoven was always going to provoke scrutiny, yet the reaction inside Anfield told its own story. As the final minutes drifted towards another humbling European outcome, Steven Gerrard was among those assessing a landscape that has shifted with alarming speed. His observations, delivered from the TNT Sports studio, cut to the heart of the unease now surrounding the club.
What unfolded on Merseyside was not an isolated dip but the latest chapter in a worrying pattern: four home losses in just over five weeks, three of them by three goals. For a stadium once regarded as the most formidable home ground in Europe, that represents a dramatic and unsettling reversal.

LIVERPOOL, ENGLAND – NOVEMBER 26: Liverpool head coach Arne Slot looks on during the UEFA Champions League 2025/26 League Phase MD5 match between Liverpool FC and PSV Eindhoven at Anfield on November 26, 2025 in Liverpool, England. Photo by Rene Nijhuis SPO PUBLICATIONxINxGERxSUIxAUTxONLY Copyright: xRenexNijhuis/MBxMediax
Gerrard, watching closely as PSV closed out their 4-1 success, highlighted an image that will sit uncomfortably with many connected to Liverpool. The sight of thousands of empty red seats before the final whistle was, in his eyes, emblematic of the anxiety gripping supporters.
He reflected on what he described as a side that appears exposed and fragile. With the Reds conceding goals at a rate that has eroded confidence, his assessment returned repeatedly to a sense of instability. While PSV’s quality deserved recognition, the broader focus remained fixed firmly on what this Liverpool team no longer resemble: assured, resilient, and composed under pressure.
Those who remained inside the ground heard both boos and defiant songs. The mixture summed up a fan base split between frustration and loyalty, yet united in its concern about where the current trajectory is leading.
For years, visiting teams would arrive in L4 expecting a hostile environment and overwhelming momentum from the stands. That aura has evaporated in recent weeks, replaced by a vulnerability seldom associated with Liverpool in the modern era.
Gerrard’s reflections echoed what many supporters have sensed since the turn of the season. Anfield, once a venue opponents feared, has become a ground they now approach with growing optimism. PSV underlined that shift by attacking with conviction and leaving with a victory that was never truly in doubt.
The reaction of those home fans who departed early reinforced the broader narrative. As one senior figure in the squad noted last week, it is difficult to blame anyone for seeking the exit early when belief in a comeback no longer feels grounded in reality.
Arne Slot now faces a delicate period, one that demands clarity amid the turbulence. Four significant defeats on home soil in such a condensed period would test any manager, and the pressure is beginning to mount as Liverpool look to stabilise their season.
The Dutchman has emphasised patience and long-term structure since arriving, yet the immediacy of results in this environment means performances of this nature inevitably intensify scrutiny. Supporters have shown remarkable restraint but are reaching the limits of endurance after three consecutive disjointed displays.
Gerrard, who experienced difficult eras as a player, stated plainly that this stretch ranks among the toughest Liverpool have endured in the past decade. With fixtures coming rapidly, the need to re-establish defensive solidity and restore confidence inside Anfield is now essential.
The upcoming weeks could define how Slot’s tenure is shaped. For now, the empty seats and subdued atmosphere stand as a stark reminder of how quickly authority can slip in elite football.









































