Anfield Watch
·6 de noviembre de 2025
In partnership with
Yahoo sportsAnfield Watch
·6 de noviembre de 2025
He had an own goal, a red card and conceded a penalty. Slot removed him from the lineup on several occasions - with Tsimikas starting more games than he perhaps might have expected.
With Kerkez coming into the club, the writing was on the wall. Robertson’s contract was ticking down to 2026 - but he was even linked with a summer move to Atletico Madrid.
He opted to stay and knuckle down however - even if Kerkez was preferred early in the Premier League season.
This season has seen a tremendous fight-back from the 31-year-old - who just a few short months ago looked destined for the Anfield history books.
Kerkez’s lack of form has opened the door for Robbo to take his starting place back. And in recent victories against Eintracht Frankfurt, Aston Villa and Real Madrid he has looked once again like his old self.
The discussion now becomes whether Robertson is worth a NEW deal - considering his class, experience and leadership.
He has demonstrated he’s still got plenty to offer - even if it remains to be seen how he gets through the demands of a 50 or 60-game season.
Richard Hughes will have a significant decision to make before that contract runs down. Robertson is reported to be on £160k per week - a huge wage for someone designated as the “reserve” left-back.
That will have to be taken into account - as well as the duration of any deal offered. Given Robertson’s age, it’s unlikely he will get any longer than a one-year extension.
On his current form and trajectory however, it’s certainly worth considering.
There has been no moaning, no unnecessary drama. Instead he’s bided his time, waited for his opportunity and struck back where it matters - on the pitch in the most testing of circumstances. To get back in the team is a great achievement.
To earn a new contract would go someway beyond that.









































