Anfield Index
·18 de mayo de 2026
Pundit convinced Slot won’t be Liverpool head coach next season

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·18 de mayo de 2026

Liverpool’s season has drifted from disappointment towards open unrest and Richard Keys believes the situation around Arne Slot may now be beyond repair. Following the Reds’ bruising 4-2 defeat to Aston Villa, Mohamed Salah delivered a pointed public message that appeared to question the direction of the club under Slot, reigniting debate about the Dutchman’s future.
According to the original source from CaughtOffside, Salah called for Liverpool to rediscover the “heavy metal” football that once defined them. The timing and tone of the message immediately sparked conversation across the game, particularly after a significant number of Liverpool players reportedly engaged positively with the post online.
For Keys, this was not merely frustration after another damaging defeat. He views it as evidence of a dressing room losing faith in its manager.
Speaking on beIN Sports alongside Andy Gray, Keys did not attempt to soften his assessment. He said: “What he said is damning but what is goin on behind it is more so for me. It suggests there are some serious issues in and around the dressing room. As a group, the players appear to have lost faith in the coach.”
Those are extraordinary words considering Slot guided Liverpool to the Premier League title only a year ago. Yet football changes quickly and Liverpool’s sharp decline this season has created a climate where scrutiny intensifies with every defeat.

Photo: IMAGO
Richard Keys has consistently questioned whether Slot would survive the mounting pressure at Liverpool, but his latest remarks were his strongest yet.
“I think what 8 of his playing colleagues liked the post? That doesn’t help Arne Slot,” Keys added. “I have said for some time. I don’t think he will be incharge next season. I am more convicned about that than ever.”
That prediction will resonate loudly among supporters already frustrated by Liverpool’s collapse in form. Twelve league defeats have transformed what was expected to be another title challenge into a desperate scramble for Champions League qualification.
Results alone rarely tell the full story at a club of Liverpool’s stature. Supporters can tolerate setbacks if they recognise identity, cohesion and direction. What has unsettled many around the club is the growing sense that Slot has lost control of those elements simultaneously.
The Salah situation matters because he remains Liverpool’s defining figure. When a player of his influence publicly questions the footballing identity of the side, it carries enormous weight inside and outside the dressing room. Reports that numerous current and former players supported the message only deepened the perception of division behind the scenes.
Keys clearly believes the fracture runs deeper than tactics or results. His argument is built around authority and whether Slot still commands the confidence required to lead Liverpool through a difficult period.
Slot inherited enormous expectations after succeeding one of the most transformative managers in Liverpool’s modern history. Early success suggested the transition had been handled impressively, yet this campaign has exposed vulnerabilities that now threaten to define his tenure.
Liverpool’s performances have lacked consistency, intensity and emotional control. Defensively they have appeared fragile. In midfield, they have often looked disconnected. Up front, moments of brilliance have been overshadowed by tactical uncertainty.
There has also been criticism of Slot’s communication style and man-management. Several pundits and supporters have questioned whether he has properly understood the emotional demands attached to managing Liverpool. Every press conference, every tactical call and every public reaction now receives microscopic analysis.
The Aston Villa defeat felt particularly symbolic because Liverpool once again appeared vulnerable under pressure. Villa attacked with purpose while Liverpool drifted through key moments of the match without conviction.
That backdrop made Salah’s intervention impossible to ignore.
Rather than protecting the manager publicly, the Egyptian forward’s comments reopened discussions about Liverpool’s identity and standards. In elite football, when influential players begin speaking in those terms, alarm bells quickly follow.
The coming weeks could shape the direction of Liverpool for years ahead. If Slot retains the backing of the hierarchy, he will require a significant reset this summer. That would mean repairing fractured relationships, reshaping the squad and restoring belief among supporters.
Yet Keys clearly doubts the manager will be granted that opportunity.
His comments reflect a growing belief in some quarters that Liverpool may decide change is necessary before the damage deepens further. Whether that proves accurate remains uncertain, but the noise around Slot is becoming impossible to silence.
For Salah, the situation also raises questions. His frustration appears rooted not simply in poor results, but in concerns about the style and personality of the side. Liverpool supporters will hope their leading forward still believes the club can recover quickly from this turbulent spell.
What once looked like a stable post-title era now feels unpredictable and volatile. Slot faces the biggest challenge of his managerial career, while Keys continues to insist the end may already be approaching.







































