Anfield Index
·27 mars 2026
Jamie Carragher names his Liverpool top 10: Mohamed Salah, Virgil van Dijk and more

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Yahoo sportsAnfield Index
·27 mars 2026

When Jamie Carragher speaks about Liverpool, it carries the weight of experience and memory. With 737 appearances and a career built on consistency, his voice cuts through nostalgia and lands somewhere closer to lived truth. His selection of the club’s greatest players with the LFC website offers a revealing look at how Liverpool’s identity has been shaped across generations.
Carragher’s list is not simply a roll call of talent, it is a story of evolution. From Second Division struggles to European dominance, the names reflect how Liverpool became what it is today.
Carragher begins with Ian Callaghan, a symbol of endurance and humility. “I am going to start with Mr. Liverpool, and that is Ian Callaghan. He always has to be in any top 10, for me.” It is a nod to a player whose journey mirrors the club’s rise itself.
Kevin Keegan follows, representing Liverpool’s emergence as a European force. Carragher notes his significance clearly, “he was a genuine superstar, one of the best players in European football.” These are the figures who laid the groundwork, who turned Liverpool into a name that resonated far beyond England.
Alan Hansen and Graeme Souness deepen that legacy. Hansen, elegant and ahead of his time, and Souness, fierce yet refined, embodied a balance that defined Liverpool’s dominance. Carragher’s admiration is unmistakable, particularly for Souness, “I think you have the best central midfield player this country’s ever seen.”
The modern era finds its place through Virgil van Dijk and Mohamed Salah. Carragher’s assessment of Van Dijk is emphatic, “For me, he’s the best centre-back I’ve seen in the Premier League era.” It reflects a player who did more than defend, he redefined Liverpool’s ceiling.

Photo: IMAGO
Salah’s inclusion speaks to relentless excellence. “Mo Salah gets 30 goals every season for Liverpool. He’s never injured.” In a club built on icons, consistency at that level becomes a form of greatness in itself.
Ian Rush and John Barnes complete this section of the list, each representing different shades of brilliance. Rush, the ultimate finisher, and Barnes, the artist who brought flair and imagination to Anfield.
At the summit, the conversation turns inevitable. Kenny Dalglish stands as Liverpool’s defining figure, yet Carragher places him second. “For me, when I think of Liverpool I think of Kenny Dalglish.”
Still, it is Steven Gerrard who takes the top spot. Carragher’s reasoning is rooted in moments that transcend statistics. “It’s the European Cup final in 2005 and the FA Cup final in 2006.”
Those performances, he argues, elevate Gerrard beyond even Dalglish’s greatness. “Those performances will be getting talked about in 40, 50 years’ time.”
Carragher’s list ultimately reveals something deeper about Liverpool. Greatness here is not only measured in trophies or numbers, but in defining moments and emotional resonance. From Callaghan’s loyalty to Gerrard’s heroics, each name represents a chapter in a story still being written.
And perhaps that is why debates like this endure. At Liverpool, history is never settled, it is constantly relived.









































