Anfield Index
·4 juillet 2026
Liverpool Favourite Opens Up On Potential Coaching Role

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Yahoo sportsAnfield Index
·4 juillet 2026

There are some players whose influence lingers long after their final appearance, and Thiago Alcantara remains one of them at Anfield. Elegant on the ball, exacting in thought, he always gave the impression of seeing the game a fraction earlier than everyone else. That quality tends to invite an obvious next question once a playing career winds down, whether the touchline might offer a natural second act.
For now, though, any immediate return to Liverpool as part of Andoni Iraola’s new coaching structure has been ruled out by the most prosaic of modern football barriers, licensing. Thiago himself has explained the issue clearly speaking to Rio Ferdinand on Rio Meets, saying, “I don’t have the badges. I don’t have enough of the badges to be a coach [at Liverpool].” It is a simple answer, though one that says plenty about the game’s increasingly formal pathways.
There had been understandable curiosity over Thiago’s next move after he left Barcelona’s staff at the end of the 2025-26 season. He had worked under Hansi Flick and, by all accounts, left a strong impression. The praise aimed at him in Catalonia suggested a figure already able to translate elite experience into practical support for players and staff, a former midfielder with both authority and empathy.
That fits with what was seen during his final season at Liverpool, when he spoke of helping team-mates develop. Some footballers coach by instruction, others by demonstration, others by quiet conversation. Thiago appeared capable of all three. In an age when coaching staffs are increasingly specialised, that kind of intelligence is valuable.
Liverpool, now reshaping under Iraola after a turbulent campaign, are in the middle of defining a new technical identity. In that context, the idea of bringing back a former player with Thiago’s grasp of rhythm, spacing and control carries obvious appeal. Not as a sentimental gesture, but as a football one.
Yet the modern game has little room for improvisation when it comes to the dugout. Coaching badges are more than administrative clutter. They are the game’s accepted threshold, part safeguarding measure, part educational filter, part declaration that instinct alone is no longer enough. Thiago may possess the mind for high-level coaching, but the profession now asks for certification as well as insight.
That does not close the story, it merely delays it. Reports have indicated that Thiago is interested in a role on Merseyside and there is a broader sense within football that a reunion would make sense in time. If Liverpool share that view, then the sensible move may be to support his development while he completes the necessary qualifications, an approach clubs have taken before with former players.
There is room here for patience. An academy or developmental role in future may prove a natural bridge, once the badges are in place. For a club seeking smart football people, Thiago remains an intriguing possibility. The route back to Anfield exists, but for now it runs through the classroom before it reaches the touchline. Credit to the original report for first highlighting Thiago’s explanation.
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