Anfield Index
·25 mars 2026
Liverpool star pays heartfelt tribute to Mohamed Salah

In partnership with
Yahoo sportsAnfield Index
·25 mars 2026

There are exits that feel transactional, and then there are those that land like a tremor through a club’s identity. Mohamed Salah’s decision to leave Liverpool falls firmly into the latter category. After nine years at Anfield, the Egyptian forward—revered as the “Egyptian King”—has chosen to bring his time on Merseyside to a close a year earlier than expected.
Salah has reached an agreement with Liverpool to terminate his contract ahead of schedule, a move that has stunned supporters and insiders alike. His departure does not merely remove goals from the team sheet; it strips away a defining presence of a golden era.
From the moment Salah arrived in 2017, he reshaped Liverpool’s attacking DNA. Relentless in output, ruthless in front of goal, and unshakeable in mentality, he became the benchmark against which others were measured. Now, as the curtain falls, Liverpool are left contemplating not just a replacement, but a reinvention.

Andy Robertson’s response to the news was not crafted for headlines, yet it resonated deeply. His words, shared publicly, carried the weight of shared battles, triumphs, and standards forged over nearly a decade.
“Mohamed, Thank you. 9 of the best years of our lives with amazing memories on and off the pitch. Watching you become the best at what you do and become one of the best to ever have worn the Liverpool shirt has been a joy to watch and be part of.
Your mentality is second to none and a lot of people could take note. You have pushed yourself every single day and always demanded more from yourself and others.
A pleasure sharing the pitch with you for so long but even more so being able to call you a friend.
You deserve a send off that reflects your status at LFC- the greatest. Second to none 🇪🇬👑”
It is rare for a teammate to so openly acknowledge another as “the greatest” within the context of Liverpool’s storied history. Robertson’s tribute speaks not only to Salah’s numbers, but to the internal culture he helped shape—one built on intensity, accountability and elite standards.
Salah’s Liverpool career belongs in the upper tier of Premier League greats. His consistency redefined expectations for wide forwards, while his influence stretched beyond statistics into mentality and identity.
He was central to Liverpool’s resurgence under Jürgen Klopp, playing a pivotal role in securing both the Premier League title and a sixth Champions League crown. Yet beyond silverware, Salah’s greatest contribution may have been psychological: he normalised excellence.
Opponents feared him; teammates fed off him. Week after week, he delivered with a cold efficiency that bordered on inevitability. In an era of tactical evolution, Salah remained a constant—a player capable of deciding matches in moments, yet sustaining performance across seasons.
His exit, therefore, is not just the loss of a player, but the removal of a reference point.
As Liverpool process Salah’s departure, another subplot quietly gathers momentum. Andy Robertson himself could follow a similar path out of the club.
With his contract nearing expiry and no extension reportedly forthcoming, the Scottish captain has seen his role diminish this season. The arrival of Milos Kerkez has altered the dynamics at left-back, limiting Robertson’s appearances and prompting speculation over his future.
Interest from clubs such as Celtic and Atletico Madrid suggests that Robertson’s next move may already be taking shape. If he too departs, Liverpool would be losing not just experience, but leadership and continuity.
Together, Salah and Robertson have embodied an era defined by intensity, unity and relentless ambition. Their potential exits signal more than a squad refresh—they mark the closing chapter of one of Liverpool’s most successful modern cycles.
What comes next will demand not only recruitment, but reinvention. Because replacing players like Salah and Robertson is one challenge. Replacing what they represented is another entirely.









































