Anfield Index
·6 février 2026
Report: Liverpool star demanding £300,000-per-week as contract dilemma grows

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Yahoo sportsAnfield Index
·6 février 2026

Dominik Szoboszlai’s Liverpool future has drifted into sharp focus, shaped by timing, leverage and the growing sense that he has become central to the club’s evolving identity. Credit to Hungarian outlet Blikk for first detailing the financial framework around talks, yet the wider story speaks to Liverpool’s planning as much as the player’s ambition.
Speaking after the recent league meeting with Newcastle, Szoboszlai offered a glimpse into negotiations already in motion. “From now on, the decision is not in my hands,” he said, stressing that he loves the city, the club, his teammates and the Anfield crowd, and that he “would really like to stay” on Merseyside.
Those words feel significant. They project contentment, yet also a quiet acknowledgement that modern contracts hinge on valuation as much as loyalty.

Photo: IMAGO
Szoboszlai’s case rests on output and influence. Across 32 appearances in all competitions this season, he has delivered eight goals and six assists, operating across multiple midfield roles under Arne Slot. In a campaign marked by uneven league form, his consistency has stood out.
Within Anfield, his trajectory appears obvious. Leadership credentials, tactical flexibility and physical intensity have fostered internal belief that he could wear the captain’s armband in years to come.
External attention has inevitably followed. Real Madrid’s reported interest adds tension to the process, not necessarily as an immediate transfer threat, but as a reminder of the midfielder’s continental standing.
Elite clubs rarely move without encouragement. Even distant admiration can reshape negotiations, inflating both urgency and price.
From Liverpool’s perspective, allowing talks to drift would risk empowering that outside interest. Securing key performers before peak years arrive has long been part of the club’s squad building model.
Blikk’s reporting places numbers on the discussion. Szoboszlai currently earns around £120,000 per week, ranking only 12th within Liverpool’s wage hierarchy. That standing appears misaligned with his on pitch importance.
The Hungarian report claims his demands are towards the club’s top salary bracket, with a figure near £300,000 per week referenced. Comparative salaries, including those of Hugo Ekitike and Alexander Isak, are cited as benchmarks within the piece.
Such a rise would represent both reward and risk. Liverpool have traditionally balanced financial discipline with targeted elite contracts. Elevating Szoboszlai into that tier would signal faith in him as a cornerstone figure.
Perhaps the most intriguing element lies in the reported request for a release clause. Blikk suggests any extension could include a defined minimum exit fee.
From a player perspective, it preserves long term flexibility. From a club standpoint, it introduces controlled vulnerability.
Liverpool must weigh security against autonomy, safeguarding value while recognising the realities of modern elite careers.
From a Liverpool supporter’s lens, this situation feels like a test of foresight rather than finance. Szoboszlai has not simply performed well, he has injected energy into a midfield rebuild that once looked structurally uncertain.
Fans watching week to week see the pressing intensity, the willingness to demand the ball, the emotional connection with the crowd. Those traits resonate as much as goals or assists.
There will be debate around the £300,000 figure. Supporters often bristle at wage inflation, particularly when squad depth still needs attention. Yet many would argue that rewarding peak performers prevents costlier problems later.
Real Madrid’s shadow only sharpens that urgency. Liverpool followers have seen how quickly admiration from Spain can become formal pursuit.
Equally, the idea of a release clause may divide opinion. Some will view it as sensible modern business, others as an unnecessary opening.
Ultimately, the mood among fans leans towards retention at almost any reasonable cost.
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