Anfield Index
·12 April 2026
Arne Slot told to make huge decision ahead of Liverpool’s clash with PSG

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Yahoo sportsAnfield Index
·12 April 2026

Liverpool head into a defining European night with a familiar tension, selection calls that speak volumes about intent. After a composed 2-0 victory over Fulham, attention quickly shifted to the Champions League quarter final second leg against PSG, where Arne Slot must decide whether boldness outweighs caution.
At the centre of that debate sits Rio Ngumoha, a teenager who has injected urgency and unpredictability into Liverpool’s forward line. His opening goal at the weekend was taken with authority, but it was the manner of his display, direct running, confidence, and a willingness to engage defenders, that has fuelled calls for a starting role against Paris Saint-Germain.
Former Liverpool defender Steve Nicol did not hesitate when asked for his view.
“Absolutely. Right now Liverpool are searching for positives, and there’s no question that Ngumoha is a positive. He scares defenders.
“If you go back to the tried-and-trusted Gakpo, Ekitike through the middle and Mo on the right, then I can guarantee that whoever’s playing right-back doesn’t mind playing against Gakpo. If you play Ngumoha, the full-back won’t know much about Ngumoha. He doesn’t want to play against him.
“The kid’s already scored a goal, and he’s involved in the second goal as well, so there’s absolutely no way you should not be starting Ngumoha on one side. I think you have to start Salah in this game, particularly because he scored a goal [v Fulham], and Ekitike should be through the middle.”
There is a clarity to that argument. In elite football, unfamiliarity can be an asset, and Ngumoha represents precisely that.
Liverpool’s challenge is straightforward in theory, overturn a 2-0 deficit, yet complicated in execution against a PSG side rich in quality and control. Slot, fresh from a Premier League title in 2024-25, has built a team capable of structured dominance, but Europe often demands a different rhythm.
Ngumoha offers disruption. Each appearance so far suggests a player unfazed by occasion, one who treats elite defenders with the same curiosity as academy prospects. That mindset matters. Against PSG, particularly on the left flank, his presence could test Achraf Hakimi in ways more established options might not.
Liverpool require more than control, they need incision, risk, and a willingness to commit numbers forward. Ngumoha’s recent performance indicates he can provide that thrust.
There is, of course, a counter argument centred on experience and game management. Champions League ties are rarely kind to youthful exuberance when momentum swings. Yet Liverpool’s current position leaves limited room for conservatism.
Slot must choose an attacking configuration capable of altering the narrative. Starting Ngumoha would signal intent, a recognition that unpredictability may be Liverpool’s most valuable weapon against PSG.
In moments like this, selection becomes a statement. Liverpool can lean on familiarity, or they can embrace the unknown. Based on recent evidence, Ngumoha has done enough to justify the latter.
And sometimes, in football, that leap of faith is precisely what changes everything.










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