
Anfield Index
·15 Oktober 2025
Liverpool coaches working for ‘maximum impact’ from wonderkid

In partnership with
Yahoo sportsAnfield Index
·15 Oktober 2025
Credit must go to Anfield Watch for highlighting the growing buzz around La’More Lee Forrester, a name that is now finding its way into wider circulation thanks to fresh recognition from The Guardian. The article positions the 15-year-old as Liverpool’s latest winger-in-waiting and the excitement around him feels justified.
Much has been made of Arne Slot’s slightly more measured approach to promoting youth compared to his predecessor. Yet the progress of Rio Ngumoha suggests that caution does not equate to reluctance. As Anfield Watch noted, Ngumoha earned his rise by delivering “five goal contributions in five pre-season games” before scoring “a dramatic winner against Newcastle United.”
Photo IMAGO
That precedent matters. It shows that under Slot, the door is not simply ajar, it is open to any youngster prepared to sprint through it. Trey Nyoni, Jayden Danns, Joshua Abe and Erik Farkas are already in position. Now Forrester has stepped into the conversation.
Forrester’s return from injury has been explosive. Three goals in five games and a goal every 97 minutes for Liverpool’s U18s is impressive enough. Yet the real statement came when he “hit a hat-trick and registered two assists against Aston Villa in the U17 Premier League Cup.” At just 15 years, one month and nine days old, he had already become the club’s second youngest U18 debutant back in 2023. That kind of trajectory is rare, even in a club famed for fast-tracking talent.
Perhaps the most intriguing line from The Guardian report, as quoted by Anfield Watch, stated: “Academy coaches are working on harnessing his pace to maximum effect on the pitch.” Pace alone is raw fuel. Liverpool want refinement, precision and end-product.
One academy source reportedly added, “He runs like he is late for everything, but now he is learning when to slow down.” If that balance between chaos and control is achieved, Liverpool could have a winger built in the mould modern football demands – explosive yet efficient.
This is not a case of premature hype. It is structured development, carefully managed by coaches who have seen this pathway succeed before. If Ngumoha offered the prototype, Forrester might be the evolution.
Liverpool supporters love nothing more than a young winger who plays without fear. Hearing that the academy staff are actively fine-tuning Forrester’s speed feels like a sign of intent. This is not a case of throwing a talented runner onto the wing and hoping for the best, it is a deliberate plan to manufacture a first-team-ready weapon.
Fans will inevitably compare him to lightning-quick wide men of the past. Some will think of Raheem Sterling’s early days, others might even glance towards a younger Sadio Mané. What matters most is that Forrester is not being left to drift in youth football. He is being engineered for purpose.
Ngumoha’s emergence already has the Kop whispering about the next big breakout moment, so imagine the reception if two teenage wingers make the leap within a year. Forrester might still be in his school uniform, but the tone around him suggests this is not just a name for the future. This is one to monitor right now.