EPL Index
·26 Maret 2026
Report: Saudi club already pushing hard to sign Mohamed Salah from Liverpool

In partnership with
Yahoo sportsEPL Index
·26 Maret 2026

The story of Mohamed Salah continues to evolve, now entering what feels like its final, inevitable chapter at Liverpool. According to ESPN, Saudi Pro League side Al Ittihad have reignited their pursuit of the Egyptian forward following confirmation that he will leave Anfield at the end of the season.
There is a sense of unfinished business here. Back in September 2023, Liverpool rejected a staggering £150 million bid, a figure that spoke less about market value and more about symbolic importance. Salah was never simply a player to be sold. He was the modern embodiment of Liverpool’s attacking identity.
Now, the circumstances have shifted. Time, form, and contract ambiguity have aligned to make departure feel less like a shock and more like a natural conclusion.

Salah’s numbers remain extraordinary. His 255 goals in 435 appearances place him among Liverpool’s greatest, trailing only Ian Rush and Roger Hunt. In the Premier League, his 191 goals put him fourth on the all-time list, a remarkable feat for a player who arrived from Roma in 2017 without the global fanfare that followed.
His contribution to eight major honours, including two league titles and a Champions League, underlines a period of sustained excellence that reshaped Liverpool’s modern history.
Yet, departures are rarely scripted cleanly. Salah’s recent dip in form, combined with being dropped for three consecutive matches, introduced tension into what had previously been a harmonious relationship. His claim that the club had thrown him “under the bus” hinted at fractures behind the scenes.
That Liverpool will allow him to leave on a free transfer, despite having another year remaining, feels significant. It suggests a mutual recognition that the cycle has run its course.
Saudi Arabia now offers both financial allure and narrative opportunity. Al Ittihad, seeking a new figurehead after Karim Benzema’s exit, see Salah as the perfect successor.
Interestingly, not every Saudi club is circling. Al Hilal, Al Nassr, and Al Ahli are reportedly not pursuing him. Only Al Qadsiah are positioned to rival Al Ittihad financially.
This narrows the field and sharpens the narrative. Salah is not merely another acquisition, he is potentially the defining face of a club’s next era.
Meanwhile, interest in Casemiro hints at a broader recruitment strategy aimed at experienced European stars, players whose reputations can elevate both performance and profile.
What follows now is less about speculation and more about farewell. Salah will leave a void that is statistical, emotional, and cultural. Replacing goals is one challenge, replacing aura is another entirely.
Liverpool must now confront a future without the player who has defined their attack for nearly a decade. For Salah, the move represents both an ending and a reinvention.
From a Liverpool supporter’s perspective, this situation feels layered rather than straightforward. Mohamed Salah leaving on a free transfer raises immediate debates about owing a club legend a move he wants, and the club getting money for a move.
Fans have watched Salah carry Liverpool through defining moments, delivering goals in title races and European nights. Losing that reliability, even at 33, feels significant.
Saudi interest is unsurprising. The league is targeting players with global recognition, and Salah fits that profile perfectly. For Liverpool, the challenge now is forward planning. Recruitment must be sharp, tactical identity must evolve, and the next attacking leader must emerge quickly.
Ultimately, this is not just the end of a player’s tenure, it is the closing of a defining era.









































