Anfield Index
·19 maggio 2026
“I’m not surprised” – Jamie Carragher responds to Mohamed Salah’s social media post

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·19 maggio 2026

Liverpool’s season has drifted into uncomfortable territory and now a fresh storm has erupted around Mohamed Salah after his emotional social media statement calling for the club to rediscover its “heavy metal football” identity. Former Reds defender Jamie Carragher did not hold back in his response, accusing Salah of making the situation about himself rather than the club at a critical point in the campaign.
With Arne Slot already under mounting scrutiny following Liverpool’s inconsistent form, the timing of Salah’s comments has intensified the pressure around Anfield ahead of the final Premier League weekend.

Photo: IMAGO
Salah’s statement struck an emotional tone as he reflected on Liverpool’s decline from the standards set during the Jurgen Klopp era. The Egyptian insisted Liverpool must return to being a feared attacking force and suggested that identity should remain non-negotiable for every player and coach connected to the club.
“I want to see Liverpool go back to being the heavy metal attacking team that opponents fear and back to being a team that wins trophies,” Salah wrote.
“That is the football I know how to play and that is the identity that needs to be recovered and kept for good. It cannot be negotiable and everyone that joins this club should adapt to it.”
Those remarks immediately triggered debate around whether the forward was indirectly criticising Slot’s tactical direction. Carragher certainly interpreted it that way.
Speaking about Salah’s comments on Sky Sports, Carragher said: “I’m not surprised. I told everybody, ‘something else will come before the end of the season.’”
He then added a particularly sharp assessment of the Liverpool forward.
“Less than two years ago, I called him selfish for doing an interview and I think that rings true again.”
Carragher also questioned the impact of the statement arriving during such a tense moment in Liverpool’s campaign.
“Liverpool have a really important week. They are still not fully qualified for the Champions League and it should be about Liverpool FC, not Salah FC.”
The situation leaves Slot navigating one of the most delicate moments of his short Liverpool reign. Results have already eroded confidence among supporters and now Salah’s intervention threatens to deepen divisions around the direction of the team.
Carragher suggested Salah’s decision to speak publicly reflected the manager’s vulnerable position.
“Arne Slot is not in a position of great strength at Liverpool at the moment, and that’s why Salah made his comments,” he said.
“He’s put him in a really awkward position where he knows he’s almost got to pick him and give him that send-off.”
Despite the criticism, Carragher insisted Slot cannot afford to sideline Salah if Champions League football remains at risk.
“I don’t believe any manager should ever cut off his nose to spite his face,” Carragher explained.
“If playing Mo Salah at the weekend gives Liverpool the best chance of winning the game, you have to pick him.”
That balancing act now defines Liverpool’s immediate future. Slot must manage the emotional farewell atmosphere surrounding Salah while also ensuring the team deliver the result required against Brentford.
For all the controversy surrounding the statement, Salah’s standing at Liverpool remains immense. Few players in the club’s modern history have delivered with such consistency or transformed matches so relentlessly over multiple seasons.
His comments also reflected frustration from a player who has carried enormous responsibility during a turbulent campaign. Salah referenced Liverpool’s historic journey under Klopp and the standards supporters expect.
“Winning some games here and there is not what Liverpool should be about,” he wrote.
“Liverpool will always be a club that means a great deal to me and to my family.”
There remains a sense that Salah genuinely fears Liverpool losing its identity rather than simply settling personal scores. Yet football rarely allows sentiment to exist without consequence, especially when public statements arrive during moments of instability.
Liverpool’s final league match against Brentford now carries enormous significance. Depending on results elsewhere, Slot’s side may still require victory to guarantee Champions League qualification.
That backdrop ensures every Salah touch, every tactical decision from Slot and every reaction from the crowd will be analysed intensely.
Carragher’s intervention has only heightened the scrutiny. His criticism of Salah was severe, but it also reflected wider concerns about leadership, timing and dressing room unity during a fragile period for Liverpool.
For Slot, the challenge is immediate and unforgiving. He must steady the atmosphere, secure the necessary result and convince supporters there remains a coherent long-term plan after a bruising season.
Meanwhile, Salah prepares for what could be his final appearance at Anfield, still adored by many supporters despite the latest controversy. Football’s great exits are rarely simple and this one already feels emotionally charged before a ball has even been kicked.







































