Journalist defends Liverpool fans over Arne Slot criticism | OneFootball

Journalist defends Liverpool fans over Arne Slot criticism | OneFootball

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·14 maggio 2026

Journalist defends Liverpool fans over Arne Slot criticism

Immagine dell'articolo:Journalist defends Liverpool fans over Arne Slot criticism

Liverpool Fans Boo as Anfield Mood Turns on Slot

On Media Matters for Anfield Index, Dave Davis and Lewis Steele captured the mood around Liverpool with striking clarity. This was not simply about one draw with Chelsea. It was about Liverpool fans, the boos at Anfield, and a growing sense that supporters have reached the limit of patience.

Davis set the tone early, saying: “God, that Chelsea draw still lingers, doesn’t it? It feels like a defeat.” He later called it “groundhog day again”, a phrase that spoke directly to the frustration felt by Liverpool fans watching another familiar pattern unfold.


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Fans Have Seen Enough

Steele was blunt about what he saw from Liverpool. “I feel like I say the same every time I come on the show,” he said. “You have a little period where they’re good and then, eighty percent of the match, they’re terrible.”

For supporters, that is the deepest wound. Anfield has long been the place where visiting teams felt pressure. Yet Steele’s verdict was stark: “The fact is at Anfield the fortress is completely gone, the fans have seen enough.”

Immagine dell'articolo:Journalist defends Liverpool fans over Arne Slot criticism

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Davis picked up on the same theme, noting “people are leaving early” and “people are expressing themselves”. His description of the mood was telling: “It’s almost believers to doubt a situation now, isn’t it?”

Booing Sends Message

The boos became central to the discussion because they were not treated as a passing noise. They were framed as a message. Davis said: “But the boos at full time,” before referencing Joe Gomez, who he said had spoken afterwards with understanding: “We get it, we understand it.”

Davis added that Gomez viewed it as “a reaction to the whole year”, which he called “fair enough”.

Then came the key question: “You can’t ignore those boos, can you?”

Steele’s answer was direct. “No,” he said, adding that Liverpool’s “power brokers” listen to supporters. “We know that they listen to fans in that regard. So they can’t not hear the negativity towards Arne Slot.”

That line matters. The booing was not presented as casual anger. It was presented as something audible, meaningful and impossible for Liverpool’s hierarchy to miss.

Anfield Patience Running Thin

Steele also pushed back against any idea that the frustration had appeared suddenly. “It’s not a new thing either,” he said. “People have been anti Slot since October, November.”

He added: “Those numbers have only grown in the last six months.”

The fans’ mood, then, was described as cumulative. It has built through performances, style and repetition. Steele said: “You look at the football styles, it’s been so bad. It’s so slow. And nothing’s changing.”

Perhaps the most cutting line came when he assessed the early exits. “I don’t blame them for leaving,” Steele said. “They just decided they had better ways to spend their Saturday than be at Anfield. And that is really damning for Slot.”

Near the end, Steele returned to the strength of the reaction, saying Liverpool must weigh up decisions “alongside the fact that the fans are booing so loudly.”

For Liverpool fans, the booing was not just sound. It was judgement. On Media Matters, Davis and Steele made clear that Anfield’s patience is no longer something Slot can take for granted.

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