Anfield Index
·10 maggio 2026
Multiple journalists savage Slot and Liverpool after Chelsea draw

In partnership with
Yahoo sportsAnfield Index
·10 maggio 2026

The noise at full-time told its own story. Boos rolled around Anfield after Liverpool’s 1-1 draw with Chelsea and the sense of drift surrounding Arne Slot only intensified. What should have been an opportunity to punish a fragile Chelsea side instead became another bleak chapter in a season increasingly defined by hesitation, anxiety and mounting supporter frustration.
Chelsea arrived on Merseyside having lost six consecutive Premier League matches, yet Liverpool never looked capable of overwhelming them. Instead, the contest unfolded at a subdued pace, lacking intensity and conviction from the home side. The media reaction afterwards was brutal.
Lewis Steele of the Daily Mail delivered one of the sharpest verdicts. He wrote: “On your worst run in years and in desperate need of a point? Do you have a fanbase ready to revolt at the hierarchy after poor ownership and poor managerial appointments? Anxious about where your team might finish in the final league table?
“Doctor Liverpool will see you now. A contest against Arne Slot’s side is the perfect remedy for you.”
That cutting assessment captured the growing perception around Liverpool. Opponents no longer fear trips to Anfield. Instead, teams arrive believing there are opportunities to exploit a side stripped of aggression and confidence.

Photo: IMAGO
Pressure on Slot is no longer simmering quietly in the background. It is becoming central to the conversation around Liverpool’s decline.
Andy Hunter of the Guardian painted a picture of an increasingly restless stadium atmosphere. He wrote: “Optimism, however, was thin on the ground at Anfield where boos greeted the full-time whistle and Arne Slot’s decision to introduce Alexander Isak for Rio Ngumoha.
“His team are crawling towards Champions League qualification with dissent for company.”
That line about “dissent for company” felt particularly telling. Liverpool may still secure a Champions League place, but there is little sense of momentum or belief around the club.
David Lynch was even more direct in his assessment of the relationship between manager and supporters. He said: “Liverpool may be desperate to stick with Arne Slot, but that stance won’t withstand the Anfield crowd turning against him.
“Today felt like that – these fans are just sick of watching a passive, toothless brand of football they have seen for over a year now.”
Those words reflected the mood inside the ground. Liverpool supporters have accepted poor results before, but passive football at Anfield has rarely been tolerated for long.
Chelsea’s equaliser arrived after Liverpool retreated into themselves. Rather than pressing their advantage following the opening goal, Slot’s side became cautious and reactive.
Dominic King of the Telegraph highlighted precisely that issue during the match. He wrote: “An early goal, the chance to pummel a team so obviously short of confidence but Liverpool spend 20 minutes dropping off and playing backwards to such an extent they have now been pegged back.
“Not for the first time here this season, it has been utterly anaemic.”
Statistics reinforced the criticism. BBC Sport noted Liverpool produced an expected goals figure of just 0.51, their lowest in a Premier League home match since March 2021. Against a Chelsea side carrying dreadful form, that number exposed the lack of attacking ambition.
Aadam Patel of BBC Sport said: “When they took the lead in the sixth minute, Chelsea were there for the taking, but this Liverpool side lack intensity.”
He also pointed out Liverpool have now dropped nine points from winning positions at Anfield this season, their worst home total in a decade.
Meanwhile, Opta analyst David Segar described the contest as “a predictably low-quality game from two teams completely shorn of confidence”. His verdict that Liverpool were “insipid” echoed much of the wider media reaction.
One of the loudest reactions of the afternoon came when Rio Ngumoha was substituted. The teenager had provided rare energy and directness, yet his withdrawal for Alexander Isak sparked immediate anger from sections of the crowd.
James Whaling of the Mirror observed: “The Dutchman decided to take off the lively Rio Ngumoha for Alexander Isak on 67 minutes to a chorus of boos from those on the Kop and in other home areas.
“And the boos were loud and unmistakeable.”
Former Liverpool midfielder Joe Cole added on TNT Sports that he had “never heard Anfield this restless”, while Sam Wallace wrote that “rarely has Anfield been so angry with its team and their performance”.
That may be the most worrying development for Slot. Tactical criticism can be survived. Poor runs can be corrected. But once the emotional connection between Anfield and its manager begins to fracture, rebuilding trust becomes far more complicated.
Liverpool remain in contention for Champions League qualification, yet the atmosphere surrounding the club feels increasingly unstable. The Chelsea draw did not merely cost points. It intensified scrutiny, amplified supporter frustration and deepened questions over whether Slot’s approach can truly revive Liverpool.
Live


Live


Live


Live

































