Anfield Watch
·22 de março de 2026
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Yahoo sportsAnfield Watch
·22 de março de 2026
Liverpool have an extraordinary player lined up to replace Mo Salah.
Sooner or later, every crown falls. History has shown time and again that no reign lasts forever. Change is inevitable. When one king fades, another rises to take his place.
As reigns go, Mohamed Salah’s time at Liverpool FC as their Egyptian King has been nothing short of extraordinary. Few players have built a legacy as rich, as consistent, and as iconic as his at Anfield.
But even the greatest are not immune to time. Salah is no exception. Like all players, there comes a point where the peak begins to pass, where the demands of the game begin to catch up.
And that moment now feels closer than ever. Liverpool’s king appears to be approaching the end of his reign.
This summer could mark the turning point - when Salah moves on and leaves his crown behind. With his contract winding down, Liverpool will be reluctant to risk losing him for nothing next year. The opportunity to secure a significant fee, potentially from Saudi Arabia, may prove too important to ignore.
So, yes, Salah is going to leave Liverpool this summer. It’s just not the FSG way to let him run down his deal. The club operates a lot smarter than that and they know that Salah is still a massive asset.
By now it’s becoming very clear that the most obvious and likely replacement for Salah will be Yan Diomande.
Anfield Watch understands he is the club’s no.1 target for the role.
If you said that one year ago when Diomande hadn’t even made his professional debut few would’ve believed it.
But it’s been a remarkable rise for Diomande in the last 12 months proving himself in La Liga and becoming a star at RB Leipzig.
For a while now I have been very intrigued by the rise of Diomande.
I’ve been impressed by watching him from my Laptop screen but I wanted to see what he was like in the flesh.
So, I travelled to Leipzig to see the man last Friday as they took on Hoffenheim in a crunch game for Champions League qualification.
Now, this game did not start out in a way Diomande will have liked. His first touch of the ball saw him swarmed by four Hoffenheim players all at once (a sign of just how dangerous they think he is) and even though Diomande drew a foul therefore not conceding possession he landed awkwardly on his shoulder.
This shoulder injury visible impacted the rest of his game.
It meant I didn’t get to see Diomande in full flow. But even with this setback I was mesmerised by him.
Diomande is an extraordinary player.
He created the first goal, sending a clever pass between two Hoffenheim defenders into the penalty area for Xaver Schlager to go down the byline and cut across for Romulo, his shot was parried by the goalkeeper into Brajan Gruda who scored the tap in.
© IMAGO - Yan Diomande Liverpool
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