Anfield Index
·06 de maio de 2026
Report: Liverpool ‘keeping tabs’ on Premier League defender ahead of summer window

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Yahoo sportsAnfield Index
·06 de maio de 2026

Liverpool’s summer planning appears to have entered that familiar stage where prudence and ambition begin to overlap. According to talkSPORT, the club are keeping tabs on Bournemouth centre-back Marcos Senesi, with a rival offer being contemplated as Tottenham Hotspur and Manchester United also circle.
It is not difficult to see why. Senesi is expected to leave the Vitality Stadium when his contract expires at the end of the season, making him one of the more intriguing free agents available in the Premier League market. In a summer where elite centre-backs will not come cheaply, Liverpool may have spotted something more valuable than a bargain. They may have spotted a solution.
Liverpool are not short of centre-backs on paper, but football is rarely played on paper. Virgil van Dijk is entering the final year of his contract, Joe Gomez and Giovanni Leoni have endured injury problems, and Ibrahima Konate has yet to agree fresh terms at Anfield.

Photo: IMAGO
Even with Jeremy Jacquet set to arrive, Liverpool are expected to sign at least one more central defender. That tells its own story. Arne Slot’s side need depth, but not merely bodies. They need defenders capable of stepping into a title race without requiring months of adaptation.
Senesi, at 28, brings Premier League experience, tactical maturity and familiarity with Slot from their time together at Feyenoord. That combination matters. Liverpool’s recruitment under Richard Hughes is unlikely to be built around sentiment, yet Hughes knows Senesi well, having signed him for Bournemouth.
Tottenham are said to have reached an agreement in principle with Senesi, but their uncertain league position may yet complicate matters. That is where Liverpool’s interest becomes significant. If Champions League football, title contention and a clearer tactical fit enter the conversation, then the dynamic can change quickly.
Senesi has been a key figure in Bournemouth’s rise up the Premier League table. His contribution has not been limited to defensive work either. He has registered five assists in 36 appearances this season, matching his creative output from 2023/24, when he also scored four goals.
For a left-sided centre-back, that is not insignificant. Liverpool have long valued defenders who can progress play, break lines and contribute from set-pieces. Senesi may not be the glamorous name some supporters crave, but he carries the profile of a player who understands space, structure and timing.
Free transfers are rarely free in practice. Signing-on fees, wages and agent costs all matter. Yet compared with the price of buying an established Premier League defender, Senesi would represent smart risk.
Liverpool do not need every signing to announce a new era. Sometimes they need signings that quietly protect one. Senesi feels like that kind of player, a stabilising presence who could support Van Dijk, cover uncertainty around Konate and reduce the physical burden on Gomez.
For Liverpool, this is not simply about reacting to injuries or contract uncertainty. It is about building a squad capable of surviving a title race, a Champions League campaign and the inevitable bruises of an English season.
Senesi may already have one foot near Tottenham. Liverpool, though, appear ready to ask whether that door is truly closed.
From a Liverpool fan’s perspective, this is exactly the sort of link that deserves more attention than it will probably receive. Marcos Senesi is not a shiny £70m centre-back from the Bundesliga or La Liga, but that does not mean he lacks value. In fact, his Premier League experience may make him more useful than a younger, more expensive alternative needing a full season to adjust.
The Konate situation remains the big shadow over all of this. If he signs a new contract, Liverpool still need depth. If he does not, the club need to act decisively. Van Dijk remains outstanding, but age and contract length cannot be ignored forever. Gomez’s versatility is useful, yet availability has always been part of the conversation.
Senesi feels like a Hughes-style move, sensible, informed and opportunistic. The Slot connection also matters. A manager always benefits from players who already understand his principles, especially in defence, where hesitation can be fatal.
Would supporters see Senesi as a headline signing? Probably not. Would he improve the squad? Very possibly. On a free transfer, with the right wages, this could be one of those deals that looks modest in June and vital by February. Liverpool need elite starters, but they also need reliable adults in the room. Senesi might be one.







































