Mohamed Salah’s Liverpool career comes to an end on Sunday.
By Sam McGuire
Things move quickly in football. Just over a year ago, he penned a new, two-year deal with the club after a record breaking season. Salah scored 29 goals and assisted 18 times as he helped the Reds claim their 20th league title. The signs looked ominous for Liverpool’s rivals.
Yet here we are, one year later, and the four-time Golden Boot winner is, perhaps prematurely, calling time on his stay on Merseyside after the worst career of his season with the club.
With just seven goals and six assists to his name, it’s been a bit of a barren campaign for the usually free-scoring forward. Unfairly sacrificed earlier in the season by Arne Slot when the Dutchman wanted to shore things up, Salah’s war of words with the club expedited his inevitable departure.

The 33-year-old claimed he was “thrown under the bus” by the club during that spell on the sidelines and was left out of the squad for a trip to the San Siro as punishment. Injuries have impacted his farewell tour and what he’s said over recent weeks has dominated the conversation. So much so that instead of there being a media celebration heading into his final game for the Reds, he’s been painted as a villain who, fuelled by bitterness, is taking swipes at the club.
In reality, all he’s done is shed some light on the fact that standards have slipped within the club. He’s pointed out the obvious. If standards hadn’t slipped, Slot wouldn’t be talking about scoring two goals at Villa Park as a big positive in a game the Reds lost 4-2. If standards hadn’t slipped, there’d be a greater focus on why the 2024/25 champions of England are needing a positive result on the final day of the season to claim a fifth place finish.
The maximum points Liverpool can finish on is 62. Last season, that total would’ve secured eighth place. As Salah said in a recent statement: “Winning some games here and there is not what Liverpool should be about. All teams win games.”
He’s been vilified for wanting the Reds to do better. And while this is a cloud over his departure, it should detract from what he’s done for the club.

Perception and opinion is skewed right now. With Salah leaving Anfield, the Reds are losing one of the best ever. Pep Guardiola put it nicely in a recent interview: “One of the greatest; the numbers, the consistency – what a player! An incredible human being, goals and assists, absolutely a legend for Liverpool Football Club, but for the Premier League for all he has done.”
Given he’s been performing at such a high level for his entire stint with Liverpool, a lot of what he does is taken for granted. Before his arrival, wide forwards not named Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi weren’t posting these types of numbers. And nobody was doing it in the Premier League.
It isn’t an exaggeration to say he changed the game.

At the time of writing, he’s on 191 Premier League goals in 314 appearances. In eight of his nine seasons at Liverpool, he’s scored a minimum of 18 in the English top-flight and in five of these campaigns, he’s scored a minimum of 22. He was a goal machine for one of the best teams in world football.
He wasn’t just a goalscorer though. He’s ranked joint top for Premier League assists for the Reds with Steven Gerrard on 92.
Salah spearheaded two different Liverpool teams to Premier League success, almost singlehandedly carrying Slot’s side last season with 47 goal involvements. He’s also played his part in the Reds reaching three Champions League finals, winning one, as well as domestic success.
The No. 11 is, and will always be, a Liverpool legend. His struggles this season don’t take anything away from his time on Merseyside. And his struggles have been blown out of proportion.
The Reds are a team in the middle of an identity crisis. No attacker has been platformed well by those in charge, the balance seems off and that is a big reason as to why they find themselves in fifth position rather than in a title challenge. Despite this, and despite the narratives, Salah still ranks second for goal involvement behind Hugo Ekitike. He’s joint second for goals and assists. He’s second for big chances created and second for chances created per 90. In truth, he’s performed as expected in this set-up with seven goals from an xG of 7.91 and six assists from an xA of 4.9.
Obviously, he would’ve liked to go out on a high. If he can help the club secure Champions League football, he’s done his job. But this is about more than just one season. Salah leaves a Liverpool legend.
(Cover image from IMAGO)
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