Gulf News

It isn’t inevitable that Salah leaves Liverpool

Egyptian’s big impact does not mean Real, Barcelona or PSG will lure him away

- BY PAUL HAYWARD

The megastar-driven transfer mania that sends top players spinning to Real Madrid, Barcelona or Paris StGermain is gaudily entertaini­ng until your club is on the wrong end of it. Then it feels relentless and obscene.

And few clubs are on the wrong end of it as frequently as Liverpool, who have already pre-empted the predictabl­e where-will-Mo-Salah-end-up saga by declaring: here, where he works, under contract, in a side with a bright future.

This briefing coincided with the first big wave of speculatio­n about Salah being the obvious target for Europe’s wealthiest and most prestigiou­s clubs, who have already lifted Javier Mascherano, Xabi Alonso, Luis Suarez and Philippe Coutinho from Anfield. Liverpool fans will, justifiabl­y, rage against the premise that Salah’s flight from Merseyside is a historical inevitabil­ity, nine months into his Liverpool career, as if Barcelona and Real Madrid were the moon controllin­g the tide.

Every time Salah goes jinking through a Premier League defence to plant the ball in the net, a tortured debate resumes about where that brilliant goal might take him next.

No self-respecting club can be lumbered daily with the background noise that this or that star is merely passing through. No set of fans should be expected to accept that a brilliant striker in his first season at their club is bound to leave simply because Real and Barca start sending mind waves through the transfer universe.

Liverpool’s supporters had their fill of this with Coutinho, whose departure for £142 million has not diminished Jurgen Klopp’s squad. Roberto Firmino, part of the side’s goalscorin­g trident, thinks it may even have improved the team by removing the “playmaker” and shifting the emphasis to speed and thrust.

Elusive hitman

Salah, though, is a different matter. Signed as a goalscorin­g winger, he has emerged as a prolific central striker who bamboozles defenders with his elusive running. The loose comparison­s with Lionel Messi stem from his unpredicta­bility — his skill in tight spaces. He is not quite in Messi’s class, of course, but those qualities raise players to a higher level of buy-ability.

It falls to Liverpool to give Salah reasons to stay. Knocking Manchester City out of the Champions League would be a start. So would buying well. Salah has a stage that illuminate­s his talent and a coach who believes in building his team. He is appreciate­d in England in a way that he might not be in the megastarhe­avy Spanish league. Even if this turns out to be doomed romanticis­m, it’s worth the fight.

Every time Salah goes jinking through a defence, a tortured debate resumes about where that brilliant goal might take him next.

 ?? AFP ?? ■ Liverpool’s Mohammad Salah (left) vies with Watford’s Etienne Capoue during last weekend’s clash at Anfield.
AFP ■ Liverpool’s Mohammad Salah (left) vies with Watford’s Etienne Capoue during last weekend’s clash at Anfield.

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