Sunday People

Pay Salah whatever it takes to keep him. He’s a world-class talent who scores world-class goals. Just get it done.

- Football’s ultimate maverick sounds off

WHEN it comes to Mo Salah’s contract situation with Liverpool, I have a simple message for my old club…

Pay him. Pay him whatever it takes and get the deal done.

I know Liverpool aren’t owned by a nation state such as Abu Dhabi or by an oligarch like Roman Abramovich.

But as things stand, there are two paths they can go down and they lead in very different directions.

One goes left, into Arsene Wenger World, where people say, ‘We don’t care what the economics of football globally are telling us, we have a structure and we are going to live within our means.

‘We’ll have a strict wage bill, we won’t go above it and we’ll let some of our best players join rival clubs on the back of that if we have to’.

The other path goes right and takes them towards a place called Real Football Finances.

Exceptions

A real-world place in which Liverpool might not have the money of a Manchester City or Chelsea but in which they can occasional­ly make tactical exceptions to rules.

Look, most of you will know I believe wholeheart­edly in sensible football finances, it has been a common thread in this column over the years.

Occasional­ly you have to think outside the box and, with Salah ticking off both club and Premier League records like confetti, he is definitely an exception-to-the-rule kind of player. So if it takes £400,000 or £500,000 a week to keep him, whatever, then Liverpool must get their chief financial officer to sign it off and fast.

Smart

Once it is done and dusted, the smart thing will be to follow City’s lead over the announceme­nt rather than going down the Manchester United path.

Liverpool must forget rap or pianoplayi­ng videos like those which greeted Paul Pogba’s return or the capture of Alexis Sanchez.

Instead do what City did when they effectivel­y put out a headline of, ‘Kev Stays’, with a line underneath it saying, ‘We are delighted to announce that Kevin De Bruyne has signed a new long-term deal to remain at the club’.

No whistles, no bells, just cold, hard facts. It sends a business-like message to the rest of the Premier League and doesn’t upset anyone in the dressing

FIFA would do better creating their own version of UEFA’S Nations

League than try to impose

a biennial World Cup. The latter simply

isn’t viable because of the scheduling you and upheaval

would inflict on European and competitio­ns domestic leagues. As seen

with the FA Cup, when you water down

a competitio­n, winning it is never the same get as it was. We football is being played

more to fill ever-growing black holes

and FIFA want a piece of that. But

the

Nations League format is

a better option.

room. Let’s say Liverpool sit Salah on a throne, deck him out in a long coat, and dub him the ‘King Of Egypt’, with money raining all around him.

I guarantee that in six months’ time, if he’s not doing the business and Sadio Mane, Roberto Firmino and Diogo Jota are, that one of them goes to see his agent and says, ‘Where’s my video? Where’s my £400k a

week?’

Because the second you put out a video like that one, everyone makes it their business to find out what someone is earning.

As opposed to De Bruyne, when no one is overly concerned by the amounts and no one is waiting for him to have a dip in form to get the hump. Liverpool just need to get it done.

Because Salah is a world-class player and a world-class talent who, as we saw against Manchester City last weekend, still knows very well how to

score world-class goals.

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? ALL BLING AND
DE REAL THING Pogba rejoined United to the backing of a rap video, while De Bruyne
re-signed for City with no fanfare at all
ALL BLING AND DE REAL THING Pogba rejoined United to the backing of a rap video, while De Bruyne re-signed for City with no fanfare at all

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