Arne Slot: What can Liverpool boss do next to stop current slide?

Arne Slot: What can Liverpool boss do next to stop current slide?


Werner left Anfield on Saturday after watching a display from Alexander Isak that left many questioning what exactly ownership group FSG had bought for their £125m.

The Swede was Liverpool’s marquee summer signing, acquired from Newcastle United after a prolonged, acrimonious pursuit that included the striker downing tools to get his move.

The British record fee came after Liverpool spent £116m on Germany’s Florian Wirtz, who is yet to record a goal or assist in the Premier League this season.

Wirtz, who has struggled with the Premier League’s physical intensity and is yet to look a neat fit either in a role behind Liverpool’s striker or out on the left, was out injured against Forest.

The pair have undoubted quality, but Slot needs to get them delivering very soon. It is the very least £241m should deliver.

It was Isak who brought Liverpool’s struggles into sharp relief with an abysmal individual performance against Forest.

Isak arrived at Liverpool under-cooked after his Newcastle exile, while a groin injury also stalled his settling-in period but, even taking these factors into consideration, he was alarmingly poor before Slot called time on him after 68 minutes.

Isak, who proved his brilliance on Tyneside, was non-existent, his body language defeatist. Lightweight, lethargic, lost.

The statistics deliver a damning indictment. Isak had 14 touches, 11 in the first half, only two in the opening 25 minutes.

Isak’s lack of impact prompted justifiable claims that even the much-maligned and now departed Darwin Nunez would have at least run around a bit in a bid to make things happen.

Hugo Ekitike has been the success of Liverpool’s summer incomings, but Slot’s decision to start with Isak meant the Frenchman was reduced to a substitute’s role, playing on the left-flank against Forest when he came on after 55 minutes.

Ekitike is Liverpool’s top scorer with six this season and has also scored his first goal for France. Selecting Isak ahead of him lacked logic, smacking of a manager groping for answers, almost trying to get an expensive signing to play himself into the team.

There is little evidence, so far, that both can play together. At a cost of almost £200m, it looks like one or other must settle for a place on the bench.

Ekitike has shown quality. Isak, for now, remains a very costly problem.



Source: BBC Sport

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