arne slot

Liverpool’s title defence under Arne Slot has collapsed into a season of frustration: boos at Anfield, creativity drained, and a squad riddled with injuries and set-piece failures. The supporters are restless, and they have many reasons to be.

Arne Slot didn’t duck the reaction after the Chelsea draw; he admitted he heard the boos and insisted he knows what needs changing. “I know what we need to get that done,” he said, adding he’s “100 per cent convinced we will be a different team next season” if the summer goes to plan.

That’s a start, accountability matters but words only buy time. Slot must translate intent into visible, immediate action on three fronts: defend set pieces, restore attacking identity, and get the recruitment right.

Arne Slot overseeing slump

Liverpool have been punished repeatedly from set plays this season, 18 goals conceded from set pieces is a glaring structural failure. That’s not a one-off; it’s a recurring pattern that undermines confidence and invites pressure. Fixing it requires a forensic coaching reset: dedicated set-piece drills, clearer marking responsibilities, and a defensive leadership voice on the pitch.

If Slot wants to silence the crowd quickly, he needs to make Anfield a fortress again. Especially on dead-ball situations. Clean sheets buy patience.

Fans are bored because the team is predictable and low on chances. Liverpool’s expected-goals rank is the worst in a decade. And, the problem isn’t just finishing, it’s creating. Slot’s forwards have been starved of quality service and movement; the new attacking signings have barely had time together, with Hugo Ekitike, Florian Wirtz, and Alexander Isak combining for only 119 minutes this season. That lack of cohesion has to be addressed tactically and practically.

If there is a short-term solution, it will be, free up the front line with clearer patterns, quicker transitions, and more aggressive positional rotations. Long-term solutions will be assessed at the end of the season, but as a minimum a preseason that builds chemistry, not just fitness.

Targeted changes

Last summer’s spending was huge, but injuries and mismatches have left gaps. Jamie Carragher’s blunt prescription, a right winger, a right back and a central midfielder, is a useful shopping list: targeted, not wholesale. Slot and sporting director Richard Hughes must prioritise quality over quantity and buy players who fit the system and the Premier League’s physical demands.

Crucially, they can’t do a complete rebuild and alter the entire identity. Keep the best of what won the title and plug the holes that made the team “easy to play against,” as pundits have put it.

Fans want to see momentum. That means clear, measurable steps: improved set-piece record in pre-season friendlies, a visible tactical tweak in the first competitive game, and early transfer moves that signal intent. Champions League qualification is non-negotiable, it funds the rebuild and calms nerves. Slot must make the first two matches after the break feel like a reset, not a continuation of decline.

Uphill battle

The reality is, the boo’s are a symptom, not the disease. Slot’s words, that he knows what’s wrong and how to fix it, are necessary but not sufficient.

It’s okay to talk the talk, his team has far from walked the walk this season.

To win fans back he needs rapid, tangible improvements in defence, creativity and recruitment, plus a summer that turns stop-gap fixes into a coherent plan. If he delivers that, the noise will fade. If he doesn’t, patience is already wearing thin. He won’t be coaching Liverpool FC if this continues.

Featured image via the Canary

By Faz Ali


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