logo
Liverpool splash out to secure status as Premier League's top dogs

Liverpool splash out to secure status as Premier League's top dogs

The Citizen15 hours ago
Liverpool were among the lowest Premier League spenders last year.
Fresh from storming to a record-equalling 19th English top-flight title, Liverpool have not held back in transforming Arne Slot's squad in pursuit of an era of Premier League dominance.
On top of retaining veteran stars Virgil van Dijk and Mohamed Salah to new contracts, the Reds have splashed out £260 million ($350 million) and are reportedly far from finished in the transfer market.
Two of the Bundesliga's most promising talents Florian Wirtz and Hugo Ekitike have arrived at Anfield to add extra creativity and goals.
Jeremie Frimpong has also made the move from Germany with the daunting task of replacing Trent Alexander-Arnold at right-back, while Milos Kerkez joined from Bournemouth as the long-term successor to Andy Robertson at left-back.
More defensive reinforcements are imminent with the club closing in on deals for Crystal Palace captain Marc Guehi and 18-year-old Italian centre-back Giovanni Leoni from Parma.
But it is the potential addition of Newcastle striker Alexander Isak for a British transfer record fee in excess of £115 million that is the transfer saga of the English summer.
– Risky and rare strategy –
Liverpool were among the lowest Premier League spenders last year as Slot oversaw a steady transition from Jurgen Klopp in spectacular style.
A huge investment this time round is also possible because the Reds are among the slickest movers in the market when it comes to sales.
The departures of Luis Diaz, Darwin Nunez, Jarell Quansah, Caoimhin Kelleher, Alexander-Arnold and Tyler Morton have raised around £200 million.
Liverpool's bold strategy of tearing up a title-winning team is a risky and rare experiment.
Only once, Manchester City in 2019, have the Premier League champions been the biggest spending English club in the market since 2007.
After years of battling against the financial power of Abu Dhabi-backed City, Liverpool are now flexing their muscles thanks to years of commercial growth and prudent ownership.
'It doesn't feel Liverpool-like to me,' said former defender Jamie Carragher at the thought of a new £69 million striker Ekitike playing second fiddle to Isak.
After decades in the doldrums prior to Klopp's arrival, Liverpool are aiming to bring back glory days the club has not since the 1980s.
The last time Liverpool won back-to-back titles was in 1984 and doing so this season would come with the added bonus of overtaking Manchester United as English football's top dogs.
To do so, Slot has recognised the need to strike the right balance that still harnesses the best from his side's extra firepower.
A pre-season trend of high-scoring encounters continued in losing the Community Shield to Crystal Palace on penalties after twice blowing the lead.
'Now we are better in creating and getting promising situations than we were, in my opinion, throughout the whole of last season,' said Slot.
'What made us really strong last season was we only won mostly by a margin of one goal and that had mostly to do with us keeping a clean sheet or as a maximum conceding one goal.'
Liverpool also have extra motivation to defend their title as they try to honour a lost friend and team-mate in Diogo Jota.
The Portuguese international was killed aged just 28 alongside his brother after a car accident in northern Spain last month.
Tributes to Jota will continue throughout the season with 'Forever 20' — his shirt number, which the club have now retired — printed on Liverpool's jerseys.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

'We will have to take a step up from the Lions series to beat the Springboks', says Wallabies coach Joe Schmidt
'We will have to take a step up from the Lions series to beat the Springboks', says Wallabies coach Joe Schmidt

IOL News

time7 hours ago

  • IOL News

'We will have to take a step up from the Lions series to beat the Springboks', says Wallabies coach Joe Schmidt

'But for us, we are a little bit earlier in our time as a group to be focusing on anything but getting the fundamentals right, and not trying and push the boundaries too much.' 'I am an admirer of Tony; he is very innovative, so are Felix and Rassie. The three of them must have some interesting coaching meetings where they come up with good ideas. If anybody has a recording of those meetings, I'd love to get them,' Schmidt laughed. Schmidt, a New Zealander, knows former All Black Brown well, while as director of rugby at the Ireland Rugby Union, he regularly met with Munster men in Erasmus, Jones, and defence coach Jerry Flannery. Wallabies coach Joe Schmidt says he would love to be a fly on the wall when Rassie Erasmus has his coaching meetings with innovative assistants Tony Brown and Felix Jones. Erasmus, of course, pushes boundaries every week. Schmidt is mostly okay with it. 'Sometimes he stretches things a bit far, like having a guy offside at the kick-off, and that has been dealt with by World Rugby as an intentional breach of the rules. 'Rassie is a great man for testing the boundaries. And if you do that and get a tactical advantage, with the athletes he has at his disposal, why not?' The Wallabies are fresh from a colossal series against the British and Irish Lions, and Schmidt is pleased with his team's progression across the three Tests. 'We put things in place, and to polish up on detail is the plan. At least we would like to be able to do that,' he grinned. 'We would like to build after a good improvement across the Lions series. 'The thing is, the Boks have grown their game. Tony has added width to their attack. I expect them to be very strong in the set pieces, as they always are; their kick-chase game is strong; from turnovers, they have lethal finishers in (Kurt-Lee) Arendse, (Edwill) van der Merwe, and (Aphelele) Fassi. Then you have strong men in (Jesse) Kriel and (Andre) Esterhuizen. 'I remember two years ago, I was working with the All Blacks, and I watched this game between the Boks and Australia. Esterhuizen was a colossus and very difficult for the Aussies to contain.' Schmidt said he is a fan of Manie Libbok. 'I recall clearly that no-look, kick-pass of Libbok's against Scotland in the World Cup. That is the abundance of talent that they have. They can play in so many different ways. They can outmuscle you, they can outspeed you, and out-skill you. 'We have to be a lot better than we were in that last Lions Test, not just because of who we are playing but where we are.' Schmidt has made just one change to his side that beat the Lions in that last Test, recalling veteran James O'Connor at fly-half. Wallabies Team 15 Tom Wright, 14 Max Jorgensen, 13 Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii, 12 Len Ikitau, 11 Dylan Pietsch, 10 James O'Connor, 9 Nic White, 8 Harry Wilson (c), 7 Fraser McReight, 6 Tom Hooper, 5 Will Skelton, 4 Nick Frost, 3 Taniela Tupou, 2 Billy Pollard, 1 James Slipper. Bench: 16 Brandon Paenga-Amosa, 17 Angus Bell, 18 Zane Nonggorr, 19 Jeremy Williams, 20 Langi Gleeson, 21 Nick Champion de Crespigny, 22 Tate McDermott, 23 Andrew Kellaway.

Van der Merwe says a try would be a bonus against Wallabies but is not vital
Van der Merwe says a try would be a bonus against Wallabies but is not vital

TimesLIVE

time8 hours ago

  • TimesLIVE

Van der Merwe says a try would be a bonus against Wallabies but is not vital

Rugby Given another shot to add to his three Springbok appearances, winger Edwill van der Merwe is not motivated by increasing his try scoring record but in helping the team start the Rugby Championship on a winning note. Van der Merwe will start against Australia in what is expected to be a packed Ellis Park in Johannesburg on Saturday to add to the Test matches he has featured in against Wales, Italy and Georgia. In those three Tests, the speedy trickster has made a strong statement by scoring five tries and he is excited to be back at a venue he used to call home as a Lions player. Coach Rassie Erasmus picked Van der Merwe in the place of Cheslin Kolbe, who has been given an extra week of training after recovering from injury, and he is not perturbed about trying to fill the boots of the World Cup winner. 'I am excited about the opportunity to play against Australia and to take the field in a Test for the first time at Ellis Park,' said Van der Merwe. 'This is an opportunity and a new challenge to improve my game. That's where my focus is presently. There's an expectation that if you play for the Springboks and it is hard to become one and equally hard to stay here. 'So each day we go onto the field, training is a challenge and an opportunity to improve, and the key for me is to be able to say that with each session I got better. Scoring a try will be a bonus [but] I am more focused on my position in the system.' On what he expected against the Wallabies, Van der Merwe said they have improved in recent times. 'I have always watched and heard about the rivalry between the teams, so it's going to be special to play against them. They are a big and physical team who started building momentum against the British and Irish Lions in Australia and they have improved a lot. 'I expect the breakdown to be a focus point in the Test and I am looking forward to it.' Having scored five tries already in his short international career, Van der Merwe is not under pressure increase his tally. 'There is no pressure on me to score tries, but rather to ensure that I am accurate in implementing what the coaches want me to do. Scoring tries would be a bonus. 'The main challenge is to make the right decisions, both on attack and defence, especially against the stronger teams that have more experience.'

Shell and Total dealt devastating South Africa offshore drilling blow
Shell and Total dealt devastating South Africa offshore drilling blow

The South African

time9 hours ago

  • The South African

Shell and Total dealt devastating South Africa offshore drilling blow

The Western Cape High Court has refused environmental authorisation for offshore drilling in a venture led by French energy giant TotalEnergies off South Africa's west coast, in a ruling on Thursday. The High Court said on Wednesday the environment ministry's 2023 go-ahead for exploratory operations in the roughly 10 000-square-kilometre block near Cape Town had been 'reviewed and set aside'. Environmental lobby groups that launched a legal challenge against the project said it would harm marine life. The block is jointly owned by South Africa's state oil company PetroSA, TotalEnergies and British oil heavyweight Shell, with the French firm serving as the operator. In a statement to AFP, TotalEnergies said the venture complied with all required local regulations, including environmental and social, from the outset and it would assess the judgement. Although it had already announced its exit from exploration in the block, it remains 'fully committed to respecting the judicial process to its term', the company said. In overturning the environmental permit, the judge Nobahle Mangcu-Lockwood said TotalEnergies could reapply for authorisation after public consultation. Green Connection, one of the groups that filed the legal challenge, said the ruling was a major victory for coastal communities and small-scale fishers. 'Oil spill and blowout contingency plans were kept from the public until after approval, denying communities a chance to comment,' it said in a statement. Interest in oil and gas exploration off South Africa's coast has surged in recent years, driven in part by major discoveries across the maritime border in Namibia and broader energy activity in southern Africa, including Mozambique. The Natural Justice group of environmental lawyers said Wednesday's judgement affirmed that all companies needed to follow due process before seeking the green light for oil exploration off South Africa. 'We will continue to turn to our courts to not only stop the takers who parade under the guise of growth and development, but to ensure that impacts of oil and gas exploration and production are properly scrutinised and that our people and our resources are not exploited,' it said. Let us know by leaving a comment below, or send a WhatsApp to 060 011 021 1 Subscribe to The South African website's newsletters and follow us on WhatsApp, Facebook, X and Bluesky for the latest news.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store