Will Arne Slot Be The First Premier League Manager Sacked This Season?
Well, that didn’t take long. The paint has barely dried on Arne Slot’s new office door at Anfield, and the vultures are already circling. After a humiliating 4-1 thumping at home against PSV Eindhoven in the Champions League, the question on everyone’s lips isn’t if Slot will get the boot, but when. It seems the honeymoon period for Jürgen Klopp’s successor was shorter than a VAR check that actually goes Liverpool’s way.
Following a run that has seen the Reds lose nine of their last 12 matches, a feat of anti-prowess not seen since Winston Churchill was prime minister, the pressure is mounting. The team isn’t just losing; they’re getting systematically dismantled. This isn’t a blip; it’s a full-blown crisis, and the man in the designer tracksuit is right in the firing line.
How Bad Has It Really Gotten For Slot?
Let’s paint a picture, shall we? This current 12-game stretch is the club’s worst since the 1953-54 season. To add insult to injury, Slot has now overseen three consecutive losses by a margin of three or more goals, a first in 72 years. They were booed off their own pitch by fans who, just six months ago, were celebrating a Premier League title. Anfield, once a fortress, now has the defensive integrity of a wet paper bag.
The 4-1 loss to PSV was a masterclass in self-destruction. Virgil van Dijk, the colossus of a captain, decided to play a bit of handball in the box for the opener. Then, for the second goal, Mohamed Salah and Milos Kerkez apparently forgot who they were supposed to be marking. Ibrahima Konate rounded out the comedy of errors by completely whiffing on the ball to gift the Dutch side their third. It’s the kind of performance that makes you wonder if the team has been replaced by a group of particularly uncoordinated lookalikes.
Midfielder Curtis Jones, a fan himself, summed up the mood perfectly: “Right now, we’re in the s*** and it needs to change.” You can’t really argue with that assessment. He went on to describe the team of old as “absolute dogs” in their pressing. Now? They “hardly even play.” Ouch.
Is Slot’s P45 Already Being Printed?
Despite the on-field catastrophe, Liverpool legends are pleading for patience. Steve McManaman, speaking on TNT Sports, argued it’s “far too early” to even consider sacking Slot. He pointed to a good run of fixtures on the horizon and the fact that new signings have been perpetually injured, failing to lift the team as expected. “You have to give him time,” McManaman urged, suggesting the question should be asked again in January if things haven’t improved.
Steven Gerrard, who knows a thing or two about pressure, agreed. “That’s the world we live in, that’s football in the modern day,” he lamented. He acknowledged that “serious questions” will be asked but sided with McManaman, noting that it’s easy to call for a manager’s head from the outside.
For his part, Slot admits the situation is a “shock for everyone” but claims he feels safe in his position. “I have got a lot of support from above,” he stated, adding that while the board isn’t calling him every five minutes, he feels their trust in their regular conversations. That’s reassuring, I suppose. It’s always nice when your bosses tell you everything’s fine right before they hand you a cardboard box for your desk things.
The reality is that modern football has the patience of a toddler on a sugar high. The “trust the process” mantra only works when there are signs of an actual process. Right now, Liverpool look disjointed, devoid of confidence, and defensively shambolic. While club legends might call for calm, the deafening boos at Anfield tell a different story. If Slot can’t stop the bleeding—and fast—he might just win the unenviable race to be the first Premier League manager sacked this season.
