Kop hero Robbie Fowler has offered his own insight on Mohamed Salah's Liverpool future as the Egyptian star rolls into the final 12 months of his current deal.
Salah enjoyed another stellar season for the Reds, finishing joint Premier League top goalscorer and picking up the PFA Footballer of the Year award. But as things stand, the global superstar will be a free agent this time next year and unless he signs a new contract in the coming months his incredible Liverpool career will be over. Furthermore, he will have followed fell Anfield great Sadio Mane out of the exit door - something that would rightly concern supporters.
But Fowler, who's prolific return for the Reds saw him nicknamed 'God' by the Kop in the 1990s, thinks that the Reds will still be weighing up the likely return on any future investment - as they did with Mane - should they even consider coming close to agreeing a deal that would satisfy Salah's wage demands.
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Writing in his column for the Mirror, Fowler said: "I won’t pretend to know what’s going on with his contract, but clearly the answer is: nothing much. And that leaves so many questions unanswered. One thing is obvious, the club has done some very clear, precise and unemotional calculations with Mane. He’s 31 in April, has a huge amount of running in his legs, and wanted a huge contract as one of the best players in the world.
"I don’t blame him for that. Mane is the equal of virtually every world class star at the moment, and rightly wanted that recognition with the going rate for the last big contract of his career. What Liverpool so obviously did though, was run their analytics - which to their credit they do so well - and decided selling him to buy Darwin Nunez and keep their wage structure in place was the right thing for the club. It begs the question, what calculations have they run on Salah?
"Again, I don’t know all the answers, but what screams out to me so clearly, is they won’t be breaking their wage structure to keep him. If they were prepared to do that, it would have happened by now. But look, I can’t blame Salah for wanting the going rate, just like Mane did. He’s the Premier League Golden Boot winner, he’s the Footballer of the Year and in with a great shout of the Ballon d’Or top three.
"What salary does a player in the top three in the world command? He obviously believes it’s more than Liverpool are offering. But if my old club are running complex calculations, then so too is Salah - and it can never be a precise science. I think him saying no matter what happens with his contract, he’ll be at Anfield next year was clearly a threat."
Salah knows that should no deal be done with Liverpool, he is free to leave at the end of next season and will likely not be short of suiters, some of which will be willing to pay the type of wages that will put him on a par with top tier stars like Ronaldo and Kevin de Bruyne. It is a calculated gamble on Salah's part, but Fowler is of the view that Liverpool are doing careful analysis of their own before making a firm decision on their top goal-scorer's future.
Fowler said: "His calculation is that if he gets to leave Liverpool next summer on a free, with his salary and with a big bonus because there’s no fee, he’ll get that level of wages. That can work, often does. But there’s another calculation, which I’m inclined to believe Liverpool are currently running. Will he still be the same player next summer? Look, he’s been one of the best in the world for a long time now. But since the turn of the year, he’s been - by his standards - pretty average.
"Look at his goals record. Six from open play in the whole of 2022, a lot of missed chances, some heartache in the Champions League final when he could have won it - and probably the Ballon d’Or along with it. So he and Liverpool must ask: is that temporary because of the punishing schedule and his exertions for Egypt? Or is time catching up with him? That’s the question other potential suitors must ask too, if and when he becomes available. Can he stay at the summit of world football well into his 30s, or will he begin to fade?
"I have to confess that I’m beginning to believe Liverpool are concerned it will be the latter, otherwise they’d have done more over a new deal. And maybe they’re waiting now to see how he starts next season."
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