Slot Faces Title Race, Transfer & Contract Questions Ahead of Brentford Trip

Four points is close enough to feel.
Arsenal's north London derby win cut Liverpool's Premier League lead and changed the texture of the title race.

At a moment when margins define everything, Liverpool manager Arne Slot prepares to face the cameras with a four-point lead that felt comfortable only days ago and now feels like something that must be defended. A draw at Nottingham Forest and Arsenal's derby victory have compressed the title race, while questions about expiring contracts and incoming transfers remind us that football clubs are never just about the match in front of them — they are always, simultaneously, about the future being quietly negotiated in the background.

  • Liverpool's cushion at the top of the Premier League shrank overnight as Arsenal closed to within four points after beating Tottenham, turning a manageable lead into something that demands attention.
  • A 1-1 draw at Nottingham Forest — where only a late goalkeeping performance by Matz Sels prevented Liverpool from finding a winner — left the door open for Arsenal to walk through.
  • Brentford arrive on Saturday carrying their own momentum after coming from two goals down to draw with Manchester City, making them a far from routine obstacle.
  • The transfer window pulls at the press conference agenda, with Milos Kerkez linked to Liverpool as cover for the absent Joe Gomez and reporters pressing Slot for clarity he has so far declined to offer.
  • The contract situations of Salah, Van Dijk, and Alexander-Arnold remain unresolved, with renewed reports suggesting Alexander-Arnold could leave for Real Madrid on a free transfer in the summer — a loss that would reshape the club's identity as much as its tactics.

Four points separate Liverpool from Arsenal heading into the weekend, and that number carries a weight it didn't hold just a week ago. A trip to Nottingham Forest that might have extended Liverpool's lead ended in a 1-1 draw, with goalkeeper Matz Sels denying the Reds a winner in the closing stages. Arsenal then beat Tottenham 2-1 the following evening, and suddenly the title race feels like a race again.

Slot will face the media on Thursday ahead of Saturday's match against Brentford — a side that showed their own character this week by recovering from two goals down to draw with Manchester City. The press conference, though, will range far beyond the weekend fixture.

January brings transfer questions, and Liverpool's interest in Bournemouth left-back Milos Kerkez has a practical logic behind it: Joe Gomez's absence has thinned the defensive options, and reporters will want Slot to address whether reinforcements are coming. More pressing still are the contract situations of Virgil van Dijk, Mohamed Salah, and Trent Alexander-Arnold, none of which have been publicly resolved. Alexander-Arnold's case carries the sharpest edge — reports this week have revived speculation that he will join Real Madrid on a free transfer when his deal expires in the summer, which would mean Liverpool losing one of their most important players without a fee in return.

Slot has navigated these questions with careful composure throughout the season, keeping attention on the football rather than the noise around it. Liverpool still lead the Premier League, still hold a game in hand, and are still the team everyone else is measuring themselves against. But four points is close enough to feel.

Four points. That's the gap between Liverpool and Arsenal heading into the weekend, and it's a number that will hang over everything Arne Slot says when he steps in front of the cameras at the AXA Training Centre on Thursday morning.

It had been a comfortable cushion before Tuesday night. Liverpool traveled to Nottingham Forest for what looked like a chance to extend their lead at the top of the Premier League, but they came away with a 1-1 draw instead — saved from something worse only by a string of late stops from Forest goalkeeper Matz Sels, who kept the Reds from finding a winner in the closing stages. A point on the road at a difficult ground isn't a disaster. But the timing mattered.

Arsenal made sure of that. The following evening, they beat Tottenham Hotspur 2-1 in the north London derby, cutting Liverpool's advantage to four points. Slot's side still hold a game in hand, which softens the arithmetic somewhat, but the race has tightened in a way it hadn't been just a week ago.

Saturday brings Brentford to the fixture list, and they arrive with their own momentum. In midweek, they came from two goals down to draw 2-2 at home against Manchester City — a result that says something both about Brentford's resilience and about how far City have fallen from the defending champions they were. Slot will be expected to address that challenge directly, and to explain how Liverpool intend to avoid the kind of result that lets the teams behind them breathe easier.

But the press conference will almost certainly range well beyond the weekend's match. January has a way of pulling every conversation toward the transfer window, and Liverpool's name has been attached to Milos Kerkez, the Bournemouth left-back. The club is currently without Joe Gomez, the versatile defender whose absence has thinned the options at the back, which gives the Kerkez speculation a practical logic that reporters will want Slot to either confirm or dismiss.

Then there are the contracts. This is the question that has followed Slot to nearly every press conference this season, and it isn't going away. Virgil van Dijk, Mohamed Salah, and Trent Alexander-Arnold are all approaching the end of their current deals, and none of the three situations has been publicly resolved. Alexander-Arnold's case carries the most urgency right now — reports this week have renewed speculation that he is set to join Real Madrid when his contract expires in the summer. If that move materializes, Liverpool would lose one of the most influential players in their system without receiving a transfer fee.

Slot has handled these questions with measured patience throughout the season, neither confirming nor dismissing, keeping the focus on the football in front of him. Whether that composure holds as the window deepens and the title race tightens is one of the more interesting things to watch.

For now, the immediate task is Brentford. Liverpool lead the Premier League, they have a game in hand on Arsenal, and they are still the team everyone else is chasing. But four points is close enough to feel.

Slot is expected to address the contract situations of Van Dijk, Salah, and Alexander-Arnold, with the latter heavily tipped for a summer move to Real Madrid.
— Liverpool Echo reporting ahead of Thursday's press conference
La Conversación del Hearth Otra perspectiva de la historia
Inventor

What's the actual risk here for Liverpool — is four points a real danger or just noise?

Model

It depends on how many more draws they pick up. One more slip and Arsenal could be level. The game in hand matters, but only if Liverpool win it.

Inventor

The Nottingham Forest draw — was that a bad result or just an imperfect one?

Model

Imperfect. Forest's goalkeeper was the difference in the final minutes. Liverpool didn't lose ground so much as fail to gain it, and Arsenal punished that immediately.

Inventor

Why does the Trent Alexander-Arnold situation feel more urgent than the others?

Model

Because Real Madrid is a specific destination with a specific timeline. Van Dijk and Salah's futures are uncertain — Trent's feels like it has a direction.

Inventor

If he leaves on a free in the summer, what does Liverpool actually lose?

Model

Not just a right-back. Someone who functions almost as a second playmaker. Replacing that profile is genuinely hard, and doing it without a fee makes it harder.

Inventor

What about Kerkez — is that a response to Gomez being out, or something bigger?

Model

Probably both. The short-term need is cover. But a left-back of Kerkez's quality would be a long-term addition, not a stopgap.

Inventor

How does Brentford fit into all this — are they a real threat on Saturday?

Model

They just came back from two down against City. That's not a team you overlook. Slot will know that.

Inventor

What's the one thing Slot probably wants to avoid saying in this press conference?

Model

Anything that sounds like he's worried. The whole posture of this Liverpool side has been calm confidence. He'll protect that.

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