Three wins, no goals conceded — and still, the questions are about goodbyes.
Arne Slot sat down with reporters at Liverpool's AXA Training Centre on Friday morning, and the questions waiting for him were the kind that tend to define a manager's early tenure — not just tactics, but futures.
The occasion was a preview of Saturday's Premier League home fixture against Nottingham Forest at Anfield, Liverpool's first match back after the international break. On the surface, the mood around the club should be buoyant. Slot's side have won all three of their opening league games without letting in a single goal — a start that would have satisfied any new head coach, let alone one stepping into the considerable shadow left by Jürgen Klopp.
But the break brought complications. Harvey Elliott, the young midfielder, picked up an injury at the worst possible moment and has been ruled out for as long as six weeks. He won't be the only name Slot was pressed on. Curtis Jones is another whose fitness is uncertain, while Federico Chiesa — signed this summer and still finding his footing at the club — remains a question mark. Perhaps most pressing is Alexis Mac Allister, who returned from international duty with Argentina carrying some discomfort, leaving supporters anxious about his availability.
Forest arrive at Anfield in decent shape themselves. Nuno Espírito Santo's team are unbeaten through three matches, having won once and drawn twice. They are not a side Liverpool can take lightly, and Slot will know it. Still, the broader context of the weekend is hard to ignore: Arsenal, dealing with both injuries and suspensions, travel to Tottenham, while Manchester City face their own difficult run of fixtures. A Liverpool victory on Saturday would not just extend their unbeaten start — it could open a meaningful early gap at the top of the table.
Slot, for his part, is unlikely to frame it that way publicly. Managers rarely do. But the fixture list stretching out ahead of Liverpool makes every available body precious. After Forest, the Reds plunge into a congested run that includes Champions League commitments and a Carabao Cup campaign — a competition they won last season and will be expected to defend seriously.
Then there are the contract questions, which have been building quietly since the summer and are now impossible to avoid. Mohamed Salah, Virgil van Dijk, and Trent Alexander-Arnold — three of the most important players in the squad, and three of the most recognizable names in English football — are all in the final year of their current deals. None of them have signed extensions. Each situation carries its own weight: Salah is the club's talisman and leading scorer, Van Dijk is the captain and the spine of the defense, and Alexander-Arnold is a homegrown academy product who has grown into one of the best right-backs in the world. The prospect of losing any one of them on a free transfer next summer is the kind of thing that keeps sporting directors awake at night.
Slot has been in the job only a matter of weeks, but these are the conversations that will follow him all season. Every press conference, every result, every injury update will be filtered through the question of whether this squad — this particular group — can stay together long enough to challenge for the title.
Saturday against Forest is the next step in finding out.
Notable Quotes
The contract situations of Salah, Van Dijk, and Alexander-Arnold are expected to dominate questioning at the press conference— Liverpool Echo reporting
The Hearth Conversation Another angle on the story
What's the real tension in this press conference — is it the match or the contracts?
It's both, but the contracts are the slow burn. The match is this weekend. The contracts could reshape the club for years.
How significant is it that Salah, Van Dijk, and Alexander-Arnold are all in their final year at the same time?
It's unusual and genuinely precarious. Losing one would be a blow. Losing all three in the same summer would be a structural crisis.
Is Slot in a strong position heading into this, despite the injury concerns?
Three wins, no goals conceded — yes, he's in a strong position. But Elliott out for six weeks, and Mac Allister coming back hurt, that's the kind of thing that tests squad depth early.
Forest are unbeaten too. Is this being underplayed as a difficult fixture?
Probably a little. Nuno's sides are always organized and hard to break down. Liverpool will need to be sharp.
What does the broader fixture picture mean for how Liverpool approach this game?
With Arsenal and City both facing tough weekends, a win here could create breathing room at the top before October even arrives. That's a real opportunity.
How much pressure does that put on Slot to rotate carefully?
Enormous pressure. The Champions League and Carabao Cup are coming fast. He needs his squad healthy, and right now it isn't fully intact.
What's the thing beneath the thing in this story?
Whether this version of Liverpool — this specific group of players — is still together by February. The contracts make everything feel provisional.