top of page

'We need to' - Trent Alexander-Arnold opens up on Liverpool relationship as contract uncertainty continues

mrwedwards



Trent Alexander-Arnold has stressed the importance of Arne Slot’s relationship with his players if Liverpool are to be successful this season.


The Dutchman succeeded Jurgen Klopp in the summer and has overseen 19 wins from his 22 matches in charge.


The Reds are top of both the Premier League and Champions League tables as a result





their impeccable form made all the more impressive when you consider the ongoing uncertainty regarding the futures of Alexander-Arnold, Virgil van Dijk and Mohamed Salah.


The trio are all out of contract at the end of the season, with Real Madrid known to be interested in signing the Liverpool vice-captain


Van Dijk and Salah have both publicly declared their desire to stay put at Anfield but Alexander-Arnold has kept quiet about his own intentions



Trent has been in impressive form in recent weeks following his return from a hamstring injury despite such speculation.


he has now praised the unity between the Liverpool first team, Slot and his backroom staff as a key reason behind the Reds’ campaign so far.


Trent


“We’re just so kind of assured that we’re going to get results in games because we believe so much in [the] game plan,”


“It’s always important, especially under a new manager, to have a relationship that works both ways, which is what we’ve got.


“He needs to believe in us that we’re good enough to carry out the game plans and go and get the results and understand and apply what he tells us to do.


“Likewise, us as players, we need to see that the style of play and the tactics and the game plans are working and will get us results.


“I think from the first few games we really got that and then from then on, when you’ve got that belief flowing both ways it’s always going to be a good journey.”


when talking about his love of passing, Alexander-Arnold also opened up on his connection with Salah



Trent


“You understand your players,”


“What they like and what they don’t like and what gives them the best chance to score or put them in a position where they can attack the defender.”


“Mo can receive any ball, to be honest, but we have a connection where [I play it] over the top or he’s a runner, he likes to get in behind and then be isolated one-v-one.


“Whichever way I pass the ball, he knows what to do and what I mean by the pass. You’ve just got to understand your players and understand what they appreciate and what they don’t really.


“Every pass should be delivered as a message without having to talk.


“I think the person who receives the ball should know just from how the ball is played to you what the situation is for you – whether you can turn, whether you have to play it back, whether it’s in space.


“They should understand what your thinking was through the pass.”


Trent continued: “For me, it’s always been passing. I’ve always admired it, from a very young age. I was fortunate enough to grow up in an era where the passers of the ball were incredible.


“I was able to grow up watching [Steven] Gerrard, [Xabi] Alonso, [David] Beckham, [Andrea] Pirlo, the Spanish legends as well within that. I was very, very fortunate to grow up witnessing that.


“So I think from a young age I just always admired it; I thought it was a real art and a skill, and an artistry to it. Everything that goes into it – the weight of pass, the technique that you use, the speed of your pass.”




85 views0 comments

Comments

Rated 0 out of 5 stars.
No ratings yet

Add a rating

Subscribe to our newsletter • Don’t miss out!

Thanks for subscribing!

bottom of page