Sports
Eight Liverpool Stars Could Leave This Summer With Mohamed Salah
The revelation that Mohamed Salah will leave Liverpool at the end of the season is the big story in football this week. Having joined from Roma in 2017, the Egyptian will depart Anfield after nine incredible years.
Sharing an emotional video on his social media accounts on Tuesday evening, the 33-year-old explained: “Unfortunately, the day has come. This is the first part of my farewell. I will be leaving Liverpool at the end of the season.”
He went on to add: “I don’t have enough words – the support you showed me, through the best time of my career, and you stood by me in the toughest times is something I will never forget and something I will take with me always.”
While his agent has revealed that Salah doesn’t yet know which club he will join next, GIVEMESPORT senior correspondent Ben Jacobs has confirmed that Liverpool will allow Salah to leave on a free transfer, despite having a contract for another season.
It appears as though the iconic forward won’t be the only notable Anfield departure this summer. As per the Express, eight more stars could be set for an exit ahead of the 2026/27 season.
Ibrahima Konate
There has long been a great deal of speculation over Ibrahima Konate as his contract is set to expire in the summer. That said, the Frenchman’s inconsistent season appears to have damaged the chances of a touted move to Real Madrid.
With just seven Premier League games to play, his future is still very much up in the air, but it would come as little surprise if Konate was to depart as a free agent this summer.
Wataru Endo
Wataru Endo was signed by Jurgen Klopp in the German’s final summer window, and the consequent arrival of Arne Slot didn’t massively help his prospects at Anfield. Although winning the league, the midfielder has always been a bit-part player at Anfield.
It’s never truly felt as though his style of play has aligned with Slot’s tactics, and it might make sense for all parties if a sale happens at the end of the season. With one year left on his contract, a summer move will probably be the last opportunity Liverpool have to cash in on Endo.
Curtis Jones
This move would come as a bit of a surprise compared to the others on this list, but Curtis Jones was linked pretty strongly with an exit in January. Reports revealed that Inter Milan were in talks to bring him to Italy, but no move ever materialised.
Regular starts in the middle of the park are no guarantee, so the Liverpool local may well have to look elsewhere if he wants to take the next big step forward in his career.
Joe Gomez
Joe Gomez was one of the brightest young English defenders when he got his hands on the 2018/10 Champions League trophy and he’s won plenty more in the time since. Now 28, though, his career has not panned out as planned.
Injuries are the biggest issue, and with the centre-back unable to regularly start fit, Liverpool may want to replace him with a more reliable option. His contract expires in 2027, and it feels unlikely that it would be extended.
Federico Chiesa
While this move has delivered some fun moments, it’s fair to say Federico Chiesa’s time at Liverpool has largely been a bust. The Italian has never been able to secure regular minutes under Slot and fitness troubles haven’t helped his cause either.
At 28, the winger seems likely to move on this summer, with a return to Italy the natural expectation.
Andy Robertson
One of the most important Liverpool players of the modern era, Andy Robertson, now 32 is clearly being phased out of the team. The arrival of Milos Kerkez last summer was the biggest signifier of that.
The former Bournemouth man looked a little shaky at the start, but has now found his feet at Anfield. Robertson was on the cusp of joining Spurs in January and, having dodged that bullet, will surely find a new club at the end of the season.
Freddie Woodman
Far from the most glamorous name on this list, Freddie Woodman has never looked likely to get regular minutes since joining Liverpool in 2025. The club’s third-choice goalkeeper will see his contract expire in the summer, but may hang around as there is an option to extend it by a further 12 months.
As the Englishman helps maintain the number of homegrown players in the squad, he may hang around for another year. That said, the 29-year-old may prefer a move to somewhere with better playing prospects.
Rhys Williams
Having been repeatedly loaned out, playing for six different clubs in the past six seasons, you’d be forgiven for thinking that Rhys Williams had left Liverpool already. Now 25, the defender will see his contract expire in the summer.
Having not played a Premier League minute for the Reds since the 2020/21 season, it seems as though an exit is inevitable. Indeed, he has managed to make the bench for just one senior game this term, failing to get on as his side beat Southampton in the League Cup.
Sports
What Does The Captain of a Football Team Do?
The captain’s armband has been worn by some of the greatest figures in world football. Roy Keane barked instructions and set standards at Manchester United with an intensity that hasn’t been the same since he left.
Steven Gerrard dragged Liverpool through matches on his sheer force of will. Sergio Ramos organised Real Madrid’s defensive line with the authority of a general.
Carles Puyol was an ever-present figure at Barcelona, who led them to the Champions League. The captain’s armband is simple in design but enormous – a symbol that carries the expectation of leadership, accountability, and character every time a footballer pulls on a shirt.
But what does being a captain actually mean? Beyond the pre-match coin flip and the trophy lifts, it is one of the most demanding roles in sport.
The visible duties are straightforward enough. The captain represents the team in interactions with match officials, communicating decisions, and managing his teammates in fiery moments that could land them in trouble.
They lead them out, choose ends at the coin flip, and make the huddle speeches.
The real work happens away from the spotlight. A captain is a bridge between the dressing room and the manager- a translator of the coach’s demands into a language the players trust.
When performances dip, the captain is expected to identify problems and set standards. When a younger player is struggling, it is often the captain who pulls them aside before the manager does. On the pitch, a captain organises shape, communicates constantly, and makes split-second calls on pressing triggers, set-piece positioning, and who needs words of encouragement or harsher words to refocus.
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The best captains are also emotional regulators. Football matches can swing wildly, and a team that follows its captain’s lead needs that captain to protect composure under pressure.
Keane’s ferocity was controlled by aggression in the service of the group. Whilst some other captains stay more calm, the function remains the same, keeping eleven individuals operating as one cohesive unit.
What Does It Take To Be a Captain?
Managers pick captains differently. Whilst Alex Ferguson chose a fiery Roy Keane, whose aggression could wake his teammates up, Jurgen Klopp elected for a slightly calmer Jordan Henderson and sometimes Virgil van Dijk in order for his team to operate. Both managers were successful in winning the Premier League; they just did it in different ways. But certain traits appear consistently in the best captains.
Respect from teammates is non-negotiable, you can’t lead people who don’t believe in you. That respect is earned through consistency, professionalism, and a willingness to put the team first. A captain who chases personal stats or hides in the hard games loses the dressing room quickly.
Communication is just as vital off the ball as on it. The ability to read people, to know when someone might need an arm around their shoulder and when they need a direct challenge, is a skill that separates good captains from the best. So too is the capacity for accountability. A captain cannot demand standards from others they aren’t willing to hold themselves to.
Sergio Ramos joined Real Madrid in 2005 as a young prospect. His time at the club saw him take the armband and lead Real Madrid to multiple Champions League titles, as well as the La Liga title. He led the side through a dominant spell both domestically and continentally,
John Terry was a stalwart in Chelsea’s defence for a decade and was part of the Jose Mourinho side that only conceded 15 goals all season. Terry himself is also the highest-scoring defender in Premier League history, and picked up multiple titles and even a Champions League trophy whilst at Stamford Bridge.
Before his managerial career, Didier Deschamps captained the France national team to World Cup glory in 1998. Deschamps was regarded as one of the best defensive midfielders of his time, constantly sniffing out attacks.
Famously, at the time, he was called the ‘water carrier’ by his teammate Eric Cantona, who joked that the now France manager’s only role was to win the ball back and pass it to the more skillful players. Whilst that may seem like an insult, it was Deschamps selflessness as captain to understand his role and get the best out of his teammates, and it was he who lifted the trophy.
The armband doesn’t make a captain. If you give it to the right person, it can make a team.
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Sports
Joe Rogan Reacts to Josh Hokit’s Michelle Obama UFC White House Slur
Legendary UFC broadcaster Joe Rogan has finally addressed the controversial slur that was aimed at former first lady Michelle Obama by heavyweight contender Josh Hokit at the White House earlier this month.
Hokit stopped veteran Derrick Lewis in the second round of their clash at UFC Freedom 250, with the win moving him to 10-0 as a professional. However, the former NFL player made far more headlines for what he did after the fight than for his victory.
In a moment that swiftly went viral, Hokit grabbed the microphone from Rogan during his post-fight interview and launched into an unprovoked attack on the wife of former President Barack Obama.
The 28-year-old declared: “Michelle Obama is a man,” before following that up with “Am I right, America?”
Rogan acted quickly to take the microphone away from Hokit before he attracted any further controversy. As the man who was stood alongside Hokit at the time, Rogan has broken his silence on the viral moment.
Joe Rogan on Josh Hokit’s Michelle Obama Slur
Speaking on the latest edition of the Joe Rogan Experience, the popular host explained to his guest, Tim Dillon, exactly why Hokit is so controversial.
“That guy, Josh Hokit, he’s got a shtick, a character that he does. He’s basically a pro wrestling bad guy, who also is a really good fighter. So there’s a real problem there, because this guy keeps winning.”
Rogan went on to reveal the major error that the UFC made when it came to Hokit and his distasteful comments about Mrs Obama.
“In retrospect, if they (UFC) wanted to avoid this, they probably shouldn’t have had him fight on the White House lawn. If he said that at the T-Mobile Arena or Madison Square Garden, outrageous, but not that big of a deal.”
In fairness to the UFC, Hokit wasn’t originally planned to be a part of the White House card. He was only added when President Donald Trump demanded that a heavyweight fight involving Lewis be added to the line-up.
Only UFC bosses will know if they truly regret their decision in light of Hokit’s behaviour. However, UFC CEO Dana White has confirmed that the fighter will face no internal punishment for his actions.
Josh Hokit’s Explanation For Insulting Michelle Obama
Speaking on a recent episode of the Ariel Helwani Show, Hokit gave a tongue-in-cheek explanation for his comments, before vowing that he would never apologise for his words:
“That’s one thing about my career. You’ll never hear me backtrack from what I say.”
The California native then went on to reveal that his actions were motivated by self-promotion rather than any particular issue he has with Obama.
“Don’t hate the player, hate the game, and that’s the game we’re playing nowadays. We’re playing a numbers game, and I’m gonna win them every single time. Whatever brings the most eyes to my fight, that’s what I’m going to do.”
Sports
‘Extraordinary’ Player is Now ‘Really Keen’ to Join Liverpool
Liverpool are still said to have every chance of landing one of their primary attacking targets this summer. The Reds are expected to spend big again this summer after a huge outlay last summer that ended up bringing little in the way of success.
Arne Slot has paid the price for that, and now Andoni Iraola will get his turn, and he too will be backed in the market. Víctor Muñoz has already been snapped up, and there will be more to come, even at the top of the pitch.
Liverpool need to replace Mo Salah this summer, and they seem to have one particular target they want to get over the line before the end of the window.
Liverpool move to sign Diomande still on track
RB Leipzig and Ivory Coast winger Yan Diomande is one of Liverpool’s main targets, and according to a fresh report, the Reds will ‘step up’ their interest in the near future, although there is some negotiating to be done before a deal can be struck.
The Daily Mail’s Lewis Steele told the Anfield Index that Diomande is “really keen” to make the move to Anfield this summer and that Liverpool’s efforts are likely to “step up in the next week or two.” He added: “RB Leipzig are holding out for €130m (£112.1m) but Liverpool want it closer to €100m (86.3m), so they will have to shake hands somewhere in the middle.”
Diomande an ‘extraordinary’ talent
Diomande has dazzled at this World Cup, but his club form already had clubs sniffing around before jetting off to North America. The 19-year-old scored 13 and provided 10 assists for Leipzig last season, which is tremendous production for such a young player.
Diomande’s now former Leipzig boss, Ole Werner, said of the winger at the end of the season: “Yes, for him to do it so consistently. Last summer when we looked at him, watched videos to get an impression of him, we had an idea he was an excellent talent.
“The question then is always how quickly someone can perform like that consistently. And the consistency he’s shown has been extraordinary for his age, and the fact that it’s his first full year in professional football.
“Yan’s a really important player for us, an excellent player who everyone here enjoys working with. And we’d like to continue working with him. It’s also clear there will be interest in a player like him, but that’s not something just down to the coach. If the coach could decide, then of course Yan would be playing here next year.
“It’s good he’s got a contract. I think he feels very comfortable here with us. And given we’ll be playing in the Champions League next season, he can continue to develop. The summer will show how things progress, but we’ll all be happy if he stays here.”
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