Wednesday, May 20, 2026

The Mountain Arteta Climbed: How Arsenal’s Long Exile Finally Ended

For the first time in a generation, Arsenal stand at the summit of English football once more.

Twenty-two years after the last echoes of the Invincibles reverberated across North London, the Premier League trophy has finally returned to the red half of the city. Yet this title is not merely another league triumph. It is the conclusion of one of modern football’s most painstaking reconstruction projects - a story not of sudden genius or extravagant spending, but of endurance, institutional reform, and an almost stubborn faith in an idea.

Because Arsenal did not simply win the league.

They rebuilt themselves.

And perhaps that distinction matters more.

When Arsène Wenger’s Invincibles conquered England in 2004, the assumption was not that Arsenal had reached a peak, but that they had merely arrived at a new beginning. Two doubles in seven years, a revolutionary manager, a move toward a grand new stadium, everything seemed to suggest permanence. Success looked structural.

But football has a habit of dismantling certainty.

That dismantling happened slowly at first. The Emirates Stadium, intended as a bridge toward sustained greatness, gradually became a monument to compromise. Financial limitations, ownership uncertainty, changing market realities, and strategic drift transformed Arsenal from challengers into spectators. The defining memories of the 2010s were not triumphs but humiliations: the 8–2 defeat at Old Trafford, the collapses against Chelsea and Liverpool, and annual European exits that felt less tragic than inevitable.

Perhaps the most painful development was not failure itself.

It was familiarity with failure.

Arsenal supporters stopped demanding greatness. They merely hoped for competence.

By December 2019, when Mikel Arteta arrived, Arsenal were not simply underperforming; they had become institutionally fractured. The dressing room lacked coherence, recruitment lacked direction, and the connection between club and supporters had withered.

Arteta later recalled seeing half-empty seats at the Emirates and immediately sensing something far deeper than poor results.

A football club, he realized, had lost belief in itself.

That became his first opponent.

Not Manchester City.

Not Liverpool.

Not Chelsea.

Arsenal itself.

The rebuilding of standards

Football often romanticizes tactics while underestimating culture. Yet Arteta understood something many managers do not: systems collapse when environments are broken.

His earliest years were brutal.

There were defeats to Burnley, Wolves and Aston Villa. Arsenal drifted toward relegation territory. “Trust the Process” became one of football's favorite jokes. Rival supporters mocked Arteta as Pep Guardiola’s “cone man,” reducing him to an assistant incapable of independent thought.

Externally, dismissal felt inevitable.

Internally, however, Arsenal made a choice increasingly rare in modern football: they refused panic.

The Kroenkes backed Arteta not because results justified it, but because they believed the problems were deeper than formations or league tables.

That trust changed everything.

Arteta responded by introducing uncompromising standards. Sentiment disappeared. Reputation ceased to matter.

Mesut Özil was marginalized.

Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang, the captain and star striker, was moved on.

High-profile names departed one after another.

Many decisions felt ruthless.

Some felt excessive.

But Arteta was attempting something larger than squad management. He was rebuilding authority.

As one insider noted: when Arteta loses belief in a player, he rarely restores it. That rigidity attracted criticism, but institutions often require firmness before they can rediscover identity.

Arsenal needed not comfort.

They needed a reset.

Building players, or building believers?

Once culture changed, personnel followed.

Bukayo Saka became the emotional face of a new Arsenal. Martin Ødegaard arrived carrying labels of unfulfilled potential. Aaron Ramsdale, Ben White and others faced skepticism, ridicule and accusations of overpayment.

Arteta ignored all of it.

Because he appeared to recruit personalities as much as footballers.

He sought conviction.

Players repeatedly describe Arteta’s conversations with one recurring word:

Aura.

Not charisma in the conventional sense, but conviction so complete that others begin sharing it.

And belief became central to Arsenal’s transformation.

Arteta introduced unusual psychological methods: symbolic olive trees representing resilience, motivational speakers, strange team-building exercises, and storytelling techniques designed to create emotional unity.

Many appeared eccentric.

Some seemed absurd.

But rebuilding institutions requires mythology as much as methodology.

Arteta wasn't merely coaching footballers.

He was constructing collective identity.

Near misses that became education

Pain remained unavoidable.

Arsenal narrowly missed Champions League qualification.

Then they finished second.

Then second again.

Then endured another season where extraordinary football still ended with disappointment.

The accusations followed predictably:

Bottlers.

Emotionally fragile.

Too naïve.

Too obsessed with tactical perfection.

Yet repeated failures did something curious.

Rather than break Arsenal, they hardened them.

Great teams often emerge not from immediate success but from accumulated scars.

Manchester City learned through European heartbreak.

Liverpool learned through painful defeats.

Arsenal had to learn too.

Every collapse became preparation.

Every disappointment became psychological conditioning.

And eventually, the challenge changed.

The objective was no longer reaching the elite.

The objective became surviving there.

Winning ugly, winning properly

For years Arsenal played beautiful football.

Arteta eventually understood beauty was insufficient.

League titles require brutality.

This Arsenal became physically stronger, tactically deeper and psychologically colder.

Declan Rice added leadership. David Raya brought control. Kai Havertz, Timber and others introduced versatility.

Set pieces evolved into weapons.

Defensive organization became elite.

Perhaps most importantly, Arsenal learned how to win matches they once would have lost.

Not all champions dominate spectacularly.

The greatest champions frequently endure.

This Arsenal side survived devastating injuries, tactical disruptions and pressure accumulated across years of expectation.

The old Arsenal often looked elegant.

The new Arsenal looked inevitable.

There is a difference.

The mountain and the summit

Football history often remembers trophies while forgetting journeys.

Yet Arteta’s greatest achievement may not be the title itself.

It may be the climb.

Because when he inherited Arsenal, this was a club exhausted by disappointment and detached from its own identity.

Today the Emirates feels transformed once more, not merely louder, but alive.

The siege mentality Arteta cultivated became collective belief.

The process once mocked across football eventually became prophecy.

And perhaps there is something poetic in that.

Because mountains are strange things.

People celebrate reaching the summit.

Few remember the years spent dragging themselves upward.

Arteta spent seven years carrying Arsenal up that mountain.

Now that he has finally reached the top, one suspects he has little interest in climbing down anytime soon.

Because for the first time in decades, Arsenal are no longer chasing history.

They are beginning to write it again.

Thank You 

Faisal Caesar 

Tuesday, May 19, 2026

The Tyranny of Nostalgia: Why Brazil’s World Cup Gamble Repeats an Old Mistake

Footballing nations, like empires, often collapse not because they run out of talent, but because they become prisoners of memory. The most dangerous moments in their history arrive not when they are weak, but when they begin confusing sentiment with strategy, when the romance of the past starts dictating the decisions of the present.

Brazil, perhaps more than any footballing civilization on Earth, has long lived under the spell of nostalgia.

And history has returned with cruel symmetry.

In 2002, the country stood at a similar emotional crossroads. Across Brazil, public pressure reached fever pitch as fans demanded the inclusion of Romário in the World Cup squad. The hero of 1994 was in superb domestic form, and for many Brazilians, his brilliance seemed the obvious cure for a stuttering Seleção struggling to inspire confidence.

Yet while the nation pleaded with its heart, Luiz Felipe Scolari listened to football itself.

He understood a truth supporters often resist: football evolves faster than memory. Romário’s genius remained intact, but modern football had become increasingly dependent on intensity, transitional speed, and physical dynamism. To maximize the devastating potential of Ronaldo and Rivaldo, Brazil required not a monument to the past but a player who embodied the future.

So Scolari made the politically dangerous decision.

He gave the number 11 shirt to a young, awkward, buck-toothed Ronaldinho.

The public saw betrayal. Scolari saw structure.

Months later Brazil lifted its fifth World Cup.

The lesson was never about Romário. It was about courage, the willingness to reject emotional comfort in pursuit of tactical necessity.

Twenty-four years later, Brazil appears to have forgotten that lesson.

Now it is 2026. The names have changed. The anxieties remain.

The Seleção once again enters a World Cup cycle searching for identity. The midfield remains creatively unstable, the squad lacks an obvious focal point, and Brazil no longer carries the aura of inevitability that once accompanied every tournament appearance.

But where Scolari once resisted public mythology, Carlo Ancelotti appears to have surrendered to it.

By recalling a physically diminished Neymar while excluding Chelsea’s João Pedro, Brazil has not merely made a squad selection. It has revealed a deeper philosophical crisis: an inability to detach itself from an era that, despite its brilliance, never truly conquered world football.

This is not simply about age.

It is about evolution.

Modern football increasingly punishes passengers. International tournaments are no longer won through isolated moments of brilliance alone; they are won through systems, through collective movement, pressing structures, tactical elasticity and relentless physical intensity.

João Pedro represented precisely that evolution.

Entering his physical prime, producing elite numbers in England, and operating as a modern hybrid attacker capable of linking play while maintaining defensive intensity, he embodied the qualities Brazil increasingly lacks.

Neymar represents something different.

No decline in talent, few footballers of his generation possessed greater imagination, but a style increasingly at odds with football’s direction.

For years Neymar's game has depended upon gravitational centrality. He slows rhythms, invites contact, demands the ball repeatedly, and turns attacking sequences into personalized stages. At his peak this was tolerable because his individual genius justified structural compromise.

But age alters football’s mathematics.

A physically fragile superstar demands collective compensation. Defensively, others must run more. Structurally, others sacrifice space and rhythm. In elite tournaments decided by microscopic margins, those concessions become expensive.

Football's modern landscape rarely forgives luxury.

And perhaps that explains Brazil’s deeper tragedy.

For over a decade, Neymar has simultaneously been the face of the Seleção and its defining dependency.

Since the decline of the Kaká-Robinho generation, Brazilian football has searched desperately for another mythical figure - a new heir to the lineage of Pelé, Romário and Ronaldo. Neymar accepted the burden and, statistically, thrived. He became Brazil's all-time leading scorer and delivered moments of extraordinary artistry.

But World Cup history possesses a brutal memory.

Legacy is not measured by aggregate numbers accumulated over qualification campaigns or continental fixtures. It is forged in the furnace of decisive nights.

And Neymar's World Cup journey increasingly resembles a paradox: dazzling individual episodes interrupted by injuries, emotional volatility and unfinished narratives.

Perhaps his greatest limitation has always reflected a broader flaw within Brazilian football itself, the belief that complexity is inherently superior to simplicity.

Football increasingly rewards speed of thought over beauty of gesture.

The simple pass released early. The immediate transition. The quick decision.

The transformation of Vinícius Júnior into a truly decisive global superstar arrived when he abandoned excess, reduced unnecessary touches and accelerated his choices.

Neymar never fully made that evolution.

Brazil never fully made it either.

That may explain why, for the first time in generations, Brazil enters a World Cup not as a feared favorite but as a nation uncertain of itself.

Injuries to key players such as Éder Militão, Estêvão and Rodrygo have already reduced the margin for error. This squad no longer possesses enough overwhelming individual talent to sustain an arrogant footballing identity.

Ancelotti inherited an imperfect team.

To compensate, he needed structure.

He needed pressing.

He needed collective resilience.

He needed the future.

Instead, Brazil appears once again seduced by the oldest temptation in football: the fantasy of one last miracle from one last hero.

The symbolism surrounding Neymar’s return, the emotional rehabilitation story, the narratives of redemption, the romance of a final mission, creates a compelling spectacle.

But World Cups are profoundly indifferent to sentiment.

They have no memory. No gratitude. No nostalgia.

Scolari understood this in 2002.

Great footballing empires survive because they know when to let go of yesterday. They understand that dynasties are preserved not by honoring legends but by replacing them.

Brazil once possessed that ruthlessness.

Today it seems increasingly uncertain.

Until the Seleção rediscovers the courage to prioritize collective structure over individual mythology, the sixth star may remain what it has become for an entire generation:

not a destination, but a memory of a future that never arrived.

Thank You 

Faisal Caesar 

Monday, May 18, 2026

The Return of the Firefighter: Jose Mourinho and Real Madrid’s Search for Order

José Mourinho returning to Real Madrid would feel like football indulging in its favorite habit: rewriting history as if it were destiny. The narrative is irresistible. The Special One rides back into a wounded kingdom, restores order to a fractured empire, and reminds Madrid what authority once looked like. For football romantics, it is almost perfect literature.

But football has always been dangerous when it confuses nostalgia with strategy.

Mourinho remains one of the defining managerial figures of modern football. Few coaches have stared down elite opposition with such consistency and emerged victorious. His teams were never designed as orchestras of beauty; they were fortresses built on control, emotional discipline and tactical certainty. In periods of instability, Mourinho has often acted as football’s crisis manager, the antidote to chaos itself.

Yet this is not 2010, and Real Madrid is not the Madrid he once inherited.

What makes this possible reunion fascinating is not merely the romance of unfinished business. It is the uncomfortable truth that Florentino Pérez appears to be reaching for a familiar medicine once again. When storms gather over the Bernabéu, Pérez historically returns to trusted figures. Carlo Ancelotti returned. Zinedine Zidane returned. Both brought immediate calm. Mourinho now represents another turn toward certainty rather than experimentation.

And perhaps that instinct is understandable.

This Madrid season has resembled less a title challenge and more a slow public unraveling. Dressing-room disagreements spilled into view. Managers and players seemed disconnected. Questions around Kylian Mbappé’s role grew louder. Vinícius Júnior and Jude Bellingham often looked like players carrying emotional burdens heavier than tactical responsibilities. Instead of a collective identity, Madrid appeared to become a collection of individual anxieties.

Mourinho's greatest strength was never tactical sophistication alone. It was authority.

He creates hierarchies. He imposes structure. Players know exactly where they stand. In unstable environments, that clarity can become oxygen. During his first spell in Madrid, he inherited a side psychologically scarred by repeated defeats against Pep Guardiola’s Barcelona and transformed it into a team capable of looking Europe’s most dominant side directly in the eye.

This is precisely why his return could prove productive, at least initially.

Because Real Madrid's immediate problem is not talent. It is emotional disorder.

Mourinho may restore accountability inside a dressing room that has slowly drifted into factionalism. He may repair the broken chemistry between Vinícius and Mbappé. He may even identify new leadership in a squad strangely lacking natural authority since the departures of figures like Sergio Ramos and Luka Modrić. Few managers possess the personality to walk into a fractured room and instantly command silence.

And yet there remains a larger concern beneath the romance.

Mourinho feels less like a long-term architectural plan and more like a footballing Hail Mary.

Because Madrid’s crisis is not fundamentally managerial. It is structural. The club is undergoing a generational transition while simultaneously trying to integrate superstar personalities who naturally occupy the same spaces, both on the pitch and in the hierarchy. No manager, not even Mourinho, can permanently solve institutional uncertainty through charisma alone.

Football history often repeats itself, but rarely in identical form. The first Mourinho era at Madrid was a rebellion, young, aggressive and combustible. This second version would be something different: a restoration project.

Perhaps Mourinho can still save Madrid from itself.

The question is whether Madrid should be saved by memories in the first place.

Thank You

Faisal Caesar 

Saturday, May 16, 2026

Real Madrid’s Crisis Is About a Club at War With Itself

At Real Madrid, failure is never simply a failure. It mutates into theatre. It becomes a spectacle. It arrives not quietly through tactical shortcomings or poor results, but through chaos, whispers, and eventually public combustion.

Over the years the football world has learned that when Madrid stop winning, the Bernabéu does not merely become restless; it becomes Shakespearean. Heroes are questioned, idols become suspects, and presidents begin fighting shadows.

The dramatic scenes unfolding in Madrid today are not isolated incidents. Training-ground altercations, strange press conferences, speculation over dressing-room fractures and a fanbase searching desperately for villains are merely symptoms of a much deeper disease.

The roots of the crisis are uncomfortable because they are not tactical. They are institutional.

For the first time in years, Real Madrid find themselves confronting something they rarely tolerate: vulnerability.

Only months removed from celebrating a 15th European crown, there was an expectation that a new era had begun. The arrival of Kylian Mbappé was supposed to mark the dawn of sustained dominance. Madrid supporters imagined continuity, an empire built not merely on isolated triumphs but on lasting stability.

Perhaps we became spoiled.

The eras of Zinedine Zidane and Carlo Ancelotti lulled everyone into believing the club had evolved; that the ruthless impatience which once defined Madrid had softened under success.

But Real Madrid does not change. It merely pauses.

And when trophies disappear, the old instincts return.

The illusion has now shattered.

Barcelona securing the league title directly in Madrid's line of sight felt symbolic. Not merely defeat, but humiliation. Since then, the club has appeared less like a football institution and more like a state descending into a political crisis.

Florentino Pérez’s extraordinary press conference only reinforced that perception.

For decades Pérez projected the image of the untouchable architect, the man who built Galácticos, modernized the institution and presided over unprecedented success. Yet his recent public appearance felt less like leadership and more like self-defense.

Instead of confronting footballing failures, he spoke of conspiracies and enemies in the shadows. The president who once embodied control suddenly appeared concerned with preserving power.

And therein lies the problem.

Real Madrid increasingly resembles a structure where personalities have become larger than systems.

For years Florentino Pérez operated from a position of unquestioned authority because results justified everything. Winning papers over flaws. Winning allows contradictions to coexist peacefully.

But success can become deceptive. It can disguise structural weakness.

Because beneath the trophies, Madrid have quietly accumulated unresolved problems.

The squad lacks balance. The hierarchy lacks clarity. Recruitment increasingly feels driven by prestige rather than construction.

Kylian Mbappé's arrival perfectly illustrates this dilemma.

Individually, Mbappé remains one of football’s great talents. Statistically he has not failed. But football is not mathematics.

Since his arrival, Madrid have looked less harmonious rather than more dangerous. The partnership between Mbappé and Vinícius Júnior has never fully found rhythm. Rather than complementing each other, the team frequently resembles a collection of extraordinary soloists searching for a shared melody.

At Madrid, however, nuance rarely survives.

When the machine breaks, supporters seek sacrifices.

Now even Mbappé, once presented as the future face of an era, is hearing whistles from the Bernabéu.

Today the crowd questions Mbappé.

Tomorrow it may be Vinícius.

After that perhaps Valverde.

Madrid's appetite for blood remains eternal.

And suddenly the answer offered to this chaos appears interesting:

José Mourinho.

The narrative writes itself beautifully. The Special One may return to save a fallen kingdom. 

Mourinho restores discipline. He commands egos. He rescues Madrid from itself.

Football romantics understandably love the idea.

But nostalgia is dangerous.

Mourinho remains one of football's greatest figures. Few managers have battled elite opponents and emerged victorious as consistently as he has. His philosophy prioritizes control and tactical security rather than aesthetic dominance. In another era, he was the antidote to disorder.

But this is not 2010.

Mourinho may stabilize Madrid. He may even win.

Yet appointing him feels less like a long term solution. 

A Hail Mary.

A desperate attempt to restore authority without addressing the deeper cracks beneath the surface.

Because Real Madrid's crisis is not fundamentally managerial.

Managers do not cause muscle injuries.

Managers do not create institutional paranoia.

Managers do not assemble squads without considering balance.

Consider the defence.

For years Madrid have struggled simply to keep four defenders healthy at the same time. Injuries have transformed squad planning into a lottery. Éder Militão's recurring ACL nightmares, David Alaba's physical decline, Ferland Mendy's inconsistency, and recurring issues elsewhere have made continuity impossible.

No elite side can build title challenges upon uncertainty.

Defensive partnerships require rhythm. Stability. Repetition.

Madrid have had none.

Even midfield construction remains incomplete.

Aurelien Tchouaméni was identified as the team's anchor, a player capable of protecting transitions and offering structural balance.

Yet Tchouaméni often appears trapped between roles.

He possesses physical presence but lacks the natural rhythm-controller instincts of football's elite orchestrators. Those players are rare; individuals capable of combining athleticism with the intelligence required to dictate entire matches.

Madrid continue searching for equilibrium.

And perhaps that search explains everything.

Because what appears to be a crisis of personalities is actually a crisis of identity.

Who are Real Madrid now?

A collection of stars?

A tactical project?

A commercial empire?

Or simply a club forever addicted to immediate success?

The frightening possibility for Madrid supporters is that Mourinho cannot answer that question.

Neither can Mbappé.

Neither can Pérez.

Until the institution itself decides what it wants to become, the cycle will continue.

New heroes.

New villains.

New scapegoats.

New saviors.

And somewhere beneath all the noise, Real Madrid, the football club itself, will remain searching for peace.

Thank You 

Faisal Caesar 

Liverpool’s Lost Rhythm: How Arne Slot’s Second Season Became a Crisis of Identity

There is an old saying in football: if you cannot be good, at least be lucky. Great teams survive bad days through fortune; ordinary teams survive through resilience. Liverpool, this season, have possessed neither.

At various points of this agonizing campaign, supporters have searched for the precise moment where Arne Slot’s title defense truly collapsed. Was it the humiliations at Anfield? The passive draws against struggling opponents? The chronic defensive implosions? Or perhaps the latest calamity - a chaotic 4-2 defeat at Aston Villa, which felt less like an isolated disaster and more like the inevitable continuation of a story already written.

Because this has become Liverpool’s recurring ritual: brief flickers of promise followed by self-destruction.

Hands on heads. Frustration in the stands. Familiar post-match apologies. A season defined not by isolated mistakes but by repeated patterns.

The defeat at Villa Park was merely another chapter in a broader decline.

On paper, Liverpool’s task seemed straightforward. Win, and Champions League qualification would move closer. Lose, and uncertainty would deepen. Reality, however, has often mocked Liverpool’s expectations this season.

The match itself offered a cruel snapshot of their wider problems.

Early in the second half, with Liverpool trailing, Ryan Gravenberch was muscled off the ball by Youri Tielemans and collapsed to the turf. It was an unremarkable incident, but symbolic. Liverpool have frequently appeared physically overpowered and psychologically fragile, a side unable to withstand the demands of elite football.

The image felt painfully representative of Slot’s Liverpool: talented but soft, technically gifted but emotionally vulnerable.

Ironically, Liverpool had controlled large portions of the opening period. But control without threat has become another defining characteristic of their season.

Without Alexander Isak fully fit and with Mohamed Salah limited, Liverpool dominated possession while lacking incision. They moved the ball but rarely moved fear into opponents.

Modern football increasingly punishes sterile superiority.

Morgan Rogers’ opener shortly before halftime felt almost inevitable. One moment of ruthlessness from Aston Villa outweighed forty minutes of Liverpool possession.

That has happened far too often.

And perhaps that is the fundamental issue: Liverpool no longer impose themselves; they merely participate.

For years under Jürgen Klopp, Liverpool games carried a sense of inevitability. Opponents could resist for an hour, perhaps even seventy minutes, but eventually the storm arrived. Pressing suffocated teams. Intensity crushed resistance.

Today, that inevitability belongs to Liverpool’s opponents.

Concede first, and panic follows.

Fall behind away from home, and recovery rarely comes.

Defensive uncertainty spreads like infection.

The numbers are brutal.

Twenty goals conceded from set pieces, the highest in the league.

Fifty-one goals conceded overall, Liverpool’s worst defensive return in over a century.

One point collected from away matches against top-nine opposition.

Statistics tell stories, and Liverpool’s numbers reveal a side increasingly easy to hurt.

Perhaps even more concerning is the stylistic erosion.

Klopp's Liverpool represented controlled chaos: relentless pressing mixed with emotional force. Under Slot, that identity appears blurred. The pressing intensity has declined. High turnovers have decreased dramatically. Opponents now bypass Liverpool with direct football and set-piece routines.

Football itself may have evolved faster than Liverpool adapted.

Across the Premier League, tactical trends shifted. More long balls. More physical contests. Greater emphasis on set pieces and disruption. Liverpool never found answers.

Slot frequently spoke about teams "spoiling" his football. Yet elite management demands adaptation rather than complaint.

The Premier League does not pause while coaches search for solutions.

Still, context matters.

The criticism surrounding Slot, while understandable, risks becoming selective in its memory.

This is, after all, the same coach who won the Premier League in his first season with relative authority. Many argued he merely inherited Klopp’s foundations, but inheriting talent and maximizing it are not identical tasks. Klopp himself had fallen short with many of these players.

Moreover, Liverpool’s season has not been complete catastrophe.

Champions League qualification remains possible. Injuries ravaged key areas. Major summer signings never truly settled.

Alexander Isak arrived unfit before suffering a broken leg. Florian Wirtz showed flashes but little consistency. Hugo Ekitiké suffered devastating injury problems. Jeremie Frimpong endured misfortune rarely seen during his Leverkusen years.

Slot inherited transition and then inherited chaos.

Yet football supporters rarely evaluate context during moments of emotional exhaustion.

What Liverpool fans fear is not failure itself.

It is stagnation.

Because the most troubling reality is that Liverpool’s problems are not recent. The warning signs have existed all season.

Too often struggling teams have arrived at Anfield and left strengthened. Manchester United, Nottingham Forest, Burnley, Tottenham and Chelsea all found relief against a Liverpool side increasingly incapable of asserting authority.

Even victories often felt unconvincing.

A year ago, Liverpool sealed a title amid celebration and inevitability. Today, boos echo around Anfield.

That emotional shift matters.

Football supporters forgive losing.

They rarely forgive drift.

And Liverpool currently feel like a club drifting between eras.

The difficult question now confronting Fenway Sports Group is not whether Slot deserves sympathy. He probably does.

The question is whether Liverpool believe this season was an unfortunate collision of injuries, transition and bad luck, or evidence of deeper structural flaws.

Because support from ownership and support from supporters are rarely the same thing.

Slot insists a transfer window and fresh start can transform fortunes.

Perhaps he is right.

Football history is filled with managers who survived ugly seasons and emerged stronger.

Yet history also teaches another lesson.

Sometimes teams do not collapse because they lose confidence.

Sometimes they lose confidence because, somewhere along the way, they stop recognizing themselves.

And right now, that may be Liverpool’s greatest problem of all.

Not that they have become worse.

But that they no longer seem certain who they are.

Thank You 

Faisal Caesar