Liverpool coach Arne Slot has tried to calm fears around his position by insisting he still feels full support from the club’s decision-makers and from the stands. His response comes at a tense point in the season, with Liverpool sitting fifth in the Premier League and dropping too many points in recent weeks.
Slot has already spoken publicly about the pressure that comes with managing Liverpool, but he has also said the team must stay focused on securing Champions League qualification rather than feeding outside noise. During the month of March Liverpool had taken only one point from their previous three league matches at that stage, a slide that put their top-five position under threat.
Results have changed the atmosphere
The mood around Liverpool has become heavier because the setbacks have started to pile up. Liverpool were already fifth with 49 points from 31 matches before the latest round of fixtures, while a separate report has noted that supporters were questioning performances during a difficult stretch that also affected their European push.
That is why Slot’s message matters now. He is not selling calm for its own sake. He is trying to show that the club still sees the current run as a period to manage, not a reason to panic.
Robertson exit adds to the moment
The wider atmosphere at Liverpool has also been shaped by major squad news. It has been confirmed that Andy Robertson will leave the club at the end of the 2025-26 season after nine years at Anfield, ending a spell in which he helped Liverpool win two Premier League titles, the Champions League, the FA Cup, two League Cups, the Club World Cup, the UEFA Super Cup and the Community Shield.
Robertson’s departure does not define Slot’s current pressure, but it adds to the sense that Liverpool are moving through a transitional phase. In that kind of moment, every poor result feels louder and every public show of support matters more.
What comes next
The real answer to the pressure will come on the pitch. Slot has made clear in recent weeks that Liverpool must stop wasting points and do enough in the league to secure their place among Europe’s top clubs next season. That remains the clearest standard by which this run will be judged.
For now, the debate is live, but Slot’s line is simple: the support is still there, the pressure is real, and Liverpool must respond before the conversation gets even louder.
This is IDNN. Independent. Digital. Uncompromising.