The full-back from Liverpool, Andy Robertson, revealed that certain players “made it clear that they wanted to continue here”, while the uncertain futures of Mohamed Salah, Alexander-Arnold and Virgil van Dijk.
The high trio of players of the first team is all tied with contracts that expire in June. It is believed that Liverpool is involved in negotiations on extensions for all three people, but nobody has agreed to new conditions or seemed to be shortly before being extended.
While Alexander-Arnold was associated with Real Madrid, van Dijk’s future is defiantly in the air and Salah has repeatedly expressed his frustration via Liverpool’s unsatisfactory first offers.
Before the Carabao Cup final on Sunday against Newcastle United, which could be the last showpiece event for the squad in its current iteration, Robertson admitted that there is a change of awake on the horizon, but not necessarily this summer.
“We don’t know when, but it will come to an end shortly,” said the Scotsman this week on the Liverpool training area. “I think you see the age of the players who have been here for a long time, there are some of us in our 30s.
“But the boys made it clear that they want to continue here, and all of us. We don’t really see it as the last dance. The players come and go all the time, that’s a part and the plots in every football club. We have lost pretty much every year since my year.”
The future of Robertson was also examined. This season, the 31-year-old was unable to imitate the performances that roles of the awards in the past years. While the crowd of Anfield regularly extends his committed singing when he strolls across the corner, there is a growing sense that some fans would work in his position to change the staff.
“People want new players in our club, people want players,” sighed Robertson. “This is only the world we live in. These are fans for you. This is everything else for you. There is always someone to look like. This is the world we live in.”
Liverpool was strongly connected to the entrepreneurship -long left -back Milos Kerkez in Bournemouth. The Hungarian international is a decade younger than Robertson and has a tank that never seems to be empty but would cost around £ 40 million.