There’s an uncomfortable sense of déjà vu building around Liverpool FC — and the comparisons between Brendan Rodgers and Arne Slot are becoming harder to ignore.
At first glance, the timelines are eerily similar.
A familiar pattern emerging
Rodgers’ second season famously brought Liverpool within touching distance of the title — just one game away from glory. It felt like the start of something special.
But what followed was a sharp decline.
The next season, performances dipped, confidence dropped, and the team lost its identity. Despite clear warning signs, Fenway Sports Group chose to stick with Rodgers.
By the time a decision was made, it was too late. He was sacked early in the following campaign, with the season already drifting — effectively written off before it had even found rhythm.
Now look at Slot.
- A title-winning first season
- A second season where performances have regressed
- Increasing questions over tactics and direction
The parallels are striking.
When things stop improving
One of the clearest warning signs for any manager is when progress stalls — or worse, goes backwards.
Under Slot, there’s a growing sense of uncertainty:
- Tactical changes game to game
- Lack of a consistent system
- Key players not being maximised
- Performances not matching results
When a manager starts searching rather than building, it often points to deeper issues.
The danger of waiting too long
The biggest lesson from the Rodgers era wasn’t just that things went wrong — it’s that Liverpool acted too late.
By keeping faith despite clear decline, they allowed problems to carry into a new season. And once that season started poorly, the outcome felt inevitable.
That’s the risk now.
If Liverpool head into another campaign with the same questions, the same inconsistency, and a manager still searching for solutions, they could find themselves repeating history.
A crucial moment for Liverpool
This isn’t about overreacting to a difficult run — it’s about recognising patterns.
When:
- Performances aren’t improving
- Tactical clarity is lacking
- Confidence in direction is fading
…those are the moments when decisive action is often needed.
Can Liverpool afford the same mistake?
Keeping Slot might offer stability on paper — but if the underlying issues remain, it could simply delay the inevitable.
Liverpool cannot afford another season where:
- The manager is still trying to find answers
- The team lacks identity
- And the campaign slips away early
Because as history has already shown, once that happens, recovery becomes far more difficult.
History doesn’t have to repeat — but it might
The comparison between Rodgers and Slot may not be perfect.
But it’s close enough to raise serious concern.
Liverpool have been here before.
The real question now is simple:
have they learned from it — or are they about to live it all over again?
Jamie (The Kopite View)
