It was an emotional afternoon at Anfield as Liverpool secured Champions League qualification with a 1-1 draw against Brentford — but the result itself almost felt secondary compared to the farewells happening on the pitch.
All eyes were on Mohamed Salah and Andrew Robertson as both started what is expected to be their final Liverpool appearance.
The emotion around Anfield before kick-off was impossible to ignore.
Songs echoed around the stadium for two players who helped define one of Liverpool’s greatest modern eras.
Arne Slot made three changes from the defeat to Aston Villa F.C., with Salah and Robertson returning to the side alongside Alisson Becker, whose own future still remains uncertain heading into the summer.
Meanwhile former Liverpool players Caoimhín Kelleher, Sepp van den Berg and Jordan Henderson all returned to Anfield in Brentford colours.
Unfortunately, the game itself initially followed a familiar pattern Liverpool supporters have become frustrated with this season.
Liverpool dominated possession but again looked slow and lacking fluency in the final third.
There was little intensity or rhythm early on, with Cody Gakpo barely involved during the opening stages.
It took a powerful Salah free-kick crashing against the post to finally inject some energy into the performance.
Liverpool gradually improved, with efforts from Dominik Szoboszlai, Ryan Gravenberch and Rio Ngumoha testing Kelleher.
Ngumoha again looked one of Liverpool’s brightest attacking threats, showing the fearlessness and directness supporters have desperately wanted to see more consistently this season.
At the other end, Alisson once again reminded everyone why Liverpool fans are so desperate for him to stay.
The Brazilian produced a stunning point-blank save to deny Kevin Schade in one of the biggest moments of the first half.
Without him, Liverpool could easily have found themselves behind.
The breakthrough finally arrived just before the hour mark.
Salah turned provider, teeing up Curtis Jones to put Liverpool 1-0 ahead.
The assist also saw Salah surpass Steven Gerrard for the most Premier League assists in Liverpool history — another remarkable achievement in an extraordinary Anfield career.
Interestingly, Jones chose not to celebrate wildly amid growing uncertainty surrounding his own future, with reports continuing linking him to Inter Milan.
However, Liverpool’s familiar defensive issues quickly resurfaced.
Just five minutes later, Brentford equalised as Schade headed beyond Alisson to make it 1-1.
And once again supporters were left frustrated by Liverpool’s inability to properly control a game after taking the lead.
But ultimately, today became about emotion more than football.
When Salah and Robertson were substituted midway through the second half, Anfield rose together.
The applause was thunderous.
The chants deafening.
Both players were visibly emotional walking off the pitch, with tears shared across the stadium as supporters said goodbye to two modern Liverpool legends.
Neither side found a winner late on, but the final whistle almost felt symbolic of the end of an era.
Liverpool secured Champions League football.
But the overwhelming feeling at Anfield was one of farewell, uncertainty and reflection.
Because next season may still feature Liverpool in Europe’s elite competition.
But it increasingly feels like Liverpool will enter it without many of the players who brought this football club back to the very top.
Jamie (The Kopite View)
