Ever since Fabinho departed Anfield, Liverpool have been searching for the right balance in midfield.
The Brazilian’s presence as a true defensive midfielder gave the Reds structure, protection, and control. His ability to break up play, read danger early, and distribute calmly allowed Liverpool’s attacking players to flourish.
Since his exit, that specialist role has never quite felt fully replaced.
But could Adam Wharton be the answer?
The Fabinho Void
Fabinho wasn’t just a holding midfielder — he was the anchor.
He:
Screened the back four Won second balls Controlled tempo Allowed full-backs to attack freely
Without that natural No.6, Liverpool have often looked slightly more open in transition. While tactical tweaks have helped, the squad still lacks a pure defensive midfielder with composure and intelligence at the base.
That’s where Adam Wharton enters the conversation.
Why Wharton Fits the Profile
Wharton has impressed with his maturity, positional awareness, and passing range. For a young midfielder, he shows:
Excellent defensive reading of the game Calmness under pressure Progressive passing ability Tactical discipline
He isn’t just a destroyer — he’s a controller.
In many ways, that’s exactly what Liverpool have been missing. A player who can both protect the defence and dictate the rhythm from deep.
A Long-Term Solution?
At his age, Wharton wouldn’t just be a short-term fix — he could become the long-term foundation of Liverpool’s midfield rebuild.
Under Arne Slot, who values structure and intelligent positioning, Wharton’s style looks well suited to the system. Slot wants control. He wants stability. He wants the team compact and disciplined.
A true holding midfielder provides that platform.
Would He Be the Missing Piece?
Liverpool’s midfield has energy and creativity. What it has occasionally lacked is that quiet controller who makes everything else function smoothly.
Fabinho provided it for years.
The question now is whether Adam Wharton could grow into that same role — and finally solve the defensive midfield puzzle that has lingered since Fabinho’s departure.
If Liverpool are serious about restoring midfield balance, this could be a move that makes perfect sense.
— Jamie (The Kopite View)
