Curtis Jones endured a difficult afternoon at Nottingham Forest, struggling to impose himself in a midfield that lacked control and creativity. But context matters — and Jones’ confidence can’t have been helped by the way events unfolded before and during the match.
After delivering an impressive performance at right-back against Brighton, many expected Jones to build on that display. Instead, he found himself moved back into midfield following Florian Wirtz’s injury in the warm-up — a blow in itself after thinking he had nailed down a role in the side.
It felt like a second setback when Arne Slot opted to start Dominik Szoboszlai at right-back instead, signalling that he trusted Szoboszlai more in that position. For a player who had just performed well there, that decision could hardly boost confidence.
Then came the in-game reshuffle.
With Liverpool struggling in midfield during a poor first half, Slot reversed course. Szoboszlai was pushed back into midfield and Jones was shifted to right-back midway through the half — effectively confirming that the manager felt he needed Szoboszlai centrally after all.
The constant positional changes did little to help Jones settle. Instead of clarity and continuity, he experienced uncertainty and adjustment in a chaotic first 45 minutes.
Jones was far from Liverpool’s only underperformer at the City Ground, but it’s fair to question whether the tactical juggling left him caught in the crossfire.
If Slot wants consistency from his squad players, they need clarity of role and trust. At Forest, Jones appeared to have neither.
Jamie (The Kopite View)
