Arne Slot made an interesting admission this week.
The Liverpool head coach suggested that most Premier League matches are no longer a “joy to watch”, admitting his “football heart doesn’t like” the heavy emphasis on set-pieces this season.
It was an honest reflection.
But it also raises an uncomfortable question:
Are Liverpool part of that problem?
The Rise of Set-Piece Football
Across the league, marginal gains dominate.
Throw-ins rehearsed.
Corners choreographed.
Free-kicks engineered.
Structure has overtaken spontaneity.
Slot’s comments suggest he misses the fluidity, the rhythm, the unpredictability that once defined top-level English football.
And many supporters would agree.
But What About Liverpool?
Here’s where the debate begins.
Some Liverpool fans have started to feel that Slot’s style — while effective at times — lacks excitement.
There’s more control.
More recycling of possession.
More patience.
But sometimes less spark.
Compared to the chaos and vertical intensity of previous eras, the current approach can feel measured — even cautious.
Is that evolution?
Or is that caution?
Results vs Entertainment
Football at elite level is ruthless.
Managers prioritise:
Structure Rest defence Set-piece efficiency Risk minimisation
Slot is not alone in that.
But when the manager himself says games are less enjoyable, supporters are entitled to wonder whether the balance has tilted too far towards pragmatism.
Liverpool have had matches this season where control replaced adventure.
Wins matter — but Anfield has always demanded more than sterile dominance.
A Transitional Phase?
It’s also fair to say this may simply be transition.
New system.
New players.
New rhythm.
Control can come before flair.
And perhaps once the foundations are solid, the freedom will return.
The Bigger Question
Slot’s comments feel honest — but they also shine a light on the modern game.
If Premier League football is becoming less joyful because of over-engineering, then managers must find a way to restore excitement without sacrificing competitiveness.
Liverpool supporters don’t just want points.
They want pulse.
They want unpredictability.
They want moments that lift them off their seats.
Final Thought
Slot is right — too many games are dictated by structure and set-pieces.
But the solution isn’t just acknowledging it.
It’s ensuring Liverpool don’t become another team where efficiency replaces emotion.
Because at Anfield, football has always been more than just structure.
If you want maximum engagement, a strong headline would be:
“Slot Says the Premier League Isn’t Fun — Are Liverpool Part of the Problem?”
That invites serious debate without attacking the manager outright.
Jamie (The Kopite View)

In other articles I have read about his feeling of how set pieces seem to be becoming more and more important in Premier League and he doesn’t find it enjoyable to watch and how the Eridivise isn’t so hung up on them. One simple fix leave the PL and bring in someone with the spark to reignite the team like Klopp did. With Slot it feels more like painting by numbers than watching a full on football match, with players fighting for their team and fans and going for the win
Very hard to disagree with your comments, and thanks for taking the time to post them.