Liverpool
Sir Alex Ferguson wanted to sack his own Manchester United player after blazing Liverpool dressing room row
Sir Alex Ferguson once told Peter Schmeichel he’d have to sack him following a blazing row in the Anfield away dressing room after a draw with Liverpool
In nearly 30 years of Premier League football, no matter how much time passes, there are some games that the streets will never forget.
Liverpool 4-3 Newcastle United. Manchester United 4-3 Man City. Newcastle 4-4 Arsenal. Man City 3-2 Queens Park Rangers. Fans don’t need to be reminded of the years for memories of such fixtures to come flooding back.
For Reds and Red Devils fans, a 3-3 draw at Anfield from the formative years of the Premier League falls into the same category.
United were the reigning champions, having won the inaugural Premiership title in 1992/93, when they stormed into a 3-0 lead at Anfield back on this day in January 1994.
Building such an advantage inside just 24 minutes, thanks to goals from Steve Bruce, Ryan Giggs and Denis Irwin, this looked set to be the latest embarrassing episode for Graeme Souness’ men, with the Scot going on to lose his job later that month.
However, a Nigel Clough brace and late Neil Ruddock header would earn Liverpool a famous comeback draw to ensure their boss held onto his job for a few weeks longer.
But while the under pressure Souness would avoid the sack after this particular match, it was a rather different story for one Manchester United legend after he incurred the wrath of Sir Alex Ferguson in the Anfield dressing room.
Peter Schmeichel was in goal for the Red Devils that night, and while he wasn’t at fault for any of the goals, his manager was displeased with his performance after the final whistle.
As Ferguson launched into a lengthy dressing-room inquest, the Dane took issue with the accusations the Scot fired his way, tearing back into his manager and some of his team-mates as a result.
The exchange was enough to leave Schmeichel ordering his agent to find him a new club and his manager to tell him he would have to sack him after calling him into his office the next day, only for another dressing room exchange to prompt a u-turn.
“After our 3-3 draw at Anfield in January 1994 — held up as one of the greatest Premier League games — I had a rush of blood to the head, leading to some behaviour that shames me to this day,” the former goalkeeper wrote in his autobiography, published earlier this year.
“For the first 25 minutes at least, we tore Liverpool apart. We were 3–0 up and it should have been 5–0 or 6–0. But we eased off and I have no idea why. Nigel Clough scored twice before half-time and 11 minutes from the end, Neil Ruddock equalised with a header. From the position we were in earlier in the match, it was embarrassing.
“For the one and only time in my eight years with United, Fergie held a lengthy dressing-room inquest. He was so upset about throwing it away, against them, that he launched into us, quickly focusing his anger on me. He attacked the quality of my goal kicks, of all things, complaining that they kept landing on the heads of Liverpool defenders. It was unfair.
“Of course, older and wiser, I realise he was letting off steam and I was a convenient target, but I was furious about the game too and came right back at him. There are both regrets and no regrets about what I said.
“What I regret is that I not only questioned him, both as a manager and a man, but I began pointing out others in the dressing room, saying they had not done their jobs. To call out team-mates, friends, in front of the group, to say to the manager that they played badly, that was not on.”
He continued: “Not regretted is that I stood up to the manager. This may surprise you, but Fergie permitted that. Yet this was the day for it, just not the time and place — and how I did it was certainly not in the right way.
“The disappointment is I was too naive to see all this. I should have just taken my flak and moved on. When I think of that day it feels almost like having a crime on my record; like something you did which you have to live with.
“Driving home from that game, I was simply pumped with anger and adrenaline and could not see beyond the injustice I had felt when Fergie picked on me. I felt so disillusioned I even called Rune, my agent, to ask him to find me a new club.
“The next morning, I felt calmer but still unsettled. I needed to see Fergie, but he was not at training. The day after he was, and he called me into his office. He told me he was going to have to sack me.
“I apologised for my behaviour and he accepted it but stood his ground. “It doesn’t alter the fact you will have to leave,” he said. It was then that I did the only thing in the whole affair I can take a tiny bit of pride from — before we went out for training I stood up in front of everyone and said how sorry I was.
“Unknown to me, Fergie was listening from behind a door and he never followed through on his threat.”
Schmeichel elaborated on his private meeting with Ferguson when he was threatened with the sack when appearing on Jamie Carragher’s The Greatest Game podcast.
“He called me in first thing and said, ‘You know I have to sack you?’ I can’t tolerate my players speaking to me like that. It goes against my authority.” he said. “I was still fuming at that time so I said, ‘Fine. So let me go.’ I was just being stupid.”
He also revealed more about his apology to his team-mates, with his own agent later telling Schmeichel that he had that to thank for saving his Manchester United career.
“People were about to go out on to the pitch and I said, ‘I want to apologise to all of you for my behaviour on Saturday,” he told Carragher. “That’s unheard of. I’ve apologised to the manager as well and I don’t think a player should ever behave that way. If I insulted anyone, I really do apologise for that as well.
“And this is something that my agent told me, he told my agent that he was outside the dressing room and he heard that. And he changed his mind because I apologised.
“I don’t think he was ever going to sack me. He never said it to the players. He only ever said it to me. He was right and I was wrong, right from the beginning of this.”
Liverpool
Major development in Mo Salah transfer saga as previously unknown Liverpool contract details emerge
A major development in Mohamed Salah’s Liverpool contract saga has emerged amid intense transfer speculation.
Salah is out of contract at the end of the season, with a report suggesting he’s ‘open talks’ with a European giant ahead of a free transfer.
He’s been vocal about his contract situation as he enjoys an ultra-prolific campaign, having scored an impressive 13 goals across all competitions, including a strike against Manchester City in his side’s 2-0 victory last weekend.
Salah’s approach hasn’t gone down well with Jamie Carragher, who branded the superstar player ‘selfish’ before hitting out at his post-match interview on Sky Sports.
A day removed from the 32-year-old’s heroics against Man City, The Athletic claim the Reds star would accept a new one-year contract at Anfield but is ‘growing increasingly exasperated at the club’s handling of the negotiations’.
His priority is to extend his spell with Liverpool, and he is ‘not agitating to leave’.
However, he believes he is amongst the best players in the world and wants terms to reflect that status.
The Egyptian’s current deal makes him the highest-paid player in the club’s history.
In 2022, he agreed a three-year contract extension that was widely reported to be worth a whopping £350,000-a-week in basic salary.
But, per the report, Salah ‘earns well in excess of that’ figure.
Speaking after Liverpool’s big win over Man City, Carragher claimed Liverpool ‘is not built on giving people what they want’ as he shared his thoughts on Salah’s contract situation.
“We know Liverpool as a club are run by data, so you can’t actually say we’re delighted Michael Edwards is back and the data people are back because that fell away at the end of Klopp’s time here,” he explained on Sky Sports.
“It’s a moneyball situation and we’re delighted that’s back but on the other hand say give someone what they want, you can’t do that. These two, Van Dijk and Salah, if Liverpool do have a rule such as only giving players over 30 a certain length contract, you have to move the data for players like that.
“I’m not saying he shouldn’t get a two-year deal, I’m not saying he shouldn’t be on big money – he’s on big money now and rightly so – but this idea and this saying of ‘give him what he wants’, this club is not built on giving people what they want, that’s why there is success at the club.
“Being ahead of the game, buying Mo Salah for £40m when nobody else in the Premier League looked at him, because Liverpool were ahead of the game.”
Liverpool
Stefan Ortega facing backlash for making ‘insulting’ comment about Liverpool after Man City defeat
Stefan Ortega has been criticised for comments made after Manchester City were beaten 2-0 by Liverpool at Anfield.
Manchester City goalkeeper Stefan Ortega has received backlash for comments he made about Liverpool after the 2-0 defeat at Anfield on Sunday.
Ortega started the fixture in place of regular goalkeeper Ederson in a surprise decision from Pep Guardiola, who was attempting to stop City from suffering a fourth consecutive defeat in the Premier League.
But it didn’t quite happen, with Cody Gakpo opening the scoring early on before Mo Salah bagged a second from the spot after Ortega brought down Luis Diaz in the area.
Defending Premier League champions City have now gone a remarkable seven games without a win to drop to fifth in the table and Guardiola was subjected to chants of “you’re getting sacked in the morning” by Liverpool fans.
The Catalan responded by holding up six fingers to refer to the amount of Premier League titles he has won since taking the City job in 2016. Ortega was asked about it in a post-match interview and said he had heard that Liverpool “is probably not the best part of the UK” – a comment which many branded “tasteless” and “nasty”.
Asked if Guardiola’s gesture would urge City players to “prove people wrong”, Ortega told talkSPORT: “Probably. Someone told me before that this area is probably not the best part of the UK. Yeah, I think the manager reacted really well.”
Guardiola’s antics evoked memories of Jose Mourinho boasting of his trophies and had fans claiming he had “lost his head”. After the game, the City boss addressed his gesture and admitted he was surprised that Anfield erupted in the “sacked” chants.
“I didn’t expect Anfield to start chanting at 0-2 that I would be sacked,” Guardiola said.
“Maybe I deserved to be sacked with our results. Maybe I’m still in the job because I won six Premier Leagues and a lot of titles.
“They want to sack me. I wish they were more kind. Why didn’t they do it at 0-1? Why didn’t they do it last season when we won the Premier League?
“Why do they want to sack me now? I didn’t expect that from Anfield, for other clubs like Brighton I can understand it. But for Anfield I didn’t expect this, maybe it is the respect we have. They know we have won six Premier Leagues. But it’s fine, it’s part of the game.”
City are back in action on Wednesday when the host Nottingham Forest, who are just one point and one place behind them in the Premier League table after 13 games.
Liverpool
‘So pleasing’ – Arne Slot hails three Liverpool stars and gives Trent Alexander-Arnold fitness update
Liverpool earned a 2-0 win over Man City to tighten their grip on the Premier League title race.
Arne Slot has insisted he is going to have to protect his depleted Liverpool defence in the coming weeks.
The Reds stretched further clear at the top of the Premier League as they delivered a 2-0 victory over champions Manchester City at Anfield yesterday. Cody Gakpo and Mo Salah (penalty) were on target to ensure Liverpool moved nine points away from second-placed Arsenal, while they are 11 ahead of City.
But the Reds have a hectic period approaching, with trips to Newcastle United and Everton to come this week. Slot confirmed that Ibrahima Konate (knee) and Conor Bradley (hamstring) are set to be absent for a few weeks while Kostas Tsimikas (ankle) is still absent. The Liverpool head coach had only five defenders available against City, with Joe Gomez coming in for Konate while Trent Alexander-Arnold, who has recently recovered from his own hamstring issue, replacing Bradley.
Alexander-Arnold’s recent fitness issue is why he was substituted for Jarell Quansah. And Slot was impressed with all three defenders’ performances. The Liverpool supremo said: “These players that we have available now, it is important for them now – even more than normal – to stay fit. That’s also why I took Trent [Alexander-Arnold] off after 70 minutes. He was able to play longer, he played a very good game, defended really well again and was a major threat in attack. I think he was the one that played the ball towards Mo that led to the 1-0.
“But, knowing that we play Newcastle [on] Wednesday and Saturday the Merseyside derby with only five available, we have to take care of them. That’s why it was so pleasing to see the ones that came in – Joe and Jarell – did so well, even with Jarell in an unfamiliar position for him.”
Liverpool
‘Call me delusional’ – Pep Guardiola makes Man City claim and praises ‘amazing’ Liverpool midfielder
Pep Guardiola responds to Manchester City’s 2-0 defeat to Liverpool at Anfield.
Pep Guardiola admits some people will call him “delusional” after suggesting Manchester City’s performance in their defeat to Liverpool could be a turning point in their season. But the City boss admits the Reds were deserved winners as they extending their lead at the top of the Premier League.
An early Cody Gakpo strike and Mohamed Salah’s second-half penalty earned a 2-0 win for Arne Slot’s side at Anfield on Sunday afternoon.
Liverpool are now nine points clear at the summit with champions Manchester City now a whopping 11 points behind.
And Guardiola said: “We congratulate Liverpool for a well-deserved victory. The first 15-20 minutes we experienced like many other times coming here in our prime. We suffered, they deserved the goal.
“After, we take the game. I know some people don’t like the line-ups but we cannot compete against Liverpool and many, many other clubs that are transitional teams.
“I love wingers but we wanted more control because we know when they lose it they immediately contact with Salah or Luiz or Gakpo or later Nunez. They are so fast, quicker, stronger than us in that position in a game.
“I have the feeling that from here we start to build something. Call me delusional but I have the feeling that from here we will start to build back to winning games and confidence.”
Guardiola added: “If today we give up when you come to Anfield, you go home with a terrible result. The team was there all the time, resilient in the bad moments knowing what was going to happen because we have experienced many times and that they could not drop and be negative.
“The last 15-20 minutes in the first half and the second half for the first 25-30 minutes the game was what we wanted without the threat that we expected to create with our passes. We didn’t create much. You have to play games to create chances and we don’t have it.
“Thank you to Bernardo (Silva), Manu (Nunes), Rico (Lewis) to play in a position that they’re not used to to fight against Gravenberch, his first control is amazing, and then the next line of Mac Allister and Szoboszlai and later Jones. We made an incredible effort.”
City have now lost six of their last seven games in all competitions and have been beaten four times in succession in the Premier League, extending their worst run under Guardiola.
“Our target cannot be talking about titles in November or December but we didn’t do it when we were top of the league,” said the City boss.
“At the end, we are not far away from Arsenal or teams there but Liverpool win all the games in the Champions League and in the Premier League have just lost one here. That means how good they are doing. All we can do is congratulate them and learn from Liverpool.
“I lived better before than now. Even the taste of the wine was better. But I am incredibly honest with myself and when we were winning a lot my perspective was that I am fortunate to live that and now I am not depressed that everything is going bad.
“It looks like what we have done in the past is easy, but I know with Jurgen Klopp, the Liverpool that we beat, or Arsenal in the last seasons, how strong they are, but now we are not as strong as we were, that is the reality, for many, many, many circumstances.
“I want the team back, and the players back. It is important because now the training sessions are better and four or five players are coming back.”
Liverpool
Liverpool told star player ‘is gone’ as worrying claim made about his contract hours before Man City clash
Liverpool have been told that one of their star players ‘is gone’ ahead of their clash against Manchester City.
On Sunday afternoon, all the attention will be on Anfield as Premier League leaders Liverpool take on reigning champions City.
Pep Guardiola’s men are currently in the middle of a horrible run of form, having not tasted victory in their last six matches.
In contrast, Liverpool have only been beaten once this season and is currently top of the Premier League and the UEFA Champions League.
However, despite their positive start to the 24/25 season, concerns remain over the future of some of their star players.
Star trio Virgil van Dijk, Trent Alexander-Arnold and Mohamed Salah will walk away for free at the end of the campaign if they fail to agree a new contract with the club.
Speaking ahead of Liverpool vs City, former Tottenham Hotspur manager Harry Redknapp believes Salah is ‘as good as gone’.
He told The Sun: “Even at 32, if you gave him a three-year contract next summer, he isn’t going to suddenly fall off a cliff with his fitness or his play.
“But if I were in Arne Slot’s place, as his manager at Anfield, I’d be thinking that Salah is gone after this season, no matter what cryptic messages he puts out to muddy the waters over his future. If he hasn’t signed by now, then to me Salah is gone, despite those comments about the club not coming up with a new offer like he did.
“Last summer Liverpool could have got more than that but the move to Saudi’s Pro League didn’t come off — that surprised me. Now of course, in the age of the Bosman free transfer, a lot of what Liverpool would have collected will go Salah’s way.”
Redknapp added: “He has a choice. If he is purely football driven, stay at Anfield. But even for someone like him, if clubs are dangling crazy figures in front of you, it becomes difficult to turn down.
“He could have gone last year but was probably thinking that most of the £100m or even £200m Liverpool would have got for him, will be going his way in 12 months’ time, so he is sitting it out.
“In some ways if he wins the Premier League title again with Liverpool this season, it seems like a fitting way to go out. You have to be honest and think to yourself that this uncertainty has been dragging on for so long now that it makes things even more certain. That he is leaving.”
Liverpool
Man City star launches nasty attack on Liverpool after losing at Anfield
Man City goalkeeper Stefan Ortega has come out with a bizarre statement after losing to Liverpool in the Premier League. Pep Guardiola’s side is struggling for form.
After losing 2-0 at Anfield and conceding a penalty which was converted by Mohamed Salah, Manchester City goalkeeper Stefan Ortega has bizarrely hit out at the city of Liverpool.
According to the ECHO, the Spaniard, who was surprisingly selected ahead of the usual shot-stopper Ederson, used a radio interview post-match to aim a dig at Merseyside. He did so when asked about Pep Guardiola not being particularly pleased with the crowd telling him he would be “sacked in the morning”.
“Someone told me before that this area (Liverpool) is probably not the best part in the UK,” Ortega supposedly said. “I think he reacted really well, yeah.”
Guardiola put six fingers in the air to denote the number of titles that he has won while in England, often competing against Liverpool. That was in response to the Anfield crowd’s taunts during the game and he did it at the final whistle too.
“All the stadiums want to sack me!” Guardiola said. “It started at Brighton. Maybe they are right with the results we’ve been having but I didn’t expect that at Anfield.
“They didn’t do it at 1-0, but at 2-0. Maybe they should have sung it in the past. I didn’t expect it from the people from Liverpool but it’s fine, it’s part of the game, and I understand completely. We’ve had incredible battles together. I have a respect for them.”
Liverpool.com says: Ortega’s comments were a frankly bizarre thing for a professional soccer player to say. The chants were clearly tongue in cheek and as Ortega will surely know, Liverpool supporters are far from the only ones who have said such things.
Guardiola took it relatively well and having lost six out of seven games — squandering a 3-0 lead to draw 3-3 in the other one — it isn’t that far of firing form. For Guardiola, it is obviously different because of what he already achieved, but perhaps Ortega should focus on helping his team improve rather than aiming unnecessary sly digs.
Liverpool
Mo Salah responds with huge dig at Jamie Carragher in live post-match interview following ‘selfish’ claims
Mo Salah seemingly aimed a dig at Jamie Carragher following Liverpool’s 2-0 win over Man City at Anfield on Sunday.
Salah, 32, provided an assist for Cody Gakpo’s opening goal before firing home a penalty 12 minutes from time to put the Reds 11 points clear of Man City – now fifth – and nine clear of second-place Arsenal.
The Liverpool star admitted he was “more out than in” when speaking to reporters after Liverpool’s 3-2 win against Southampton last Sunday.
“I must say, I am very disappointed with Mo Salah,” Carragher said on Sky Sports’ MNF.
“[With] that interview yesterday…Liverpool have got Real Madrid midweek and Manchester City at the weekend – that’s the story for Liverpool right now.
“And Mo Salah, we’re all quite aware…that in the seven years he has been at the football club, he’s stopped in the mixed zone twice, which is his right, which is absolutely fine.
“But he decided to stop for the third time away at Southampton on the back of winning Liverpool the game.”
“The most important thing is Liverpool winning the Premier League,” he added.
“That is more important than any of those players, and if he continues to put comments out, or his agent keeps putting tweets out, that’s selfish.”
But he did admit he was “desperate” for the player and club to “meet in the middle” regarding a contract.
Following Liverpool’s victory against City, Salah and Van Dijk were interviewed by Sky Sports.
When the Player of the Match award was being handed out by Van Dijk to Salah, the Dutchman said: “I’m surprised that Carra didn’t give it to you.”
Salah replied: “He wouldn’t…never, he [Jamie Carragher] wouldn’t give it to me.”
When pressed on his contract situation, the Egyptian admitted that the match could have been the last time he faced Manchester City at Anfield as his current deal is set to expire in the summer of 2025.
“Honestly it’s in my head [it being his last time facing Man City at Anfield],” Salah said earlier in his post-match interview.
“Until now this is the last City game I will play for Liverpool so I was just going to enjoy it. The atmosphere was incredible so I will enjoy every second here. Hopefully we just win the league and will see what will happen.”
Speaking in the Sky Sports studio following the game, Carragher doubled down on his previous take.
“I have no problem with Salah and Van Dijk,” he said.
“They are two of the greatest for Liverpool. Liverpool are a club run by data. I’m not saying he shouldn’t get a two-year deal or give him big money.
“He’s on big money now. The club is not built on giving them what they want. That’s where the success of the club has come from. They are ahead of the game”
Liverpool
Pep Guardiola didn’t expect Anfield chant but his reaction speaks volumes for Man City
Manchester City suffered a sixth defeat in seven games as they lost 2-0 to Liverpool at Anfield and Pep Guardiola wasn’t impressed with a chant aimed at him.
Pep Guardiola admitted he was surprised to be on the end of taunts from Liverpool fans about his job security after his Manchester City slumped to another defeat at Anfield.
Guardiola is on the worst run of his managerial career and the Blues are now winless in seven, with six of them defeats after this 2-0 reverse to Liverpool, who are 11 points clear of City in the Premier League table.
After Mohamed Salah’s penalty put the game beyond doubt the home fans turned their attention to Guardiola with a rousing rendition of ‘you’re getting sacked in the morning’. The 53-year-old smiled at the taunt before turning to the supporters behind him and raising six fingers, a reminder of the number of Premier League titles he has won, many of them in epic battles with Liverpool.
Guardiola repeated that gesture in front of the City fans at full-time but was again hit with a rendition of ‘sacked in the morning’ by the home fans as he left the pitch. This time he applauded the Liverpool supporters and got a generous hand in return, but after the game he said he was shocked by the song.
Asked if this season’s troubles show how hard it was to win six title in a row, Guardiola said: “Don’t try to be nice to me. The perspective and the business is how to react today, not what happened. I’m so proud of my six Premier Leagues against that team and the previous team. I didn’t expect Anfield to start to chant at 0-2 that I would be sacked. Maybe I deserved to be sacked. With our results, maybe I’m still in the job because I won six Premier Leagues and a lot of titles.
“But I didn’t expect to sing at 0-2 – maybe at 0-1 when it was tighter or maybe last season or the previous season. At Anfield I didn’t expect it but it’s fine. It’s part of the game. When you win, you laugh, When you lose, you laugh.
“There have been incredible battles. The time with Jurgen Klopp was unforgettable for me and the battles with Liverpool have been forever. Even winning the Premier Leagues with little margin their teams were amazing but fortunately we were so resilient and strong mentally at our best it helped us to do something magnificent.
“Now this season it will be so difficult to repeat but I’m pretty sure all of us will reflect and try to come on strong with our fans at the Etihad against Nottingham Forest.”
Guardiola revealed the poor run of form was affecting him, but he is able to put it into perspective after the success he has enjoyed at the club.
“I lived better before than now. Even the taste of the wine was better,” he said. “But I am incredibly honest with myself and when we were winning a lot my perspective was that I am fortunate to live that and now I am not depressed that everything is going bad.
“I am incredibly honest with myself and when I think I cannot do it we will talk with the club but I feel that I want to do it and life is not in all departments perfect. You know at the start of the season when everyone says ‘City will win the league and the rest have to fight for the Champions League,’ I said, ‘Oh my God’.
“It looks like what we have done in the past is easy, but I know with Jurgen Klopp and the Liverpool that we beat, or Arsenal in the last seasons, how strong they are, but now we are not as strong as we were. That is the reality, for many, many, many circumstances.
“Not just Rodri, of course Rodri is vital for us, but not just him. For many reasons and the best way to go through that, for myself as well, is to go through the reality, to find the decisions to have to make to find the solutions to try to win games with these players.
“When I was in trouble my mum and dad never gave me away, always they were there, and now I have the feeling in the club. I want to be with these players. We didn’t think we can lose one game, two games. Losing six or seven is wow, it is a lot, but it is what it is, accept it.”
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