There Can Only Be One Singer: My Secrets of Successful Man-Management in the Salah-Slot Saga
The photograph from West Ham was a Rorschach test for the football world. Mohamed Salah, having just scored, exchanging heated words with his new manager, Arne Slot, on the touchline. The internet fractured into a thousand takes. Was it a passionate disagreement? A sign of deep-seated mutiny? A media storm in a teacup? As someone who managed at the highest level for over three decades, I watched the debate unfold with a weary, knowing smile. Let me make my point clear: this isn’t about a spat. It’s about the fundamental, non-negotiable law of elite team management. In any dressing room, on any stage, there can only be one singer.
The Uncomfortable, Unchanging Truth of the Dugout
Let’s strip this back to the brutal, beautiful basics that the noise of modern football often obscures. Both Arne Slot and Mohamed Salah are being paid enormous salaries by Liverpool Football Club. One is paid to manage, to build a team, to make decisions that lead to victory. The other is paid to play, to execute the plan, to use his sublime talent within a framework. Their sole, shared responsibility is to act in the best interests of the club. Not their personal brand, not their legacy in the moment, not their ego. The club.
Personal views cannot, and must not, come into the equation. It doesn’t matter if the manager finds a player aloof, or if the player finds the manager’s methods peculiar. The moment personal sentiment overrides professional duty, the structure begins to crumble. The club—its staff, its supporters, its very purpose—needs every single individual united behind one aim: winning football matches. This is the covenant. This is the job.
I have sat in that hot seat, picking teams that broke my heart, leaving out legends and fan favourites. But I will tell you this with absolute certainty: I have never known a manager pick a team he believes will lose. Not once. If Mohamed Salah is currently not starting, it is because Arne Slot, with all the data, tactical vision, and daily observation at his disposal, does not believe he is a starter in his best XI. That is his right. More than that, it is his duty.
The Manager’s Scorebook: Beyond Goals and Assists
The public sees the glorious finishes, the record-breaking statistics. A manager sees what happens in the 89th minute when the ball is lost. He sees the training ground intensity, the tactical discipline in a defensive shape, the physical metrics, and the adaptability to a new system. Slot’s philosophy—intense, coordinated pressing, specific positional rotations—is a symphony, not a solo act. Every player must be an instrument in tune.
When assessing a player, especially one of Salah’s age and mileage, a manager must ask hard questions that go far beyond the highlight reel:
- Can he execute the defensive demands of my system for 90 minutes?
- Does his current physical profile allow him to beat his man consistently in a high-press structure?
- Is he a conduit for the team’s attack, or has he become its occasional, brilliant endpoint?
- Most critically, does his selection unbalance the team or make it stronger as a collective unit?
This isn’t disrespect. This is the essence of management. Sentimentality loses leagues. Tough, evidence-based decisions win them. Slot is not judging Mohamed Salah the icon; he is evaluating Mohamed Salah the component in his machine for the 2024/25 season.
The Player’s Pact: Professionalism Above All
This is the harder path, especially for a player who has scaled every peak at the club. Mohamed Salah’s legacy at Liverpool is immortal. But legacy and current selection are different things. The player’s part of the covenant is to channel any frustration into one, and only one, acceptable outlet: world-class professionalism.
This means:
- Training at a level that forces the manager to reconsider.
- Being a positive, unifying voice in the dressing room, not a simmering source of tension.
- Executing your role flawlessly when given minutes, whether that’s for 90 or 20.
- Understanding that the manager’s authority must remain absolute, even when you disagree.
The moment a player, however great, consciously or unconsciously undermines that authority—through body language, media leaks, or a drop in training standards—they are no longer acting in the club’s best interest. They are putting themselves above the team. And that is a line no successful organization can allow to be crossed.
Prediction: Resolution Through Clarity, Not Compromise
So, where does this leave the Salah-Slot stalemate? I predict a resolution, but not necessarily the one fans might want. This will be solved by clarity, not compromise.
Slot will have had a direct, private conversation with Salah. Not through intermediaries, not in the press. He will have laid out, in unambiguous terms, what he needs from Salah to regain a starting place. It will be specific: “I need you to press these triggers,” “I need you to hold this width,” “Your metrics in this area must improve.” The ball is then in Salah’s court.
He has two choices:
- Embrace the challenge, adapt his game, and fight to prove the manager wrong on the pitch and in training. This could extend his Liverpool career in a new, impactful role.
- Recognize that his time as an undisputed starter at an elite club pursuing the highest honours may be evolving, and plan his future accordingly, with the club’s blessing.
What cannot happen is a fudge. What cannot happen is Slot picking Salah to placate the crowd or avoid headlines. That would undermine the manager, destabilize the squad, and betray the very principle of picking a team on merit. United front, singular vision—this is the only way.
The Final Whistle: The Symphony Must Play On
The great Liverpool teams of the past, the dynasties we all remember, were not collections of individuals singing their own tunes. They were orchestras, conducted by a single, unwavering vision. Bill Shankly, Bob Paisley, Kenny Dalglish, Jürgen Klopp—they were all the singer. The players, however brilliant, were the choir.
The Salah and Slot situation is the ultimate test of this timeless principle. It is a reminder that football, for all its emotion, is a performance business built on hard decisions. The manager must be brave enough to make them, even when they are unpopular. The player must be professional enough to respond to them, even when they are painful.
For Liverpool to move forward, to challenge on all fronts again, there can be no ambiguity. The philosophy is set by Arne Slot. The responsibility to buy into it falls on every player, without exception. The moment everyone in the building accepts that there is only one singer, only then does the real music begin. And that is the secret, not just to man-management, but to building teams that win forever.
Source: Based on news from BBC Sport.
