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Liverpool forward Mo Salah would need to force Saudi Arabia move himself

autty 2023-08-25 14:28:04 评论

The only way Mohamed Salah will leave for Saudi Arabia this summer is if he forces through a dramatic late move away from Liverpool.

Sources in Saudi Arabia have confirmed Salah is a longstanding target for the Saudi Pro League (SPL) but there has been no indication that Liverpool are prepared to sell the player.

Liverpool have not received any offers for Salah and they have let it be known that the 31-year-old Egypt captain is not for sale.

Saudi champions Al Ittihad would be willing to make Salah one of the best-paid players in the world with a salary package worth about £1.5m a week.

They would also be prepared to pay Liverpool a transfer fee of more than £100m.

The Saudi Pro League club made attempts to sign Salah earlier in the window and remain interested despite Salah's agent Ramy Abbas Issa saying earlier in August the player was committed to Liverpool.

Salah is the most famous Arab player in the world and a move to Saudi Arabia would raise the profile of the SPL even higher as it aims to become one of the leading leagues in the world as quickly as possible.

Salah signed a new three-year, £350,000-a-week contract last summer which made him the highest-paid player in Liverpool's history.

Al Ittihad are one of four SPL clubs who are owned by Saudi Arabia's sovereign wealth fund, the Public Investment Fund (PIF).

PIF announced in October last year it had signed sponsorship agreements with Saudi clubs worth £1.8bn.

All clubs in the SPL are effectively financed by the state and there is an element of central control when it comes to signings.

Deals cannot be completed until they are approved by the SPL and its director of football Michael Emenalo plays a key role in mapping squads and advising clubs about targets.

Al Ittihad are playing in the FIFA Club World Cup in Saudi Arabia in December - a tournament which will also feature Manchester City.

Salah is expected to play for Liverpool at Newcastle United, who are majority-owned by PIF, on Sunday - live on Sky Sports.

Salah's former team-mates Jordan Henderson, Fabinho and Roberto Firmino have already moved to Saudi Arabia this summer.

'Salah is just not for sale'

Sky Sports News chief reporter Kaveh Solhekol:

"We've known for quite a while they want to sign Salah, and that as far as Liverpool are concerned he's not for sale.

"When these reports started emerging a month ago that they were interested, his own agent came out on social media and said Salah was committed to Liverpool. If that wasn't the case, he wouldn't have signed a new contract last summer.

"That contract makes him the best-paid player at Liverpool, still has two years left to run, and Liverpool are very clear that they do not want to sell him.

"But as we've seen all summer, these Saudi Pro League clubs don't take no for an answer. They have their lists of targets, and will do whatever it takes to sign those players.

"They're not going to give up, and the Saudi window is open for several days after the window closes here. This has a really destabilising effect on Liverpool, but it's something everyone in the game in Europe has had to get used to. The Saudi Pro League is here to stay and they have the money to try, and sometimes succeed, with buying the world's best players.

"I think Mo Salah is just not for sale. He's Liverpool's best-paid player. The last thing Jurgen Klopp wants is to lose him so late in the window. Klopp came out recently and said he was unhappy with how the SPL window was open after the Premier League window closes. He was worried about the fact Saudi clubs could come in and take players away from Premier League clubs after the window was closed here, so they couldn't replace them.

"If Al Ittihad do try to sign Salah after the window closes next Friday, Klopp's worst nightmares will have come true.

"This is the transfer market - Saudi clubs have a different window to Premier League clubs. Al Ittihad are doing nothing wrong. They're trying to sign a player.

"Does every player have their price? Will it get to a stage where the price is so high that Liverpool are tempted to cash in? There's been no indication so far from the club that this is the case.

"We've seen time and again this summer, Saudi clubs identify targets and throw money at these targets. We're talking about incredible sums of money, and we've been told some of these players who are reluctant to move are being told they'll be given 50 per cent of their wages over the whole term of their contract up front now, tax free, to tempt them to join."

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