In the immediate aftermath of the 47-year-old’s exit, there has been talk about just how poorly things ended for him on Merseyside. But, when we look back on Slot’s time with Liverpool, there should be no ill feelings toward a man who helped bridge a significant gap in the Reds’ recent history.
Poisoned chalice
Slot inherited a very talented squad assembled by the irresistible Jurgen Klopp, but that was perhaps a fool's bargain from day one.
Anfield's expectations didn't reset with Klopp's departure; they transferred to his successor, with assumptions that continuity would guarantee stability.
Slot’s first season in charge was a roaring success, clinching Liverpool’s 20th English league title, and suggestions that it was merely because he had "Klopp’s squad" are shortsighted. If nothing else, consider the fact that the same group failed to win the title the season before.
What changed in the end was not simply personnel, but the way the team was being asked to function under a new head coach in a league that punishes even the shortest of rough patches.
Slot's grand experiment was to pivot Liverpool away from the heavy-metal style fans had experienced under Klopp to something more measured, more Dutch, a preference for positional discipline and patience on the ball.
This approach made Slot look like a genius when it brought wins, but when that inevitable drift set in, Liverpool's patience was interpreted as passivity, partially stripping Anfield of its red-hot cauldron status.
Grief and empathy
With a Premier League winners’ medal around his neck, Slot then helped navigate Liverpool through a difficult period in his second season, following the tragic passing of Diogo Jota.
There's been some chatter around the well-liked Portuguese star’s passing over the last 12 months, as if there is a time limit on grieving. Consider, for a moment, that someone close to you in your life, aged around 25-30, died tomorrow. Do you think your performance at work would suffer, and for how long?
Modern football sometimes operates under a bizarre lack of empathy, treating elite sportspeople like cogs in machines, but the beautiful game is fundamentally a human ecosystem.
When a tragedy of that magnitude strikes the core of the dressing room, training sessions become secondary to collective emotional trauma. It was a psychological weight Slot was forced to manage, while swathes on the outside expected Liverpool to simply crack on.
That said, Slot guided the Reds to Champions League qualification last season, even if he would concede that it was with a bit of luck, given the dramatic drop-offs in the likes of Chelsea and the limitations of clubs like Bournemouth and Brentford.
It should also be said, to be fair, that qualification for the Champions League would have masked a broader issue had Slot not been sacked, as Liverpool were no longer moving in a clear direction.
Turbulence of rushed renewal
Liverpool’s spending in excess of £400 million in the summer of 2025 should have represented the beginning of a new era. Instead, it arguably exposed the difficulty of trying to rebuild at speed while still competing at the top of the game.
Heavy investment does not automatically translate into success on the pitch -- Chelsea earn their second reference in this article for being another recent example -- and in Liverpool's case, it often felt like a squad strengthened in places but not always aligned on a single tactical identity.
Massive recruitment inherently causes squad disruption and can dilute the on-the-pitch chemistry that has been built up over the course of several years.
Slot was caught in this bind. He was tasked with bleeding fresh ideas into the system, while also being judged by the immediate standards required at the very top of the game.
To use an analogy, you wouldn't try to change the engine of a plane while flying it.
Sacrificial catalyst
There is also a wider point about succession itself. We could instead look at Slot’s reign at Liverpool similarly to how we might view Naby Keita inheriting the No. 8 shirt after Steven Gerrard, so Dominik Szoboszlai could flourish; the manager who replaces Slot does not have the shadow of Klopp hanging over them in quite the same way.
That burden of comparison is real in elite football and it shapes how quickly patience erodes, even after success.
Slot may have lost the fans at the end of his tenure, as well as the dressing room, but he will not be remembered long-term as anything other than the man who helped bridge the gap after Klopp’s departure and Jota’s passing.
Even as results deteriorated, there were still moments in which support did not entirely disappear. Sections of Anfield continued to sing his name, a reminder that judgements in the stands are not always reflected in those online and within boardrooms.
There may be something more to be said about the ruthless nature of football in 2026, when a Premier League-winning manager can be dismissed after one bad season, though it may be understood.
The margins at the top of the game are now so narrow that success and instability often go hand-in-hand and silverware alone is not the definitive measure of success it once was.
But perhaps there could also be something said of fan expectations, in terms of playing style and progress on the pitch, and how quickly they recalibrate once a defining era has come to an end.
Slot's spell at Liverpool sits in a place between inheritance and renewal. He won the Premier League, so he can't be called a failure, but the results on the pitch and the team's style drew significant and justified criticism.
Now that he's no longer at the club, we can say that he kept the ship relatively steady during what could have been a genuinely disastrous period and helped keep the club in a safe place for the next manager.
