
Anfield Index
·27 de julio de 2025
Andy Robertson Responds to Liverpool Vice-Captain Rumours

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Yahoo sportsAnfield Index
·27 de julio de 2025
In the humidity of Hong Kong’s neon sky, Liverpool drifted through a pre-season spell that felt less like football and more like theatre. Against AC Milan, the match played out with a rhythm that twisted between purpose and mystery, leaving supporters with more questions than answers. Among them, one hums the loudest through the corridors of Anfield: who will become vice-captain now that Trent Alexander-Arnold has departed for Madrid’s marble halls?
This isn’t a straightforward football tale. It’s textured, laden with quiet glances and unspoken conversations. In the stillness following the Reds’ defeat, a whisper took form — Andy Robertson. The Scotland captain, known for his relentless energy and razor-sharp edge down the left, was rumoured to be next in line.
Photo: IMAGO
After the game, Robertson was asked directly about the role. The Scot responded, but it wasn’t quite an answer, more of a laugh echoing through red mist.
“I’ve seen rumours, I’ve had texts and I’ve had people congratulating me, but I’ve not heard anything!” Robertson told The Anfield Wrap, a grin tugging at the corner of his words. “We’re obviously part of the leadership group, me, Mo [Salah], Ali [Alisson] and obviously Virgil being captain. The manager’s not spoken to any of us yet, obviously we’ve lost Trent as vice captain so that role is available. But we do what we do, the four of us are a good tight-knit group.”
It sounds casual. But listen closely, and there’s something else beneath it. Something unsaid. Like an answer that’s already written but waiting for the right time to be spoken aloud.
Behind the curtain, Arne Slot already knows the name. Liverpool’s head coach confirmed the decision exists. But like a magician holding a card behind his back, he refused to show it.
“It is probably already decided but I’m not telling it here yet who will be the new vice-captain,” Slot revealed after the match. “But it’s clear we have more than a few that can take that role.”
Slot, who led Liverpool to Premier League glory in his very first season, operates not just with tactical brilliance but a sort of mysticism. He sees leadership not as a badge but a presence, a force humming through the training ground and dressing room alike.
At Liverpool, vice-captaincy isn’t only about titles. It’s in gestures, eye contact, the silence before the storm. Robertson, Alisson, Salah — these figures move with gravity. Virgil van Dijk may wear the captain’s armband, but the soul of leadership is diffused, like the red lights of Anfield spilling into fog.
As rumours ripple and the truth waits, Liverpool prepare for what’s next. The Premier League beckons again. The ghost of what was and the shape of what’s coming both linger at Melwood, now under Slot’s calm, cryptic command.
Whether Robertson steps forward or remains part of the chorus, the play goes on. And Liverpool, under Slot’s gaze, keep walking that line between clarity and dream.