
Anfield Index
·28 de julio de 2025
Liverpool target compared to star summer signing

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Yahoo sportsAnfield Index
·28 de julio de 2025
Liverpool are not hanging around this summer. The Milan defeat may have exposed some defensive frailties, but the bigger picture is clear Arne Slot and his recruitment team are reshaping this squad with precision. Names like Frimpong, Kerkez, Wirtz and Ekitike have already arrived, but there is more to come. The next target? Rodrygo.
Photo: IMAGO
According to Football Fancast, Liverpool are now in pole position to land the Real Madrid winger, with Arsenal stepping away from the race. Valued at around £87 million, Rodrygo may not come cheap, but ambition has never been about caution.
The possible exits of Luis Diaz and Darwin Nunez are shaping this window. Diaz’s £65 million move to Bayern Munich is reportedly sealed, while Nunez’s future remains up in the air. In that context, the logic behind a move for Rodrygo becomes clearer.
Photo: IMAGO
The Brazilian has long been admired across Europe, and Liverpool’s interest stretches back to his early days in Brazil. What makes this latest development more significant is that Madrid may finally be open to a deal, particularly with Xabi Alonso reshaping their own forward options.
Rodrygo fits the current mould. Quick, technically gifted, and versatile across the front line, he offers a different profile to both Diaz and Nunez. He is not a direct replacement, but Liverpool are not seeking like-for-like changes. They are building a new rhythm under Slot, and Rodrygo fits into that groove.
There’s a reason comparisons are being made between Rodrygo and new Liverpool arrival Florian Wirtz. Both can play wide or centrally, both carry the ball with purpose, and both make intelligent movements that disorganise opposition back lines. According to FBref, Wirtz is the seventh-most similar player to Rodrygo across Europe’s top five leagues.
Rodrygo may not have the same creative output as Wirtz, 14 goals and 11 assists last season is a strong return but not spectacular, but in terms of progressive play, dribbling and link-up patterns, the similarities are striking.
He even edges Wirtz in key passes per 90 minutes, showing his impact in transition and final third phases. And like Wirtz, Rodrygo is a player teammates look for. He receives progressive passes at a comparable rate, constantly operating between the lines where defenders fear to tread.
Photo: IMAGO
Spending £87 million on Rodrygo would have seemed far-fetched a year ago. But in this market, and in this moment for Liverpool, it feels more calculated than excessive. This is a club shifting away from the era of functional wide players and into one where versatility, flair and intelligence are valued above pure explosiveness.
Photo: IMAGO
Liverpool need more than just depth. They need difference-makers. Rodrygo may not be a guaranteed starter every week, but he is the kind of player who elevates standards, sharpens competition and fits the emerging identity under Slot.
Rodrygo would not just fill a void left by Diaz, he would raise the technical ceiling of the entire attack. Watching him in Madrid, you see a player that thrives on big occasions, that embraces the weight of expectation. That’s exactly what Anfield demands.
His comparisons to Wirtz are more than just convenient. They reflect a style Liverpool are moving towards. The days of raw pace and endless crossing from wide are behind us. Now it’s about clever movement, link-up play and creating space. Rodrygo offers that.
Yes, £87 million is a lot. But this is a player who has produced consistently at one of the most pressurised clubs in world football. He is young, proven and already a Champions League winner. You cannot build a squad to challenge on all fronts without players like this.
If Liverpool get this done, it will show they mean business. It is a deal that makes sense, both now and for the seasons to come.