
Anfield Index
·11 luglio 2025
Man United legend reveals he almost signed for Liverpool

In partnership with
Yahoo sportsAnfield Index
·11 luglio 2025
There are few tales more riddled with regret and intrigue than those that involve players who almost changed the course of footballing history. Nemanja Vidic, a name synonymous with the snarling backbone of Sir Alex Ferguson’s last great Manchester United side, has revealed that he almost joined Liverpool before ending up at Old Trafford. That revelation, delivered with the casual weight of a shrug, carries with it the sort of historical tension that only this rivalry can bear.
Vidic said, “In 2005, I had a call from Liverpool. Rafa Benitez called me and I spoke to him. He said he wanted me to come to Liverpool.” The thought alone is enough to send shivers down the spines of fans on both sides of the divide. Imagine him in red, but not that red.
Photo: IMAGO
This was not a fleeting conversation either. “I was interested. I thought about Liverpool,” he admitted. The allure of Merseyside was real. A European heavyweight coming off the back of a Champions League triumph, with Benitez looking to fortify a brittle defence. “But my English was not good and I was struggling to communicate. Then Manchester United came.”
It is the sort of detail that borders on the absurd. A man’s trajectory, his legacy, shaped not by tactical preference or financial incentive but by language barriers. Liverpool blinked, and Ferguson didn’t. The rest is stained into the turf of English football.
Vidic’s eventual partnership with Rio Ferdinand became the gold standard of Premier League defending. Muscular, unyielding and often bordering on the violent, it was a duo that defined an era. Liverpool, meanwhile, spent the next several seasons in a state of tactical flux, attempting to replicate what they could have had.
Photo IMAGO
Had Benitez been more persistent, had Vidic’s English been just a little sharper, could Liverpool have built their spine earlier? This was a club with Jamie Carragher and Sami Hyypiä, both warriors in their own right, but neither quite possessed the sheer intimidation factor of Vidic.
His move to Manchester United in January 2006 for a fee of £7 million proved one of the defining transfers of the Premier League’s modern age. United reclaimed the title the very next season and lifted four more during his tenure. In Europe, they won the Champions League in 2008. Liverpool’s fans were left to watch their almost-centre-half hoist trophies in another red.
History is peppered with moments like this, where clubs step to the brink and then retreat. Liverpool’s flirtation with Vidic mirrors other transfer misfires that have haunted them: Dani Alves, Simao Sabrosa, and Cristiano Ronaldo are names that circle in regret like ravens around Anfield. In each case, negotiations faltered, and another club stepped in.
Yet the Vidic saga feels uniquely poignant. This was not just a missed opportunity, it was a gift wrapped in red ribbon and left unopened. “I speak better English now. Maybe things could have been different,” Vidic quipped later, with the kind of humour that makes Liverpool fans wince.
There are careers built on the games that were played, and others haunted by the ones that never were. Vidic almost joined Liverpool, and in doing so, he almost rewrote his story and theirs. Instead, he became a colossus in Manchester, a man for the trenches, bloodied but never bowed.
For Liverpool, it remains a footnote in their transfer history, but a significant one. In a world of scouting algorithms and recruitment models, this one slipped through on the simplest of grounds. Communication.