Anfield holds its breath
Euphoria turned to silence. The kind that hits without warning. Liverpool won at Tottenham on Saturday, yes. But at what cost. Alexander Isak, the marquee signing and symbol of the Reds’ new era, came off injured, face grim, steps heavy. Since then, a dark cloud has hung over Anfield.
The official diagnosis hasn’t arrived yet; the MRI is awaited like a verdict. But in the club’s corridors, nobody’s fooling themselves. First impressions, the images of the clash, the player’s reaction… all point to an absence that could last. And for Liverpool, it’s a hammer blow.
Hero turned victim
It had looked like the perfect moment. 56th minute, Isak pops up, sets himself, scores. His second Premier League goal in the red shirt. A tidy, clinical move — exactly what he’s brought since he arrived. Then it all flipped.
As he struck, his leg got trapped between Micky van de Ven’s, who was charging in full tilt to block. The collision was violent, unlucky, almost unavoidable. Isak collapsed. Immediately. And this time he didn’t get up.
Referee John Brooks let play continue. No foul called. A decision that did not go down well with Liverpool, especially in a match already fraught where Xavi Simons had been shown red and Cristian Romero had been sent off earlier. In the stands and on social, anger rose. Too late, anyway. Damage done.
125 million and a huge void
When Liverpool broke the bank to sign Alexander Isak for 125 million pounds, it wasn’t a marketing move. It was for a player who can change the shape of a season. Pace, cleverness, composure, an ability to run in behind… Isak ticked every box.
He settled in fast. His influence obvious. And now it all stops dead, just as the patterns were starting to click. For a squad already stretched, this is a monumental headache.

In the medical staff’s hands
On Tottenham’s turf, the images spoke for themselves. Chris Morgan and Jonathan Power, key figures in the Reds’ medical team, stayed with the Swedish striker for long minutes. Ice, tests, worried looks. Isak left the pitch helped, unable to put any weight on his foot.
Their role will be decisive in the coming days. But even with all the staff’s expertise, some injuries set their own timetable. And Liverpool know forcing a return would be the worst option.
A tactical headache looms
This injury comes at the worst possible moment. Liverpool had found a rhythm, an attacking fluidity, a fragile but promising balance. Without Isak, the manager will have to rethink his plans. Change the striker profile. Alter the patterns. Redistribute the responsibilities.
This kind of absence can’t be fixed with a simple tweak. The whole attacking play has to be rethought. And in the Premier League, time waits for no one.
Between worry and hope
At Anfield, supporters swing between pessimism and nervous hope. Hope that the MRI brings good news. Fear that the season takes a brutal turn as early as autumn. Because in this cutthroat league, every dropped point is paid for come spring.
Alexander Isak’s injury is a harsh reminder. In football, everything can flip in a fraction of a second. A goal, a slip, an unlucky clash. For Liverpool, it’s now time for resilience. For solidarity. For the ability to hold course when the wind picks up.
Anfield has weathered storms before. The question is whether this one will leave deep scars… or whether it will, once again, expose the character of a club that refuses to bend.

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