Salah Laughed After Klopp's 10-15 Year Message — Salah Comments On Alexander-arnold

Salah Laughed After Klopp's 10-15 Year Message — Salah Comments On Alexander-arnold

Mohamed Salah comments on alexander-arnold were not the point of the exchange on TNT Sport, but Klopp’s video message stole it. The Liverpool star laughed when Jurgen Klopp told him, “not every minute but most of the time,” and the moment briefly turned a farewell interview with Steven Gerrard into a shared laugh.

Klopp’s line landed because it cut straight through the sentiment. He told Salah, “Two of my legends are sitting together, Stevie, you know how much I love you. But Mo, it was an absolute honour to work with you, it was a pleasure as well, not every minute but most of the time.” Salah looked away smiling after the remark, and Gerrard laughed with him.

Klopp's Farewell Message

Klopp used the video to push the conversation beyond nostalgia. He said he wanted to “create a special story” and make sure that when they saw each other in “10 or 15 years” they could look back and smile. He finished by saying, “I'm just super happy and thankful that I was part of the whole journey for a while and all the best for what is coming up, there's still a great few years to come so have a great time together and enjoy, see you, bye.”

The wording fit a public goodbye between two of Liverpool’s biggest figures. Salah is set to leave Liverpool as a club legend, and the injury that had threatened to cut short his farewell run did not end the way it first looked like it might.

Salah on Klopp's Dressing Room

Salah then shifted from the laugh to the football. He said Klopp could manage “a dressing room though with a team full of stars” and “keep everybody on their feet and working.”

He added that Klopp may have been helped by the players themselves: “He may have been lucky as well that we all wanted to work, he didn't have to force anyone to work because we really wanted to succeed and achieve big things.” That is the sharp edge in the tribute. Salah was not just praising motivation; he was describing a coach who could organize elite talent without losing control of the room.

Slot's Friday Update

Friday brought the practical part of the story. Arne Slot said Salah had a minor injury and was expected and needed back for the final part of the season, but not for Sunday.

Salah gave Gerrard a tighter target. “I should be back a little before that,” he said when asked about the final game of the season against Brentford. At 33, he is still on the schedule for a return, and the message from both manager and player pointed to the same outcome: his absence was brief, not terminal.

That is what changed here for Liverpool. The interview delivered the public farewell tone Klopp wanted, and the injury update shifted the focus back to availability for the run-in. Salah’s laugh said one thing; the return timeline said something more useful for the club’s final stretch.

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