Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-MD), the ranking Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee, is facing mounting backlash after publishing a trove of private prison emails written by convicted human trafficker Ghislaine Maxwell.
Liverpool legend Jamie Carragher has directed his anger towards the club’s players after a humiliating Champions League defeat at home to PSV Eindhoven.
Instead of blaming Reds manager Arne Slot, Carragher feels that it’s currently the team’s players letting everyone down, while he also made the big claim that it looks like Virgil van Dijk and Mohamed Salah basically look finished at the very highest level.
Speaking on CBS Sports in the video clip below, Carragher suggested he couldn’t see Slot getting the sack, whilst insisting that he wanted to see Salah in particular come out to address the fans after the club’s awful recent form.
Jamie Carragher on Arne Slot, Virgil van Dijk, and Mohamed Salah
Carragher said he’s “angry” with Liverpool’s players, and suggested we’re starting to see a glimpse of the club’s future now that key figures like Van Dijk and Salah are past their best.
“Liverpool’s not a sacking club,” the former LFC defender said. “Liverpool are different from almost every club in European football – the manager is the king, the manager gets time.
“Liverpool have never sacked a manager who’s won the league. Never in their history … I couldn’t believe at the weekend that people were talking about the manager’s job, when I spoke to Liverpool supporters after losing at home to Nottingham Forest.
“I’ve always been in the camp that you stick with the manager, I’m angry with the players if I’m being totally honest.
“But it does get to a stage with any manager at any club where I always use this word “untenable”, where it feels it can’t go on any longer. I’m not quite there yet personally, in terms of the manager, but I know a lot of supporters will be.
“I’ve had a lot of time to think about it because I knew the game was over long before the final whistle. I think what you’re seeing now is, Liverpool in 2018 under Jurgen Klopp sort of starts this journey … we’re now, what, seven or eight years later, and the catalyst for that run was Alisson, Van Dijk, and Salah.
“Alisson’s injured a lot now, he doesn’t play so much. But you watch Van Dijk now, not the same player, and Mo Salah looks like his legs have gone. I don’t like criticising them, and I think some of the criticism of them this season as players has been harsh.
“You always look for leaders in your team to step up when things are not going well. And I’ve been critical of Salah off the pitch, I want him to come out and do an interview tonight and speak to the Liverpool supporters about what the players are going to do, about what’s going on in the dressing room, giving the supporters hope that things are going to improve.
“But I don’t like criticising them on the pitch because they’re absolute legends for what they’ve done, and their legs have just gone. Van Dijk now can’t help other players, he needs help himself, and that just means he’s a normal centre-back like I was, maybe he’s not super human right now.”