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Dutch will welcome high-flying Arne Slot with pride on his return with Liverpool

Arne Slot
Arne Slot is hugely popular in the Netherlands for the excellent job he is doing as Liverpool head coach - Getty Images/Andrew Powell

Arne Slot returns to familiar ground on Wednesday having already established himself as one of the best Dutch exports since Heineken.

PSV Eindhoven may be former Eredivisie rivals of the ex-Feyenoord coach, but there will be respect rather than hostility as he returns in Liverpool’s colours.

There is a perceptible sense of pride in the Netherlands at Slot’s early success at Anfield, interest in the Premier League enriched as a football-loving country embraces the success of one of their own.

Slot was received enthusiastically by the Dutch journalists gathered in the Philips Stadion for his pre-match Uefa press conference, putting one instantly in mind of the reception afforded Jürgen Klopp whenever he returned to Germany as Liverpool’s coach.

Despite facing a former foe, it felt like a homecoming as Slot was quizzed on how many close family and friends will be attending Wednesday’s match, and the differences between English and Dutch football.

In six months, Liverpool’s coach has been elevated from being a well-known Dutch personality to an international statesman, now one of his country’s most popular and important football ambassadors.

‘We think of Arne Slot as the best coach in the world’

“We honestly think of Arne Slot as the best coach in the world,” says Milan van Dongen, Dutch football broadcaster for ESPN. “He already had a big status here in the Netherlands because of what he was able to make of a moderate team like Feyenoord. All the things we saw at Feyenoord we see at Liverpool now but with better players.

“Normally, we are not the most ‘proud’ of our stars, but the fans of Feyenoord definitely look at what he is doing with joy and pride.

“We have never seen Arne Slot in crisis. He never lost three times in a row with Feyenoord and he is yet to do so at Liverpool. It is quite special. There is a lot of enthusiasm for how Liverpool are playing.”

With Slot, Virgil van Dijk, Cody Gakpo and Ryan Gravenberch adding an “Oranje” flavour to Liverpool, the Merseyside club can expect to be the most popular in the Netherlands for the foreseeable future.

Cody Gakpo (centre) celebrates scoring Liverpool's third goal against Ipswich with Virgil van Dijk (second from right), Andrew Robertson (second from right) and Luis Diaz (left)
Cody Gakpo (centre) and Virgil van Dijk (second right) have helped Dutch interest in Liverpool’s fortunes soar - Reuters/Phil Noble

“When Van Dijk went to Liverpool, it was similar in that the television was more interested in showing Liverpool games,” observes Jorn Aalders of FCUpdate, who confesses to being a long-term Liverpool supporter watching from the Netherlands.

“Feyenoord fans felt a connection with Liverpool anyway – a port town built by hard-working people.”

That fascination has spread across the country.

“One hundred per cent there is more interest in the Premier League here because of Arne,” says Lars Teunissen, writer for VoetbalPrimeur. “I have friends who are interested in the Premier League but would generally only see the highlights. Now everyone is buying a subscription for the Premier League broadcaster to see the Liverpool games.

‘We knew Liverpool had an amazing manager and now the people in Liverpool are seeing it’

“Slot is doing an amazing job. Did we all expect it to be so good? No, but we knew when he was at Feyenoord he made the players look 10 times better. Now you are seeing in the Dutch league that those players are back at a normal level. We knew Liverpool had an amazing manager and now the people in Liverpool are seeing it.

“There are no worries at all how he will be received by PSV fans. Everyone in Holland likes him – maybe with the exception of Ajax because they were the big rivals of Feyenoord – because of his playing style. He is loved in the Netherlands.

“A lot of Feyenoord fans hope he goes back one day. But everyone in the Netherlands understands now he will not be working here for the next 20 years because he will win big prizes abroad.

“There is a fascination in what Slot is doing with a player like Gravenberch, making him possibly the best No 6 in the world. Tactically he is amazing.”

Ryan Gravenberch of Liverpool during a training session during the UEFA Champions League 2024/25 League Phase MD8 training and press conference at AXA Melwood Training Centre on January 28, 2025 in Liverpool, England
Dutch fans are fascinated to see whether Slot can help Ryan Gravenberch make the leap to becoming a world-class No 6 - Getty Images/Nick Taylor

So far, Slot is succeeding where other Dutch coaches have notoriously struggled.

“It was the same interest when Erik ten Hag went to Manchester United, but of course that turned out to be less of a success. There has been an obvious, immediate comparison,” says Aron Kleeven of sportnieuws.nl.

“Arne Slot is the complete package. Ten Hag did not have that charisma,” adds Teunissen.

Tweaking rather than tinkering

For Von Dongen, the secret of Slot’s instant impact is a more modern approach to implementing a “Dutch” style.

“A lot of Dutch managers went to England and wanted to change too much – make the team play in ‘the Dutch way’,” says Von Dongen.

“I think of Frank de Boer at Crystal Palace. You can’t just change a whole club to an extreme like that. Arne Slot has built on Jürgen Klopp’s foundation where he has not had to change too much, and he is an innovative coach who knows the new developments of football.

“That’s the big difference with previous Dutch managers in the Premier League.”


Arne Slot rests top players for PSV trip with Bournemouth priority

Liverpool are prioritising this weekend’s visit to Bournemouth over the Champions League with Arne Slot resting his superstars for the trip to Eindhoven.

Mohamed Salah, Virgil van Dijk, Trent Alexander-Arnold and Alisson Becker are among a host of first-team players who remained on Merseyside when the squad flew to the Netherlands.

Liverpool are in a position to take advantage of the certainty of finishing among the top-two qualifiers. Only Barcelona can overtake Slot’s side, who need a point against PSV Eindhoven to enter the round of 16 as table-toppers.

Slot said he had given his regular starters a day off on Wednesday because of the tough schedule.

“We are playing many, many games and the ones we left behind could have played but we need to think long-term,” said Slot. “If you look back at our season and the players who play all the time we always try to give them a break after three, four or five weeks when it’s the League Cup or FA Cup to help them get their freshness back. The squad is a choice for the long term.

“It has taken me a while to understand this new format but I’m now 100 per cent sure it doesn’t matter if you end up first or second because we are guaranteed to play the team that is 15th, 16th, 17th or 18th, and then it’s down to the draw.

“We can’t drop to third. It has no impact on the league table but we will be trying to win. A wise man once said to me he’s never seen anything good come from losing a game.”

The Merseyside club is already cashing in on its European success this season. The rewards from qualification into the competition and through to the round of 16 mean Liverpool have secured at least £55.94 million from this season’s Champions League, with the promise of more to come.

Prize-money breakdown

The breakdown makes for healthy reading for Slot’s side.

Each position is worth £275,000 in the qualifying table, with competing teams also earning £2.1 million per win. With seven consecutive victories, Liverpool have so far maxed out. Their seven wins from seven means have recouped an additional £14.7 million from Uefa’s pot.

They are guaranteed an initial £18.62 million by qualifying for the Champions League, and have now earned a further £11 million by securing their position in the round of 16. Those clubs finishing in the top eight also earn a further £2 million.

There will be more dividends once the market share of broadcast revenues is calculated, although that depends on the success and progress of other English clubs as well as Liverpool.

But while other European giants fret about making it into the last 16 – or in some cases reaching the knockout phase at all – Slot has the luxury of thinking ahead to the next Premier League fixture.

Liverpool travel to in-form Bournemouth on Saturday seeking to protect or extend their six-point lead over Arsenal. It is the start of a busy period which also takes in the second leg of the Carabao Cup semi-final against Tottenham Hotspur, and the Merseyside derby at Goodison Park.

As well as Salah, Van Dijk, Alexander-Arnold and Alisson, Slot has also omitted Luis Díaz, Dominik Szoboszlai, Ibrahima Konaté and Alexis Mac Allister from his European squad.

That means goalkeeper Caoimhin Kelleher, young defenders Conor Bradley and Jarell Quansah, and the fit-again Federico Chiesa can expect to feature against PSV.