
Liverpool had just lost 3-2 at Old Trafford. The away end didn't leave. They stood, they sang, and for nearly five minutes Mohamed Salah's name bounced around that corner of the ground like it had nowhere else to be.
Defeat at Old Trafford. Three goals conceded. A long drive or train ride home. None of it stopped the Liverpool away end from doing something that felt less like a chant and more like a statement. Salah's name, unprompted, for close to five minutes. Not a response to a goal, not a reaction to a substitution — just supporters deciding, collectively, that this was the moment.
Salah is 33. His contract runs until summer 2027, which means there's still time, but also means the clock is visible now in a way it wasn't two years ago. The chant has existed for years, of course — it's been sung in Champions League finals and on Tuesday nights at Burnley — but people inside that away end say it hasn't sounded like this in months.
We spoke to three Liverpool season-ticket holders who were in the away end. None of them planned it. None of them knew who started it. "Someone near the back just went for it," one of them says, "and within about ten seconds the whole section was in." Another describes it as the kind of spontaneous thing that only happens when a crowd has something unresolved to say. The third just says: "We needed to tell him."
That word — tell — keeps coming up. Not perform. Not sing. Tell. As if the song has shifted function, from celebration to conversation. Salah wasn't on the pitch when it started. He may not have heard it clearly. But everyone in that end knew who they were talking to.
There's a version of this story where it's just fans doing what fans do after a painful away defeat — filling the silence, processing the loss, defaulting to the one name that still feels like certainty. That's probably part of it.
But there's another version where a fanbase that has watched contract sagas drag on before — and has occasionally watched them end badly — is doing the only thing it can do from the away end of Old Trafford on a Saturday afternoon. Reminding him. Reminding the club. Reminding anyone listening that Mohamed Salah, at 33, after a 3-2 defeat, is still the name they reach for when they need something to hold onto.
Five minutes is a long time to sing anything. It's longer when you've just lost.
Liverpool had just lost 3-2 at Old Trafford. The away end didn't leave. They stood, they sang, and for nearly five minutes Mohamed Salah's name bounced around that corner of the ground like it had nowhere else to be.
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