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Ahead of Arsenal clash, revealed the 20 million owners are throwing away

Reds have unhelpful spending on assets

By Charles Cornwall

Reds have unhelpful spending on assets

With just 10 games left to play for Liverpool in the current 2022-2023 campaign, the Merseyside outfit's balance sheet has begun to be generated from all quarters, with much being argued at the moment about footballing failings, under-investment in reinforcements, under-performing players, and absurd spending that only causes the institution losses at the end of a footballing year.

 

Currently, the squad led by Jurgen Klopp has an endless number of players who have not performed as expected after being contracted one or more seasons ago, causing the team to lose both in terms of football and in economic terms, as they do not register due to injury or because of their low level of play those minutes that justify their signing, with the top management paying approximately 20 million euros per year in salaries for players who do not see official activity.

The most recent case of this problem is precisely that of the Brazilian, Arthur Melo, who after his arrival in the summer could only play 18 minutes in a Champions League match against Napoli to spend the rest of his days on Merseyside recovering from one injury after another, a situation that is no longer news to a fan base that has seen since 2018 as Naby Keita receives a large salary to only play a couple of games before presenting discomfort in some area of the legs.

 

<strong>Liverpool&#39;s big losses are in midfield</strong>

In addition to the Guinean midfielder and the Brazilian, the list of expensive and unprofitable players for the team includes the names of Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain, Fabio Carvalho and Curtis Jones, adding between them just over 20 million euros invested by five players who together do not even have 20 full games played, with the board urgently needing to solve these micro losses in the millions to better use that money on a world star to do their job in the area.

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