This season, Liverpool has done a fantastic job of ensuring a seamless manager change.
Many at the club had been concerned about how the Reds would handle losing Jurgen Klopp and the majority of his staff.
However, Arne Slot was chosen to manage that switch, and the Dutch coach did a fantastic job.
Along with Slot, the new Liverpool coaching staff is also deserving of a great deal of praise for their quick start.
Given the early work he did at Anfield with Slot, for instance, it is not surprising to see John Heitinga associated with management positions.
Regretfully, though, Liverpool has not been exempt from seeing important players depart the team to pursue careers elsewhere. Additionally, it appears that Slot has lost a longtime Reds stalwart, according to news from Norway on Tuesday.
Liverpool’s Mads Jorgensen departs
Over the summer, there was a significant change in Liverpool’s hiring process as Richard Hughes took over as sporting director and Michael Edwards and Julian Ward returned.
seasoned director of recruiting and scouting Dave Fallows, who joined the team in 2012, also departed.
Danish scout Mads Jorgensen was one man who had been with the same squad since before Fallows had ever come.
However, the Norwegian team Molde’s official website, moldefk.no, claims that Jorgensen has left Liverpool to join them.
The Molde Football Club is thrilled to announce that Mads Jorgensen, a Danish scout, has joined the team.
Since 2011, the 45-year-old Dane has been employed by Liverpool, where he has played a significant role in scouting and discovering talent for one of the top teams in the world. In order to join our ambitious scouting team, he is now returning to Scandinavia.
Will Liverpool’s hiring practices alter?
It raises the issue of if Liverpool is taking a different approach with their new squad in light of the departures of players like Fallows and Jorgensen.
Edwards and Ward, for example, have obviously been at the club for a long time, but maybe they’re eager to try something else.
Federico Chiesa’s signing certainly seems to imply that things might be different now.
Chiesa, who was 26 when he joined and was considered a bit of a spent force by many, was not the kind of signing that Liverpool supporters had been accustomed to from Edwards’ previous administration.
Now that some of his squad members are departing, perhaps we should start anticipating the unexpected from Edwards on the transfer market. In any case, thank you for your years of service and best of luck in your future endeavor, Mads!