Key Takeaways:
- Mohamed Salah apology helped calm dressing-room tensions after his comments about being “thrown under the bus”.
- Salah has scored 250 goals for Liverpool overall but has five in 20 appearances this season; he remains an influential figure.
- The forward was left out for a Champions League trip but returned to the side after talks with manager Arne Slot and fellow players.
Mohamed Salah apology restores harmony at Liverpool

Mohamed Salah apology brings team closure
Mohamed Salah apologised to his Liverpool teammates after remarks in which he said he felt “thrown under the bus”, the club’s midfielder Curtis Jones has confirmed. Jones told Sky Sports that Salah spoke directly to the squad, expressed regret if his words had affected anyone and reinforced his desire to be part of a winning team.
Jones said: “Mo is his own man and he can say his own stuff. He apologised to us and was like, ‘If I’ve affected anybody or made you feel any sort of way, I apologise.’ That’s the man that he is. He was the exact same Mo, he had a big smile on his face and everybody was exactly the same with him.” The public apology appears to have settled tensions within the dressing room.
The 33-year-old Egypt international remains one of Liverpool’s most prolific scorers, with 250 goals for the club across all competitions. This season his output has dipped, with five goals in 20 appearances, a marked contrast to last season when he netted 34 times in 52 matches and won the Professional Footballers’ Association player of the year award for the third time.
Salah made the remarks after being dropped for a third consecutive match, comments that prompted manager Arne Slot to leave him out of the squad for Liverpool’s Champions League trip to Inter Milan. The situation was managed internally, however, and after talks between Salah and Slot the forward was restored to the team for the home fixture against Brighton.
Liverpool’s form has stabilised since a heavy 4-1 defeat at home to PSV Eindhoven in late November. The club went into their next Premier League fixture at Tottenham unbeaten in five matches, with the squad aiming to build momentum during the busy season and while several players prepare for international duty.
Salah is currently at the Africa Cup of Nations with Egypt, but the apology and subsequent conversations have left the first-team group feeling united, according to Jones. “We’re past that now and we’re gelling well as a team,” Jones added. “Playing well and starting to win games.” The response suggests that the coaching staff and players prioritised swift resolution and a return to focus.
For supporters and analysts, the episode is a reminder of the pressures on high-profile players and the importance of clear communication in elite squads. Salah’s standing at Liverpool is secure, both because of his record and his willingness to address friction head on. How he translates that reconciliation into goals on his return will be watched closely as Liverpool pursue honours on multiple fronts.
With the season unfolding and key fixtures ahead, the club will hope the matter remains behind them and that Salah can recapture the form that made him one of Europe’s most feared attackers. For now, the apology appears to have achieved its immediate aim: restoring calm and unity in the dressing room.

















