DUBAI: When Liverpool take on Newcastle United at St Jamesâ Park on Monday night in their second Premier League match of the season, the chatter will again be about their new signings â and the possible recruitment of Alexander Isak from Eddie Howeâs team, which is expected to make the atmosphere edgier than usual.
The opening day of the season saw Arne Slotâs team beat Bournemouth 4-2 with British transfer record signing Florian Wirtz making his bow at Anfield alongside forward Hugo Ekitike and new fullbacks Miklos Kerkez and Jeremie Frimpong.
The latter two were withdrawn in the second half as the home team led 2-0, and former Liverpool player Glen Johnson, who played for the club at both left- and right-back positions, believes the additions will be expected to excel at defense and attack.
âThatâs part of the game now,â Johnson told Arab News while in Dubai recently. âObviously theyâve got to defend, theyâve got to be good on the ball, but theyâve also got to be good going forward. And to do that, you need an engine.â
Frimpong, who is likely to miss the match against Newcastle, and Kerkez have taken over starting positions from Liverpool stalwarts of recent years in Trent Alexander-Arnold, who left for Real Madrid, and Andy Robertson, who remains at the club.
Johnson added that modern football, not to mention Liverpoolâs attacking methods, places extra demands on them.
âNowadays itâs expected (to attack and defend),â the former England star said. âBefore, there was probably only a handful of people who could do it. But now itâs almost like if you canât do it, you canât play there.â
Johnson said that after Liverpool deservedly, if unexpectedly, won the Premier League last season, expectations will be to repeat the feat.
âAny team that wins the Premier League deserve it,â he said. âBut obviously to win it back-to-back is even tougher. But they look like theyâve done great in the transfer window.
âSo they look like theyâre going to be the ones to peg back again. But youâd also expect the other teams around them to improve. So itâll be tough.â
âHopefully they get off to a good start and find some early momentum,â he added.
âTheyâre favorites for nearly every game they play, youâd probably put them down as favorites. Youâd expect some of the other big guns to bounce back and close the gap and try and make it as difficult for Liverpool as possible.â
Johnson, who also represented West Ham, Chelsea, Portsmouth and Stoke, called Liverpool a âspecialâ club to play for.
âObviously the fans are one thing. The way the club looks after players, ex-players, itâs a family. Itâs a real united group. Theyâre used to winning,â Johnson added.
âSo thereâs a huge expectation that you go to these big clubs and you want to win every single week.â
âThere are some clubs further down the league where to lose the odd game here and there is OK, because theyâre expected to finish wherever their target is.
âBut with clubs like Liverpool, youâre expected to win most football matches and certainly more than youâd lose.â
âSo there is pressure, but thatâs why they sign good players, thatâs what good players want. You want the pressure and most of the time, thatâs the order.â
Johnson has maintained his ties with Liverpool since retiring in 2018 and was speaking to Arab News as an official representative of the club at the Adidas Flagship Store in Dubai Mall.
âItâs obviously an iconic brand, a global brand, and those big brands want to be associated with the hottest thing,â he said. âLiverpool being the club it is, it is the hottest thing.â