Saudi Pro League: Transfer deadline closes with Mohamed Salah staying at Liverpool

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Media caption,

Liverpool boss Jurgen Klopp says Saudi Pro League is more of a threat than not

The Saudi Pro League transfer deadline shut at 22:00 BST to end a record-breaking summer of spending - but Al-Ittihad were unable to prise Mohamed Salah away from Liverpool.

Nuno Espirito Santo's side had a £150m bid rejected by the Reds for the 31-year-old Egypt international and reports of a world-record £215m bid were never confirmed.

Several Premier League managers have criticised the fact the Saudi deadline closed almost a week after Europe's major leagues.

How much have Saudi clubs spent?

It was an unprecedented summer of spending by a non-European league, with Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund ploughing huge resources into four of their clubs - with other sides also spending big.

In total, Saudi clubs spent about £700m this summer, putting it below only the Premier League, France's Ligue 1 and Spain's La Liga - according to Deloitte data.

Notable Premier League departures to Saudi Arabia

Al-Ahli: Allan Saint-Maximin (Newcastle), Riyad Mahrez (Manchester City), Edouard Mendy (Chelsea), Roberto Firmino (Liverpool)

Al-Ettifaq: Jordan Henderson (Liverpool), Demarai Gray (Everton)

Al-Hilal: Ruben Neves (Wolves), Kalidou Koulibaly (Chelsea), Aleksandar Mitrovic (Fulham)

Al-Ittihad: N'Golo Kante (Chelsea), Fabinho (Liverpool)

Al-Nassr: Aymeric Laporte (Manchester City), Alex Telles (Manchester United)

As well as multiple Premier League stars going to Saudi Arabia for roughly a combined £250m, some of world football's major names will also play in the Gulf.

Paris St-Germain forward Neymar joined Al-Hilal for £77.6m, while Saudi clubs also lured his PSG team-mate Georginio Wijnaldum, Ballon d'Or winner Karim Benzema from Real Madrid, Bayern Munich's Sadio Mane, Inter Milan captain Marcelo Brozovic, Barcelona's Franck Kessie, Celtic's Jota and Lazio midfielder Sergej Milinkovic-Savic.

There could have been a new world-record transfer too. PSG gave Al-Hilal permission to talk to Kylian Mbappe after making a £259m bid, but the forward opted to stay with the French champions and Neymar was sold instead.

Salah staying boosts Liverpool

Media caption,

Football Focus discuss Mo Salah's future at Liverpool

Liverpool fans had been waiting nervously for the Saudi deadline to close.

There was the fear Al-Ittihad could come back with a bid the Reds could not refuse for Salah - when they would not have been able to buy a replacement for four months.

Salah has scored 188 goals in 309 games for Liverpool since joining from Roma in 2017.

"The key for Liverpool is Salah," said former Blackburn striker Chris Sutton on BBC Radio 5 Live.

"With him, I really believe they can make a challenge to Manchester City. If he went, they wouldn't challenge - he is that important to Liverpool."

Reds legend Jamie Carragher added on TalkSPORT: "It feels like a brilliant start [to the season] for Liverpool, everyone has got their energy and buzz back.

"It feels like the start of a new team, Klopp 2, Liverpool fans are calling it."

While Al-Ittihad may yet make a renewed offer in January or next summer, Salah's Liverpool contract runs for almost two more years, until the end of 2024-25.

"Before you know it, his contract will be up and he will be able to go on a free," continued Carragher. "The feeling among most Liverpool fans is we have him for one more season.

"For all parties it feels like next summer Liverpool would still get a substantial fee and would still have him this season and a good chance of success. Liverpool would then have 12 months to consider how they replace him.

"It would be very difficult to get another Mo Salah right away, but great players come and great players go."

Image source, BBC Sport
Image source, BBC Sport

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