Thierry Henry on Mohamed Salah's 'mistake' at Liverpool: 'You protect your team at all costs at all times'
Salah hit out at the club and manager Arne Slot on Saturday, saying Liverpool has 'thrown me under the bus' amidst a poor run of form and a stretch of limited playing time

Ex-France international Thierry Henry has criticized Liverpool's Mohamed Salah for his comments after the Reds' 3-3 draw with Leeds United on Saturday, with Henry saying Salah took the "wrong" approach despite some understandable frustration over a lack of playing time.
Salah was an unused substitute on Saturday for the second time in three matches, a match that stretched his goal contribution drought to seven games. The Egypt international was critical of manager Arne Slot's approach after the match, as well as the club as a whole, during a season that has been far from perfect for both Liverpool and Salah himself.
"It seems like the club has thrown me under the bus. That is how I am feeling. I think it is very clear that someone wanted me to get all of the blame," Salah said on Saturday. "I said many times before that I had a good relationship with the manager, and all of a sudden, we don't have any relationship. I don't know why, but it seems to me, how I see it, that someone doesn't want me in the club … I don't accept this situation. I have done so much for this club."
Salah is still training with the team but was omitted from the Reds' traveling squad for Tuesday's UEFA Champions League match at Inter, a 1-0 win, and has received a lot of flak since his comments, including from Henry.
"Nobody's talking about what Mo Salah has achieved in the game," Henry said on the UEFA Champions League Today pre-match show. "We're talking about moments in time that I think he got wrong. You do not talk about your personal situation openly when your team is struggling. You do it in the dressing room. I've done it. I went to the dressing room and smashed everything in. I went to the office of the boss and complained about stuff."
Henry went on to compare Salah's circumstances to his own at Barcelona during the 2009-10 season, when he was left out of the team's squad at Villarreal.
"When I was at Barcelona, I went away with the team," Henry said. "They put me in the stands. Did you hear me talking about it? No … We won the treble the year before but I wasn't performing so if you're not performing, you put yourself in the situation where you leave the door open for someone to [get] in. I traveled, we arrived at the stadium, I'm in the stands. Am I going to make a fuss about it? Am I going to make it about myself? Am I going to talk to the press after? I have achieved stuff in the game but team first. If I had to say something – and by the way, I said it. I said it to [manager] Pep [Guardiola], what I thought about what was happening, but not publicly."
Henry believes Salah should not have gone public with his complaints at all, arguing that it endangers team dynamics.
Thierry Henry, @Carra23 and @MicahRichards dissect a tough week for Liverpool 👇 pic.twitter.com/GcCgT0gn1c
— CBS Sports Golazo ⚽️ (@CBSSportsGolazo) December 9, 2025
"You need to protect your team at all costs, all the time," Henry said. "I can understand you want to speak. I can understand the frustration. I don't [understand] the how and the when. That doesn't make sense to me. That was wrong and when people talk about relationships, the only relationship a coach wants to have with a player is for him to perform. If you're not performing, then your position is in danger. It's not [your] due to have a position, especially at a club like Liverpool … It has nothing to do, again, with what he has achieved. I repeat – I love Mo Salah. I love what he has done in the game. That's a different topic. There, that's not how you go about stuff."
'We've all been below the standards'
Following Liverpool's win in Milan, defender Andy Robertson addressed the situation between Salah and the club, admitting it stems from the team's collective dip in form after winning the Premier League title last season.
"Firstly, we probably want the season to have went better for the club and for him," Robertson said. "He puts a huge amount of pressure on himself to perform all the time and last season, he took it to a whole new level in terms of at times, he carried this whole team forward to go and achieve amazing things. I think we've all been below the standards of last season, Mo included, and he'll be the first to admit that and then obviously, he finds himself out of the team, which is a bit of a unique situation for him."
The Scotland international, though, said Salah was professional in training on Monday and wished his teammates well before their trip to Italy.
"It's obviously something he's not used to experiencing but he was positive yesterday in terms of wishing us all well, sending us on our way and I'm sure he would've liked to have been involved but the support for the lads was still there and as a teammate, that's all you can ask," Robertson said.
















