Liverpool scouting plans sharpen as January focus narrows
Liverpool’s January transfer thinking is beginning to take shape, with fresh reporting from Anfield Watch pointing to a clear and deliberate scouting strategy rather than reactive market panic. The club have now completed a second visit to Midtjylland, a move that suggests structured planning behind the scenes as Richard Hughes and his recruitment team weigh up short and medium term options.
As the original article notes, Liverpool are “in the process of figuring out their January transfer plans. Or at least, finalising what they’ll do.” That distinction matters. This is not a club scrambling, but one refining priorities amid a difficult run of form that has exposed structural weaknesses in the squad.
Squad gaps driving recruitment urgency
Results have faltered and cohesion has dipped, prompting external noise. The article references the idea that “blowing it all up by sacking Arne Slot” would be the most drastic option, yet that was never a realistic consideration. Slot remains secure, having delivered the Premier League title in his debut season, and the focus remains on reinforcing rather than resetting.

Injuries and uncertainty are driving that need. Giovanni Leoni’s absence has left Liverpool light defensively, while Mohamed Salah’s future remains unresolved. As the piece states, “they’ve got no one to back him up properly”, a reality that sharpens the urgency around forward planning even if Salah ultimately stays.
Midtjylland visits reveal wider talent sweep
Liverpool’s interest in Midtjylland first surfaced during their emphatic 6-0 win over Nordsjælland, where Franculino Djú scored twice and fuelled speculation. His form has “generated a lot of hype across Europe”, but the second visit changed the narrative.
Franculino missed the 1-0 win over Genk through injury, prompting Bayern Munich to withdraw their presence. Liverpool did not. As reported, the Reds attended regardless, suggesting that the striker may not be ‘the one’. Instead, Campo report interest in Darío Osorio, Aral Şimşir and Mikel Gogorza, a trio fitting Liverpool’s long held profile of high ceiling, adaptable talent.
Strategy over spectacle in January market
Liverpool “are certainly devoting plenty of time to watching them”, a line that captures the essence of this approach. Two scouting missions to the same club underline intent rather than curiosity. January business, if it happens, will likely be precise rather than headline grabbing.
Our View – Anfield Index Analysis
From a Liverpool supporter’s perspective, this report feels quietly reassuring. There is no sense of panic buying, no desperation to appease short term frustration. Instead, the club appear committed to a process that has underpinned previous success.
Midtjylland is not a glamorous destination, but that is the point. Liverpool’s best signings have often arrived from markets where development matters more than reputation. The decision to attend the Genk game without Franculino involved suggests broader thinking, perhaps identifying profiles who can contribute across multiple roles or grow into future starters.
Supporters will naturally want immediate solutions, particularly with form stuttering and injuries mounting. Yet there is confidence in knowing Slot is backed with structure rather than slogans. January additions may be limited, but if they arrive, they are likely to be players already embedded in long term planning.
This feels like Liverpool acting like Liverpool again. Calm, observant, and convinced that smart decisions beat loud ones.



