Tag: Cody Gakpo

  • Cody Gakpo’s World Cup redemption: from Liverpool flop to Dutch hero

    Cody Gakpo’s World Cup redemption arc is writing itself in real time. Two years after his move from PSV to Liverpool, the Dutch forward has reclaimed the form that made him a global name in Qatar and silenced critics who questioned his £37m transfer. His brace in the Netherlands’ 5-1 demolition of Sweden—his fifth goal in seven World Cup matches—was a reminder that the player who terrorised defences in Eindhoven remains when given the freedom he craves.

    From Anfield anxiety to international clarity

    Gakpo’s Liverpool struggles last season were well documented: he scored only nine goals in 52 games, a sharp decline from the 18 he managed in the Reds’ 2024-25 Premier League title triumph. The contrast with his international performances could not be starker. In Houston, he seized the moment with a clinical finish in the 54th minute, cutting inside before drilling a shot past Kristoffer Nordfeldt. It was a microcosm of his World Cup return—controlled, decisive, and ruthless.

    The freedom he referenced after the game is not just tactical but psychological. “It’s a little bit different,” he said. “How I play here, where the coach wants me to be, the freedom that I have at the club.” The phrasing trailed off, as if the explanation was too simple for the weight of the moment. But the numbers speak for themselves: he has 23 goals in 52 international appearances, a strike rate that dwarfs his club output in recent months. Liverpool’s version of Gakpo often saw him chasing lost causes; the Netherlands’ version sees him as the spearhead of a counter-attacking system built around his movement.

    Spurs circle as Gakpo’s club future hangs in the balance

    Gakpo’s World Cup revival has not gone unnoticed in the transfer market. Mirror Football’s live blog reports Tottenham are preparing a bid for the forward following his three-goal contribution in the Sweden win. The move would reunite him with Ange Postecoglou, the manager who signed him at PSV, and offer a clear route to first-team football—something that has been in short supply at Anfield under Arne Slot.

    The timing is no coincidence. With Liverpool’s own attacking options evolving—Florian Wirtz’s potential move to Chelsea adding another layer to the midfield puzzle—Gakpo’s role at the club may be about to change. Slot’s system demands pressing and positional discipline, traits Gakpo has shown in patches but not consistently. At international level, Ronald Koeman has given him licence to drift between channels, arriving late into the box or drifting into half-spaces to receive the ball. The result is a player who looks like the one Liverpool thought they were buying: a goalscorer, not a bystander.

    The Brobbey effect: how the Netherlands unlocked their frontline

    Gakpo’s revival was built on more than just his own renaissance. Brian Brobbey’s early double against Sweden exposed Sweden’s defence, with the Sunderland striker’s strength and acceleration dragging defenders out of position. “We knew his qualities all along,” Gakpo said. “His hold-up play and coming at the right time into the box is amazing.” The two combined for quick transitions, with Brobbey’s physicality creating space for Gakpo to exploit. It was a tactical blueprint that Liverpool have rarely replicated this season, where Gakpo has often been isolated up front.

    The contrast with Liverpool’s approach is striking. Slot’s system prioritises high pressing and positional rotations, but Gakpo’s best moments at Anfield came when he was allowed to roam. Against Sweden, he was given the freedom to drift, arriving in the box at the right moment to finish Brobbey’s knockdowns. The result was a performance that would have silenced the critics back in Merseyside—if only for a night.

    What next for Gakpo and Liverpool?

    The question now is whether Gakpo can sustain this form when the World Cup ends and the Premier League resumes. Liverpool’s attacking depth—including Mohamed Salah’s potential return and the emergence of youngsters like Ben Doak—means competition for places is fierce. But the World Cup has reminded everyone what Gakpo can do when given the right system and mentality.

    For Tottenham, the pursuit is a gamble worth taking. A bid in the region of £50-60m would reflect Gakpo’s peak value, and a reunion with Postecoglou could reignite his career. For Liverpool, the challenge is clearer: find a way to integrate Gakpo into a system that maximises his strengths, rather than forcing him into a role that stifles his creativity.

    The World Cup has given Gakpo a platform. The next step is to prove it wasn’t a one-off. If he can carry this form into the new year, Liverpool may yet regret letting him slip through their fingers—twice.

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