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Jamie Carragher and Gary Neville agree Liverpool have a youngster who can step up and save Arne Slot £50m

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Last week, former Premier League manager Sam Allardyce suggested that, by keeping both Mo Salah and Virgil van Dijk, Liverpool might just have saved themselves from signing £200 million worth of replacements.

How on earth do you move on from arguably the finest goalscoring wideman in the game, and arguably the finest central defender?

Fortunately, those are questions Liverpool can kick down the road for another couple of years. Both Salah and Van Dijk have committed their futures to the Anfield outfit for the time being, as ex-West Ham, Newcastle United and Everton boss Allardyce argues that Arne Slot deserves all the credit for convincing two supremely-influential and very long-serving players that further success lies just around the corner.

Unfortunately, while Salah and Van Dijk are staying put, Trent Alexander-Arnold still looks destined for Real Madrid. The West Derby-born right-back will be a free-agent in a matter of months, with contract talks of his own yet to reach an amicable conclusion.

Though, while a winger as prolific as Salah and a defender as complete as Van Dijk may have proven to be irreplaceable even after a £200 million splurge, the likely departure of Alexander-Arnold does feel slightly less damaging.

Conor Bradley may lack Trent’s world-leading technical ability – at least for now – but the raw talent is clearly bubbling under the surface of the all-action Northern Ireland international.

Jamie Carragher looks on ahead of the Premier League match between Liverpool FC and Brighton & Hove Albion at Anfield
Photo by Chris Brunskill/Fantasista/Getty Images

Jamie Carragher urges Liverpool to promote Conor Bradley

Liverpool legend Sammy Lee wants Bradley to step into Alexander-Arnold’s shoes from next season onwards, even if last week’s narrow 1-0 win at Leicester City highlighted the gulf that still remains between The Reds’ future right-back and their current one.

As Bradley struggled up against the tricky Stephy Mavididi, Alexander-Arnold stepped off the bench to lash Liverpool three points closer to Premier League glory. Tearing off his shirt in gleeful delight.

Though, as Carragher is keen to point out, Alexander-Arnold endured his fair share of difficult afternoons back in the day. So did Carragher himself.

Position Team Played MP Won W Drawn D Lost L For GF Against GA Diff GD Points Pts
1 LiverpoolLiverpool33 24 7 2 75 31 44 79
2 ArsenalArsenal34 18 13 3 63 29 34 67
3 Man CityManchester City34 18 7 9 66 43 23 61
4 Nottm ForestNottingham Forest33 18 6 9 53 39 14 60

That is just part and parcel of a young player’s development, with one below-par Bradley performance nowhere near enough to shake the confidence in a 21-year-old with a half-century of Reds appearances under his belt already.

“I said [when watching Bradley up against Mavididi]; ‘I’ve been there and you [co-host Gary Neville] have been there’. One of those games where everyones thinking you should dominate this, Liverpool vs Leicester. You get done but its all part of the experience and learning,” Carragher says.

“Eventually, that lad will say; ‘I am either going to play or I will move on as well’. I think he’s done well enough where you would have to go; You know what? You still buy someone but it might not be a right-back for £40 – £50 million.

“We might go and buy someone for £25m or a fourth-choice centre-back who can play right-back.
Give [Bradley] 12 months.”

Conor Bradley grimaces as he bends down to touch the pitch during Liverpool's Premier League match against Leicester City.
Photo by Shaun Botterill/Getty Images

Gary Neville backs Bradley as Liverpool eye young right-backs

Lest we forget, while injuries have stalled his progress, it is only a few months ago that Conor Bradley outshone Kylian Mbappe in a Champions League victory over Real Madrid. He stared last season’s EFL Cup final, too, and showcased Alexander-Arnold-levels of game-changing creativity with two assists in a 4-1 thumping of Chelsea.

If you add the £50 million or so Liverpool could save on signing a more readymade Alexander-Arnold replacement, that takes a summer of hypothetical savings up to £250 million.

“I would go with [Bradley next season],” agrees Neville, who knows a thing or two about thriving as a right-back on the Premier League stage. “Definitely. 100 per cent.”

Gary Neville during his presenting duties for Sky Sports.
Photo by James Gill – Danehouse/Getty Images

Reports suggest that the runaway leaders are thinking along the same lines as 2005 Champions League winner Carragher. Liverpool are looking at Wesley Franca of Flamengo, for instance, alongside Braga flyer Roger Fernandes. Arne Slot was tipped to reunite with Feyenoord’s Givairo Read, too, before the teenager signed a new deal this month.

Three right-back targets. Three young right-backs who would not break the bank, and could compete with Bradley rather than shutting him out of the starting XI.