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Sport
Kedar Bayley

‘After the highs of last season, the first time I saw the lads after the trophy days, we were on a plane to one of our mates' funerals’ Andy Robertson describes impact of Diogo Jota’s death on Liverpool

Ian Wright, Gordon Strachan and Andy Robertson sit in a cafe in the shadow of Anfield chatting around a table.

Andy Robertson played his final game for the club in Sunday’s 1-1 draw with Brentford, departing alongside icon Mohamed Salah.

The left-back joined the Reds in 2017, with Diogo Jota joining in 2020, and the pair spent the next five years lifting trophies together in England.

Liverpool, winners of the 2024/25 Premier League title, endured a torrid fifth-placed finish this season on just 60 points, and the impact of Jota’s passing on that ordeal has been described by the Scot in a recent chat on camera with two legends of the game.

Andy Robertson on the aftermath of Jota’s death

Andy Robertson admitted pre-season was tough due to the grief, and that early season form put the club in a false position (Image credit: Alex Livesey/Getty Images)

Robertson, who started 29 Premier League games en route to Liverpool’s latest title win, spoke with Ian Wright and Gordon Strachan for The Overlap’s series, My Best Coach.

Strachan, former Scotland manager, gave the 32-year-old his first international cap, and has since watched Robertson win almost every trophy available to him in the English top-flight.

Diogo Jota's last memory for Liverpool was winning the Premier League title. (Image credit: Getty Images)

The departing left-back told the pair: “I think what happened in the summer, nobody can prepare for what we had to go through.

“After the highs of the end of last season, the first time [I saw] the lads after the trophy days, we were on a plane to one of our mates' funerals,” he continued.

Robertson, acutely aware of Liverpool’s dramatic fall from grace under manager Arne Slot this season, clearly expressed that he didn’t want people to use Jota’s death as an excuse for that form, but affirmed how tough the ordeal was.

“We're only human beings at the end of the day. I think for the world of football it was tough enough, but for us, it's one of our best mates,” said the Scotland international.

“We had a disruptive pre-season… in terms of grief, the manager, the sports scientists, they couldn’t push us too hard, too early because of what we were going through,” he continued.

Andy Robertson will leave as a Liverpool legend. (Image credit: Getty Images)

Robertson acknowledged that, despite winning their first five games of the season, the Liverpool team were acutely aware that their performances were poor from the start.

“It was probably a bit of a false position [topping the Premier League table after five games]. We knew our performances had to lift,” said the 32-year-old.

“For whatever reason, we’ve just not been consistent this season… it’s been a disappointment, there’s no hiding away from that.

“There’s no buttering it up. We expected a lot more from this season… we’ll see what the future holds for Liverpool.

I hope next season they can rebuild… and be back competing. That’s where they have to be.”

This week’s My Best Coach podcast is available now on YouTube and all leading podcast platforms

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