Liverpool suffered a 2-1 defeat to bottom-of-the-table Wolves in the Premier League, leaving them in sixth place after Chelsea's subsequent win over Aston Villa. Captain Virgil van Dijk admitted that failing to qualify for next season's Champions League would significantly impact the club's summer transfer plans. Financial experts estimate the absence could cost Liverpool up to £120 million in revenue.
On Tuesday night, Liverpool fell to a surprising 2-1 loss at Molineux against Wolves, who secured just their third win of the season. The match remained goalless until the 78th minute when Rodrigo Gomes scored with Wolves' first shot on target, clipping the ball over Alisson Becker. Mohamed Salah equalized shortly after with his first Premier League goal since November 1, but Andre Trindade's 93rd-minute effort, which deflected off substitute Joe Gomez, sealed the victory for the hosts.
This result marked Liverpool's ninth defeat of the campaign and dropped them to sixth in the table on goal difference following Chelsea's 4-1 win at fourth-placed Aston Villa on Wednesday. Van Dijk described the performance as 'disappointing and poor,' noting lapses in defending during the final 10 minutes. He revealed that manager Arne Slot was 'angry' at halftime due to an insipid first half against a side that had lost 20 of 30 games this term.
Van Dijk emphasized the high stakes: 'One hundred per cent [it will have impact]. The stakes are very high. If you play for Liverpool, it's always been like that.' He added, 'Either we get it and we deserve it or we don't get it and we don't deserve it.' The captain stressed the need for consistency amid ongoing Champions League and FA Cup commitments.
Financially, missing Champions League qualification could cost Liverpool around £120 million, according to expert Kieran Maguire, including reduced UEFA payments, matchday receipts, broadcasting money, and commercial bonuses. For comparison, Liverpool earned €98.1 million (£85.3 million) for reaching the 2024-25 Champions League last 16, versus €26.8 million (£23.3 million) for the 2023-24 Europa League quarter-finals. Despite a record £703 million revenue and £8 million profit for the year to May 2025, and a £400 million summer spend on players like Florian Wirtz and Alexander Isak, Maguire noted Liverpool's prudent management positions them well to handle such a setback.