Liverpool's biggest loser this season? Luis Diaz - Legit Sports
Of all the losers from Liverpool’s quite dreadful season, Luis Diaz has been perhaps the biggest.
When the Colombian went down with a knee injury at Arsenal in October, the Reds were still a team with a big reputation and lofty ambitions. Sure, they’d made a slow start to the campaign, but that was only a temporary blip, right?
Once they came through it they’d be back at the top of the Premier League, and back competing for trophies, right? Right?
Not quite. For as Diaz prepares to make his long-awaited, and significantly-delayed, comeback against Leeds United on Monday night, he returns to a team, a club, that is almost unrecognisable from the one he left behind in the autumn.
Out of the Champions League at the last-16 stage and out of both domestic cups by the end of January, Liverpool head into this weekend eighth in the Premier League, 29 points behind leaders Arsenal and 12 off even a top-four place. They are closer to the bottom of the table than they are the top, and have lost more league games this season than they did in the 2018-19, 2019-20 and 2021-22 campaigns combined.
Good luck then, Luis. Diaz is known as an upbeat, infectious personality - “water in the desert,” as assistant manager Pep Lijnders memorably called him - and he’ll need all the positive energy he can muster if he is to breathe some life, belatedly, into a team that has collapsed without him.
When they reflect on a season in which just about everything that could go wrong, did go wrong, Diaz’s injury, and his subsequent six-month absence, will certainly be viewed by Liverpool as a key moment.
He had been one of the few shining lights in a stuttering start, one of the few players who looked unaffected by the mammoth efforts of the previous campaign. Having hit the ground running following his arrival from Porto in January 2022, Diaz looked ready to go up another level in his first full season on Merseyside.
It was his goal, and a brilliant one at that, which rescued the Reds a point in their first home game of the season against Crystal Palace. Wilfried Zaha’s strike and Darwin Nunez’s red card had left Jurgen Klopp’s side staring down the barrel, but Diaz stepped up for his team, big time.
He got the ball rolling in the 9-0 win over Bournemouth a couple of weeks later too, eventually scoring twice, and then scored the consolation goal in the dreadful Champions League loss to Napoli.
And when Liverpool found themselves behind at home to Brighton in early October, it was Diaz’s half-time arrival which sparked them into life. They drew 3-3 in the end, but they could and should have won following the Colombian’s emergence.
Eight days later came Arsenal, and though Liverpool got off to a(nother) poor start, conceding inside the first minute, Diaz again led the comeback charge, his run and cross setting up Nunez for a well-worked equaliser.
Then came the injury, an awkward challenge with Thomas Partey which left Diaz writhing in agony as he clutched his left knee. On the sideline, Klopp grimaced, fearing the worst. Off went Diaz, and he hasn’t been seen on a pitch since.
The initial diagnosis on Diaz was reassuring, if still disappointing. Fears of an anterior cruciate ligament rupture were dismissed, with Liverpool insisting there was no need for surgery to repair the damaged lateral collateral ligament either.
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“I will come back stronger,” Diaz posted on Instagram on October 12. He would, Liverpool said, be absent until after the World Cup, missing 10 games but returning to training when Klopp’s side travelled to Dubai for a winter training camp in December.
And so he was. On December 6, both Diaz and the club shared pictures of him, smiling and sprinting, joining in with a session in the sunshine. “Very happy to be back,” he posted. His delight would prove short-lived.
Two days later, it emerged that he had suffered a setback, more discomfort in the left knee, and that would be flying back to the UK for further diagnosis.
“It’s a proper smash in the face,” Klopp admitted, while many in the medical world questioned the wisdom of Liverpool's initial treatment of the injury. Soon after, the decision was made for Diaz to undergo surgery to repair the lateral collateral ligament.
His partner, Gera Ponce, posted a picture of him in a hospital bed. “Patience and strength are essential,” read the caption. He would be out, Liverpool said, until at least the middle of March.
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