Liverpool's midfield—once the most dynamic unit in English football, pressing with purpose, driving play forward, and winning matches in the middle of the park—has looked slow, predictable, and far too easy to play through this season. The summer transfer window offers a chance to fix that, and three players stand out as the perfect fits for what Arne Slot's side needs.
First up is Lamine Camara, the 22-year-old Senegalese star who has become the heartbeat of Monaco's midfield. His consistency, maturity, physical resilience, and ability to maintain a high tempo are exactly what Liverpool's engine room has been missing during their tougher stretches this season. No player in Ligue 1 wins back possession more frequently than Camara, averaging 8.01 recoveries per 90 minutes. In the Champions League, he covers around 11.36 kilometers per game—numbers that scream a midfielder built for the demands of English football. Liverpool have tracked similar profiles before—Moises Caicedo and Aurelien Tchouameni come to mind—and missed out. They simply cannot afford to let that happen again.
Next is Adam Wharton, the England international who has developed into one of the Premier League's most composed and intelligent central midfielders. His positional discipline and passing quality would perfectly complement the more dynamic players around him at Anfield. What makes Wharton so compelling is his age and trajectory: at just 22, he already shows composure under pressure that takes most midfielders years to develop. He reads the game exceptionally well, rarely wastes possession, and has the tenacity to win the ball back in tight spaces—a combination that would slot seamlessly into Slot's system. Liverpool need a midfielder who can control tempo without sacrificing intensity, and Wharton does exactly that, week in and week out, for a Crystal Palace side that consistently punches above its weight.
Finally, there's Angelo Stiller, who has drawn comparisons to Toni Kroos for his exceptional ball distribution and tactical awareness. Liverpool have lacked a genuine deep-lying playmaker since Fabinho's departure, and Stiller could fill that void with his ability to dictate play from deep, pick out passes that unlock defenses, and keep the ball moving with purpose. His calmness on the ball and vision would give Liverpool's midfield a new dimension, allowing their more attacking players to thrive.
For a club that prides itself on being prepared, Liverpool cannot afford another summer of hesitation. These three midfielders represent not just talent, but the specific qualities needed to restore the engine room to its former glory—and keep the Reds competing at the highest level.
