Andoni Iraola appointed new Liverpool head coach on two-year contract
Andoni Iraola has been appointed the new head coach of Liverpool on a two-year contract.
The 43-year-oldâs arrival was confirmed just six days after the sacking of Arne Slot.
Liverpool moved quickly to replace Slot with the former Bournemouth head coach after identifying him as the ideal candidate for their preferred playing style and with Milan, Bayer Leverkusen and Crystal Palace all vying for the Basqueâs services. Other coaches were considered, including Stuttgartâs Sebastian Hoeness and Pierre Sage of Lens, but Iraola was always Liverpoolâs favoured option and the only one spoken to about the vacancy.
Liverpoolâs approach for Iraola was led by their sporting director, Richard Hughes, who also appointed him at Bournemouth in 2023 after sacking Gary OâNeil. Hughes and Michael Edwards, chief executive of football for Liverpoolâs owners, Fenway Sports Group, had conducted the review into the teamâs poor title defence under Slot and concluded a change was necessary to implement a more aggressive, attacking style.
Formal talks with Iraola and his agent, IĂąaki IbĂĄĂąez, opened earlier this week and advanced smoothly. Negotiations were helped by Iraola making it clear from the outset that Liverpool were the only club he wanted to join following the expiry of his contract with Bournemouth. Hughes enjoys a close working relationship with Ibanez, who also represents Xabi Alonso. Liverpool did not make an approach for their former midfielder, who was appointed Chelsea manager on 17 May.
Iraola arrived on Merseyside on Thursday and has signed a contract that ties him to Liverpool until the end of the 2027/28 season. While short by Liverpoolâs previous standards, the length of the deal is in keeping with how Iraola liked to manage his career at Bournemouth and Rayo Vallecano. Iraola intends to bring his assistants at Bournemouth, Tommy Elphick and Shaun Cooper, analyst Tom Webber and fitness coach Pablo de la Torre with him to Anfield. Elphick and Cooper remain under contract with the south coast club and Liverpool have not finalised any additions to their new backroom team as yet.
Liverpool consider Iraola one of the best coaches available and perfectly suited to evolving the teamâs style after the disappointing end to Slotâs Anfield career. They were also attracted by his proven performance in the Premier League, where he improved Bournemouth year-on-year without having the resources of the majority of his competitors and made them an exciting, high-pressing team. His track-record of improving players individually and collectively also appealed, as did his personality and leadership skills.





