Andy Hunter 

Liverpool set-piece coach Aaron Briggs leaves club after defensive struggles

Liverpool have parted company with their first team set-piece coach, Aaron Briggs, in response to the issues that have blighted Arne Slot’s side this season
  
  

Liverpool set-piece coach Aaron Briggs gestures on the touchline during a Premier League match at Anfield
Liverpool set-piece coach Aaron Briggs with Arne Slot at Anfield – Briggs had been a member of the backroom team since July 2024. Photograph: PA Images/Alamy

Liverpool have parted company with their first-team set-piece coach, Aaron Briggs, in response to the weaknesses that have blighted Arne Slot’s side this season.

Slot has made no secret of his ­dismay with Liverpool’s set-piece failings at both ends of the pitch, and admitted they were holding back the Premier League champions before Saturday’s 2-1 win over Wolves.

Wolves’ consolation was the 12th goal Liverpool have conceded from a set piece in the league this season – 46% of their total against – while the champions have scored from only three. Only bottom-placed Wolves have scored fewer set-piece goals in the league and no side has conceded more than Liverpool.

Briggs is considered a diligent, hard-working coach who played a prominent role in Liverpool’s title success last season and in Slot’s adaptation to English football. However, given the continuing nature of Liverpool’s set-piece problems and with more than half a season left to play, the club decided to intervene and a mutual agreement was reached.

A former analyst at Manchester City, Briggs initially joined Slot’s backroom team in July 2024 as first-team individual development coach. He became set-piece coach two months later after Liverpool had been unable to find a suitable candidate despite advertising for the role.

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Liverpool will replace Briggs in time and do not consider his departure as a cure-all for the team’s set-piece problems. His ­responsibilities will be taken up ­initially by existing coaching staff, including Slot and his assistants, Sipke Hulshoff and Giovanni van Bronckhorst, and there is recognition that it will take a collective effort to implement the improvements required.

Before the Wolves game, Slot said: “If you look at what has happened in the first half-year then I am not so surprised where we are. If you look at our set-piece balance, there is not one team in the world that is minus-eight in set pieces [now minus nine] and is still joint-fourth in the league [now fourth outright]. If you were to exclude the set pieces then the world would look completely different and we would probably be five or six points higher.”

 

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