It's almost been forgotten about at this stage butTrent Alexander-Arnold's decision to defect to Real Madrid came as a massive blow to Liverpool - as underlined by the incredibly cold nature of the statement confirming his departure. In the end, though, Liverpool handled the academy graduate's exit superbly: firstly, by charging a desperate Madrid £8.4 million ($11.2m) for a player with just one month left on his contract; and, secondly, by wrapping up a deal for Frimpong so quickly that the Dutchman's arrival was announced on the same day that Alexander-Arnold officially departed.
Less than three weeks later, Frimpongwas joined on Merseyside by his former Bayer Leverkusen team-mate Wirtz in a deal that virtually nobody saw coming as recently as May. The presumption was that the Germany international would end up at the Allianz Arena or the Etihad, but Liverpool blew both Bayern Munich and Manchester City out of the water to sign one of the best young players in world football for a club-record fee that signalled the scale of the Reds' ambition.
Sporting director Richard Hughes then returned to former club Bournemouth to conclude a deal for Kerkez, who looks like the perfect Andy Robertson replacement, before making another statement of intent by hijacking Newcastle's move for Ekitike.
By that stage, many people were wondering how Liverpool could afford all of the new players, particularly as Giorgi Mamardashvili had also belatedly arrived from Valencia. However, the English champions had zero Profit & Sustainability Rules (PSR) issues and were also once again doing a sensational job of selling academy products such as Caoimhin Kelleher, Jarell Quansah, Tyler Morton and Nat Phillips for pure profit. Even more importantly, both Bayern Munich and Al-Hilal paid well over-the-odds for Luiz Diaz and Darwin Nunez, respectively, and we're still expecting RB Leipzig to pay good money for Harvey Elliott, while Chiesa should also depart before deadline day.
So, even accounting for the fact that Slot's squad looks short in cover in defence and attack, Michael Edwards & Co. deserve immense credit for the masterful way in which they’ve managed this sensational summer window to this point - because they're clearly not done yet.
It still seems highly likely that a new defender will arrive before the close of the transfer window, with Liverpool being heavily linked with both Marc Guehi and Giovanni Leoni, while there's clearly still a chance that Liverpool could land dream signing Alexander Isak, who wants out of Newcastle.