THE ₷190M STANDOFF: WHY THE EGYPTIAN KING IS STILL WAITING
Liverpool's 99-Rated Salah Listed for Record Fee but No Takers as Market Liquidity Dries Up

Alreet, pet. There’s a right royal standoff happening at Anfield, and it’s got the whole transfer market holding its breath. Mohamed Salah Hamed, the only 99-rated player currently on the block, has been sitting with a massive ₷190,000,000 price tag for over a week now, and darlin’, not a single manager has dared to blink. It’s a King’s ransom, no doubt, but as the days tick by without a bid, we have to ask: has Liverpool’s boss, Serrao10, finally found the limit of the Soccerverse's pockets?
Now, don't get me wrong, we're talking about the best player in the game here. But at 33 years old, that ₷190M minimum bid is a massive ask, especially when you look at the current state of the market. My sources tell me that liquid SVC is harder to find than a sunny day in Newcastle right now. Even the richest whales like SoccerTitan only have about ₷13M in ready cash—nowhere near enough to trigger an auction for the Egyptian King without selling off half their squad first.
Serrao10 isn't just testing the waters; he’s trying to fund a revolution. As we’ve seen in recent reports, Liverpool is pivoting hard toward youth, looking to build a new dynasty from the ground up. Selling Salah would give them the ultimate war chest to snap up every high-potential kid in England Division 1, but they're currently stuck in 11th place with their star man averaging a 7.0 rating. He’s still performing, but he’s not carrying the team like he used to, and the market knows it.
When you compare the price to other elite listings, the gap is eye-watering. Berat Djimsiti (93 rated) is waiting for ₷128M, and even top prospects like Clément Akpa are listed at ₷165M. Salah is the gold standard, but in a world where the highest completed transfer this season was Luis Suárez Charris for ₷87M, that ₷190M figure feels more like a mirage than a move. It’s a bold gamble, pet, and until someone finds a way to liquefy their assets, the King might just be staying put in Liverpool.