Federico Chiesa has told Liverpool he is prepared to walk away from Anfield this summer unless new manager Andoni Iraola can guarantee him a genuine role in the first team. The Italian winger wants answers – and he wants them fast.
Chiesa will hold direct talks with Iraola during Liverpool’s pre-season US training camp before making a final decision on his future. If those assurances do not come, his message is unambiguous: he will look elsewhere.
Chiesa Has Made His Position Clear – And He Is Not Bluffing
Speaking openly about his situation, Chiesa left nothing to interpretation: “I’ve played very little since the start of 2026. I repeat… I want to play. If I don’t find consistency in the Premier League, I’ll have to look elsewhere. I’m ready to fight for a place, anywhere.”
That is not the language of a player quietly agitating behind closed doors. That is a public ultimatum – and it carries real weight given what has gone before.
Liverpool signed Chiesa from Juventus for £12.5 million two years ago, a fee that looked like a steal for a Euro 2020 winner of his calibre. What followed was a 422-minute Premier League career across two seasons – just two starts, two goals, one assist. Arne Slot then blocked a potential return to Juventus in the January 2026 window, citing squad numbers. Chiesa accepted it. He stayed. He barely played. His patience is now exhausted.
This Is About More Than One Player’s Frustration
Liverpool finished fifth in the Premier League last season – failing to defend the title they won the year before – and the sacking of Arne Slot has thrown the club’s entire direction into question. Iraola arrives with a mandate to reshape the squad and, as our coverage confirms, his backroom team is already being assembled. But reshaping a squad takes time – and players like Chiesa are not willing to sit in limbo while the new manager finds his feet.
The complication is the contract. Chiesa signed a four-year deal to 2028 at Liverpool, reportedly worth around £150,000 per week. That gives Liverpool significant leverage. They are understood to have privately set a valuation in the €25–30 million range, with Roma, Napoli and Juventus all monitoring the situation. They will not be rushed into a discount sale.
But holding a player on that wage who is openly demanding out – with a summer rebuild already underway – is its own kind of problem. Liverpool cannot afford that kind of dressing room static right now.
What Iraola Can Realistically Offer – And Whether It Is Enough
Iraola’s arrival at least offers Chiesa a clean slate. Speaking about the 28-year-old upon being appointed, the new Liverpool boss recalled the moment Chiesa scored a late winner against his old side Bournemouth: “He scored and the place erupted. It was crazy, no? I want now to feel this from the other side.” That suggests Iraola sees something in Chiesa – but appreciation and a starting spot are very different things.
Iraola built Bournemouth on intensity, rotation, and players who buy into a system completely. Whether Chiesa fits that model – or whether Iraola would be prepared to guarantee him the consistent minutes he is demanding – points to a conversation that could go either way in the US.
If Iraola cannot offer a credible pathway into the team, Chiesa will not accept platitudes. He has been patient for two years already.
A departure would land Liverpool with a resale profit on a £12.5 million outlay, but it would also signal something uncomfortable about the environment Iraola is inheriting – a squad with unhappy players, uncertain futures, and questions about the emotional weight being carried inside that dressing room. That is not the start any new manager wants.
The US camp is where this gets resolved one way or another. Iraola needs to show Chiesa he has a plan for him – not just warm words about a goal that made the Kop roar. Chiesa has earned the right to demand more than a memory.
If Iraola cannot deliver that, Juventus and Napoli will be waiting. And Liverpool will have turned a bargain signing into a wasted two years.
