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Darwin Nunez took it upon himself to cool down the Egyptian, who could be seen raising his finger in the direction of the Liverpool boss as the pair continued to bicker.
Klopp attempted diffused the situation when speaking after the match, insisting he had spoken to Salah about it in the dressing room, only for the forward to claim "There is going to be fire if I speak."
READ MORE: Mohamed Salah chooses his words carefully - Liverpool’s new power structure has a major decision
READ MORE:Mohamed Salah anger doesn't reveal Liverpool truth as Jurgen Klopp plea misread
Salah's conduct, coupled with his poor form in recent weeks, has left many questioning whether the 31-year-old will still be a Liverpool player come the start of next season.
Our writers have had their say...
Paul Gorst
Two years ago, the decision to hand Mohamed Salah the biggest contract of all time at Liverpool was taken on the trust and belief in the player himself from the club's owners Fenway Sports Group.
Tom Cavilla
If this is to be Mohamed Salah's final season at the club, it is not shaping up to be the glorious farewell many would have predicted.
Salah has lost his way in front of goal in recent weeks, although he is not alone in that department, and did not appear to be at all pleased after being named on the bench for Liverpool's game at West Ham.
His actions on the sidelines were simply out of order and has only increased suspicions that all is not well at Liverpool right now, for whatever reason that may be.
The Reds turned down an offer worth £150m for his services last summer and this decision seemed shrewd in the opening months of the season as Salah continued his relentless form, scoring 15 times in the first 20 Premier League games.
If you ask Slot whether he wants Salah in his starting line-up, chances are he would say yes - and most other coaches, for that matter.
Watching Salah thrive in the Saudi league rather than for a direct rival would soften the blow considerably, as would a mammoth transfer fee and the opportunity for Slot to recruit quality additions to a squad which is in need of fine-tuning rather than reconstruction.
The truth is that Liverpool stand to benefit from whichever decision they take on Salah: keep him, and they retain a world-class talent who could guide the Reds through a potentially tricky start to life without Klopp; sell him, and Slot has a transfer war-chest to immediately realise his vision for a new Liverpool.
Kieran Horn
The thought of Jurgen Klopp not being Liverpool manager is one thing, but Anfield also without Mohamed Salah is unthinkable.
The German leaving after was undoubtedly bound to cause shockwaves throughout the club and one thing to factor in would have been player morale.
Every player at Liverpool has either come through the academy under Klopp or been signed by Klopp but it is now time for a new era, and that may be without Salah.
The funds acquired could go a long way for Slot and the new recruitment to me and with Salah not getting any younger, the time has come for a difficult decision to be made even though it is the right one.
Isaac Seelochan
The sight of Jurgen Klopp and Mohamed Salah arguing on Saturday was one of the most shocking images of the season.
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