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Liverpool supporters became used to the heartbreak of seeing top players leave the club throughout the 2010s.
The Reds had built a fearsome team under Rafael Benitez heading into the end of the 2000s, almost winning the Premier League as the decade came to a close.
However, things took a turn before the new one even got underway, with Xabi Alonso leaving for Real Madrid in 2009.
As matters worsened on the pitch – and Benitez was sacked – Fernando Torres pushed his way out, before the second half of the decade saw the likes of Raheem Sterling, Luis Suarez and, finally, Philippe Coutinho leave.
One player who is sometimes overlooked from this parade of exiting stars is Liverpool‘s former central midfield general, Javier Mascherano.
Like Torres, Mascherano forced an exit from Anfield, refusing to play in order to hammer through a transfer to Barcelona in August 2010.
However, more than 11 years on from his departure, Mascherano spoke out to hail the Liverpool fans he’d left behind.
Photo credit should read GLYN KIRK/AFP via Getty Images
Liverpool’s team that came so close to glory in 2008/09 truly was a special one.
And Mascherano was a big part of that.
Although he went on to win it all at Barcelona while a part of Pep Guardiola’s super team, the Argentinian spoke to Four Four Two in March 2021 to explain that he had never felt love like that of the Liverpool fans.
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“Yes, I’m a Liverpool supporter.
I knew they weren’t happy, and I wanted to share the moment with them.”
READ MORE: Fernando Torres revealed what he really loved about Scousers one year before leaving Liverpool
Mascherano also lifted the lid on why he felt he had to leave Liverpool following Roy Hodgson’s appointment in 2010.
“Although I was playing regularly and the supporters loved me – and they’re extraordinary people – the issue was that I trained for three or four hours a day and had 20 hours left to stay at home.
“It’s difficult to see your family unhappy and unsettled because of the language, the weather… I needed to go somewhere else for the wellbeing of my loved ones.”
Perhaps it is partly because of the cloud which hung over his departure, maybe it was because he never won anything with Liverpool, but Mascherano is quite possibly underrated on Merseyside.
SeasonAppearancesGoals2006/071102007/084112008/093802009/104812010/1110Javier Mascherano at Liverpool
Those too young to have properly watched the man nicknamed ‘El Jefe,’ will maybe never know the true impact he had, simply because few seem to still mention his name.
In reality, though, Mascherano was a big part of why Liverpool were able to go up a level under Benitez in 2008/09.
Still yet to arrive into his peak years alongside Alonso – and with Steven Gerrard and Torres ahead of him – the Argentine was ferociously combative in a manner which would make even Fabinho blush.
Mascherano will, of course, forever be thought of more for his role at Barcelona than Liverpool, but it is clear that he also cherished the time he spent with the Reds.