'He looks completely off': Ex-Red Jose Enrique doubts Mohamed Salah's performances and urges Liverpool to buy someone capable of challenging the Egyptian following their Champions League hammering
- Luis Enrique has questioned the ongoing form of Liverpool's Mohamed Salah
- Ex-Red Enrique believes Salah has struggled since signing a lucrative new deal
- And has called on his former club to buy a new star to challenge the Egyptian
Former Liverpool player Jose Enrique has questioned the form of some of the club's current superstars after their Champions League hammering against Real Madrid on Tuesday.
Liverpool look on the edge of a European Cup exit after their 2-5 Anfield anihilation against the current tournament holders after surrendering an early lead against Carlo Ancelotti's men.
Mohamed Salah doubled Jurgen Klopp's sides' lead after strike partner Darwin Nunez first opened the scoring before Madrid produced a stunning comeback.
Speaking to talkSPORT, an unimpressed Enrique said: 'I don't think it's one problem, first of all I think some of the players want everything, my honest opinion – the biggest one – is that they didn't really buy the players that they needed.
'You cannot let Sadio Mane [go], then buy Darwin [Nunez] and [Cody] Gakpo – players that still need to be made in the Premier League, they've been OK, but they are not Mane.

Mohamed Salah's form was questioned after Liverpool's Champions League defeat on Tuesday

The Reds became unhinged at Anfield as they surrendered an early two-goal lead

Real Madrid players celebrate after scoring another goal in their 2-5 rout of Jurgen Klopp's side
'Salah as well, he looks off completely, [Virgil] van Dijk looks off completely, Trent [Alexander-Arnold] has been really bad this season as well.
'I'm not just pointing out these players because it's been the whole team, but the truth is there's many world class players in this team that have been performing that actually, if he [Klopp] had options, he would bench them,' he added.
Criticism of Liverpool's underperformers comes after a season of struggles that see's them virtually out of the running for the Premier League title and already eliminated from the FA Cup and Carabao Cup.
However, improvements in recent top-flight encounters was meant to have seen them turn the corner before Tuesday's European defeat.
Salah is Liverpool's top scorer with 19 goals in all competitions and has been one of their star players in recent seasons of outstanding success.

Salah scored the second of Liverpool's goals before Madrid kick-started their comeback

The Egyptian is the club's top scorer amid a season of struggles for Jurgen Klopp's side

Ex-Red Luis Enrique believes Liverpool should purchase a new player to challenge Salah
The Egyptians exploits earned him a lucrative new contract worth nearly £400k-per-week, but Enrique wants more from the 30-year-old.
'Yesterday, Salah was really good, but I don't know what's been going on with him since he lost the final at the AFCON,' said Enrique.
'He looks like another player completely, you just renewed his contract, you gave him one of the biggest salaries in the Premier League, and he's another player.
'I actually believe that they should buy someone to actually really compete to take his place right now,' he added.

Most watched Sport videos
- Moment golf pro Max Homa hits man standing on the fairway
- Aston Villa & PSG fans brawl on streets of Paris before UCL clash
- Moment hockey player sends referee flying into sideboards
- Rory McIlroy's daughter upstages her dad with astonishing putt
- Will goes through emotional rollercoaster at Aston Villa game
- Matic blasts Onana as 'one of the worst keepers in Man Utd history'
- Horrifying moment NBA star suffers head injury on the court
- Masters star's wife stuns crowd with her shot at Par-3 competition
- Spencer Leniu's on-field altercation with Johnathan Thurston
- Man United fans claim to have been tear-gassed while kept in stadium
- Amorim insists he's still confident in Onana after two howlers vs Lyon
- Johnny Spieth's kid golfs at Par-3 competition before Masters