The echoes from Sunday’s 3-0 dismantling at the hands of Manchester City still ring through Anfield. Jérémy Doku struck fear into the heart of Liverpool’s defence—not just with his speed and dribbling, but with a sense of vindication. He was once courted by Liverpool, but made choices of his own. Now the truth of those choices is clear, and it cuts deep.
Doku’s performance was nothing short of sensational. The young Belgian winger scythed through defenders like they were standing still, his feet a blur, his changes of pace ruthless.
The likes of Conor Bradley and Ibrahima Konaté—both expected to be pillars of Liverpool’s future—looked brittle, overwhelmed, exposed. When Doku’s curling shot found the net, the moment felt poetic. A player Liverpool once flirted with was now their tormentor.
But what makes this even sharper for Liverpool fans is the knowledge that this wasn’t just a missed scouting chance. Back in 2018, Liverpool looked at Doku as a future star. Reports say he visited Melwood, the club rolled out the red carpet, even sent former star Sadio Mané to personally persuade him. But Doku said “not yet.” He felt the timing was off.
In 2020, under Jürgen Klopp, Liverpool tried again. Mané, Roberto Firmino and Mohamed Salah were ageing; the shift demanded youth and pace. Doku was targeted. But again, he turned the offer down. He joined Stade Rennes instead—choosing growth, development, space over immediate glory.
Now at City, Doku is delivering the final piece of the story. He evolved from a raw talent into a high-precision attacker, the kind Liverpool so desperately need but let slip. Under Pep Guardiola, his dribbling, his decision-making, and his fearlessness have matured. In the 3-0 win, it looked like the culmination of a path Liverpool started and abandoned.
Liverpool’s search for that lightning-fast, direct winger has dragged on. They spent seasons trying to replace Mané, to reignite their attack, to storm back. Meanwhile, Doku—once meant to be part of that answer—has become a key weapon for their rival.
It’s almost ironic. A player who was once at Anfield, who visited, who was tempted—now wears sky-blue and terrorises Reds defenders. The sense of “what might have been” is real, tangible, and woven through every dribble, every burst of acceleration, every Liverpool mistake that Doku punished.
Liverpool’s issues at the back go deeper than one match. But if there’s a symbol of where things turned, where decisions went wrong, where a window closed—Jérémy Doku is it. For many, he embodies the gulf between ambition and execution, between vision and patience.
And for the Reds, the burning question remains: if they had been braver, had jumped earlier, would this day have come differently? Would Doku have been wearing red, causing nightmares for the other teams instead of them?
On Sunday, Jeremy Doku didn’t just beat Liverpool. He made them relive one of their biggest transfer regrets—in full, devastating colour.
