Mohamed Salah's mood on Liverpool return after World Cup exit changes focus
The scenes at the end of Egypt’s World Cup qualifier in Dakar were as horrifying as they were disturbing.
Mohamed Salah, bewildered, shocked, and disorientated, stumbled towards the tunnel amid a bombardment of missiles from the stands as security guards desperately protected his eyes and head from serious injury.
Yet you sensed it wasn’t the coin which hit him on the head that caused such devastation in his stunned expression, but the implications of what had unfolded in the shootout against Senegal. His nation were out of the World Cup, his chance to grace the ultimate football stage at the absolute height of his career now gone forever. Salah knows all about the depth of that disappointment.
He went to the last World Cup finals with a serious shoulder injury and was way below his best as Egypt stumbled out in the group stage. Now he will watch from home, and he knows only too well what that means. Salah makes no secret of his desire to win the Ballon d’Or, his seventh place finish last year behind the undeserving Lionel Messi not just a personal insult, but almost an expression of football’s inherent racism against the African continent.
And he knows without a World Cup to base next year’s challenge on, he will have to do something remarkable to break the glass ceiling which has stopped any African player in history from reaching the number one spot. As 100-cap Egypt national team legend Hosny Abd Rabo said in the light of the Senegal defeat, "Mohamed Salah has done what no other Egyptian, no other African could achieve, and he deserves to be the best in the world.”
Gallery: The most hated teams in British football (FourFourTwo)
Luckily, he is currently part of something remarkable indeed. Liverpool are still


