Virgil van Dijk played 6,141 minutes in 2025/26—the most of his career—while Liverpool’s transfer window demands a solution to protect their captain.
The Dutch defender started all 38 Premier League games, played every minute except two rest days and one substitute appearance in cup ties, and averaged 89 minutes per outing across club and country. His 69 appearances (6,141 minutes) topped his previous career high, yet Liverpool’s defensive depth remains dangerously thin.
Why did Van Dijk play so much?
Liverpool’s centre-back options collapsed after Ibrahima Konaté’s £70m move to Real Madrid. Only Trent Alexander-Arnold and Virgil van Dijk remain as senior defenders, with Jeremy Jacquet (20, £60m) and Giovanni Leoni (19, recovering from ACL surgery) as unproven alternatives. Andoni Iraola’s system will demand even more from Van Dijk, raising injury risks.
What’s the risk for Liverpool?
At 34, Van Dijk’s workload is unsustainable. His World Cup exploits proved his quality, but two years until the next major tournament leave little room for error. Konaté’s exit removed a key partner, and Joel Matip’s departure last summer left a hole. Even Fabinho’s midfield pivot won’t solve the backline crisis.
Who could replace him?
Liverpool’s transfer list is long: a winger, striker, midfielder, right-back, *and* a centre-back. Maïga (Bournemouth) and Diaby (Chelsea) are rumored, but neither guarantees immediate impact. Jacquet’s potential is clear, but youth alone won’t cover 3,000+ minutes a season.
What happens next?
Van Dijk’s contract expires in 2027. Liverpool must act now—before his age and minutes catch up. The 2026/27 season starts with a question: Can they replicate his 2025/26 feat, or will fatigue force a reckoning?