Mohamed Salah concluded the 2024/25 campaign by collecting two of English football’s most significant honours. First named the Premier League Player of the Season, he subsequently became the PFA Players’ Player of the Year for the third time in his career — a landmark achievement that no other male player has reached. These dual recognitions reflect both institutional endorsement and peer acclaim for a season of sustained excellence.
The statistical case for Salah’s awards is compelling: he finished the league with 29 goals and 18 assists in 38 appearances, amounting to 47 direct goal contributions. That combined output led the division and underpinned Liverpool’s attacking potency across the campaign, with numerous goals and key involvements directly deciding matches that mattered in the title race.
Beyond raw numbers, Salah’s season was defined by consistent availability, tactical adaptability and decisive actions in high-pressure situations. His ability to combine finishing with chance creation — while integrating pressing and defensive work — offered manager and team a reliable offensive epicentre, which translated into points and, ultimately, silverware.

The double endorsement — the league’s official award and the PFA vote of fellow professionals — highlights a rare consensus about Salah’s impact: official metrics and peer judgement aligned in recognizing his central role. In legacy terms, the 2024/25 season places Salah among the modern greats of the Premier League era and cements his standing as a defining figure of Liverpool’s recent success.

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