Mohamed Salah celebrates scoring for Egypt at the 2026 FIFA World Cup

10 Surprising Facts About Mohamed Salah Every Fan Should Know (2026)

Introduction

Mohamed Salah’s route to becoming the Premier League’s all-time top foreign goalscorer began at a provincial Egyptian club, was interrupted by a stadium riot that suspended his entire domestic league, and passed through a difficult, underused spell at Chelsea before Liverpool made him one of the most productive attacking players in the competition’s history. His 2026 World Cup with Egypt adds another chapter to a career that has quietly rewritten several Premier League records. Here are ten facts behind the numbers.

Table of Contents

  1. He joined his first club’s youth team at 14
  2. A stadium riot suspended the league that launched his career
  3. His unlikely route through Basel
  4. A difficult, underused spell at Chelsea
  5. Helping Egypt end a 28-year World Cup absence
  6. A record-breaking debut Liverpool season
  7. Becoming the Premier League’s all-time top foreign goalscorer
  8. The unprecedented 2024-25 individual treble
  9. Matching Thierry Henry’s Golden Boot record
  10. His announced Liverpool departure and 2026 World Cup context

1. He joined El Mokawloon’s youth team at just 14

Salah debuted in organised football at the age of 14 when he joined the youth team of Al Mokawloon, before joining the club’s senior team in the Egyptian Premier League in 2010.

2. A stadium riot suspended the league that first showcased his talent

Salah continued to become a regular face for El Mokawloon until the Egyptian Premier League was suspended following a stadium riot in February 2012 — the disruption that indirectly helped push his move toward European football.

3. His move to Europe came through Switzerland, not a major league directly

Following the suspension of the Egyptian Premier League, a friendly was organised with the Egyptian Under-23 side, which Basel’s scouts used to assess him. Salah was subsequently invited to train with the Swiss club and agreed to a four-year contract in April 2012.

4. He struggled for game time in a difficult first stint in England

Salah joined Chelsea in 2014 for a reported fee of around £11 million, but limited game time led to successive loans to Fiorentina and Roma, who later signed him permanently for €15 million — a spell now seen as the sole rough patch in an otherwise smooth rise.

5. He was instrumental in ending Egypt’s long World Cup absence

Salah was instrumental in securing Egypt’s qualification for the 2018 FIFA World Cup, a feat the national team hadn’t achieved since 1990 — ending a 28-year absence from the tournament.

6. His Liverpool debut season broke a club goalscoring record

On 17 March 2018, Salah scored four goals in a 5–0 win over Watford, in the process breaking a record of scoring 36 times in his debut season for Liverpool, and also became the leading goalscorer in Europe’s top five leagues that season, overtaking Barcelona’s Lionel Messi and Tottenham’s Harry Kane.

7. He is the Premier League’s all-time top foreign goalscorer

On 26 October 2024, with a goal in a 5–1 win over Toulouse, Salah became the highest-scoring Premier League player in European competitions in Liverpool’s history, overtaking Thierry Henry, cementing his status as the league’s all-time top foreign goalscorer.

8. He became the first player to win three major Premier League individual awards in one season

During the 2024–25 English Premier League season, Mohamed Salah became the first player in the league’s history to win the Golden Boot, Player of the Season, and Playmaker of the Season awards all in a single campaign. He was also just the third player in league history to top both the goalscoring and assist charts in the same season, joining Andy Cole and Harry Kane.

9. He has matched Thierry Henry’s record for most Golden Boots won

Salah’s 2024-25 Golden Boot was the fourth different season he finished as the Premier League’s top scorer, equalling Thierry Henry’s record for most Golden Boots won by a single player.

10. He announced his Liverpool exit shortly before the 2026 World Cup

In March 2026, Mohamed Salah announced he would be leaving Liverpool at the end of the 2025-26 season, despite having signed a contract extension in April 2025 that would potentially have kept him at the club until 2027 — a decision that added extra intrigue to his final Liverpool campaign and his subsequent World Cup performances for Egypt.


Key Statistics Table

CategoryFigure
Premier League Golden Boots4 (record tied with Thierry Henry)
Premier League goals for Liverpool200+
Egypt World Cup qualification gap ended28 years (2018)
2024-25 individual awards won3 (Golden Boot, Player of Season, Playmaker)
First Chelsea move fee~£11 million

Historical Context

Salah’s path — an unremarkable European entry point through Basel, a difficult Chelsea loan spell, and a delayed but explosive Liverpool breakthrough at 25 — stands apart from the more direct academy-to-superstardom trajectories of contemporaries like Mbappé or Yamal, making his eventual record-setting Premier League career an unusually late-blooming one by modern standards.

Expert Analysis

Analysts frequently cite Salah’s tactical repositioning under Jürgen Klopp — from a traditional winger into an inside-forward finishing role — as the single biggest factor behind his goal-scoring explosion at Liverpool, a shift that took full advantage of his left-footed cutting-in style from the right flank.

FAQs

How many Premier League Golden Boots has Mohamed Salah won? Four, tying Thierry Henry’s all-time record.

Did Mohamed Salah help Egypt qualify for a World Cup? Yes — he was central to Egypt’s qualification for the 2018 World Cup, ending a 28-year absence from the tournament.

Is 2026 Mohamed Salah’s final season at Liverpool? He announced in March 2026 that he would leave the club at the end of the 2025-26 season.

Conclusion

Mohamed Salah’s numbers at Liverpool are now among the most decorated in Premier League history, but his route there — through a suspended domestic league, an underwhelming Chelsea spell, and a delayed European breakthrough — is far less linear than the “Egyptian King” narrative usually suggests. His 2026 World Cup with Egypt arrives at a genuine career crossroads, with his Liverpool exit already confirmed before a ball was kicked in North America.

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