Florian Wirtz: Liverpool’s £100m Midfielder Explained
He is 22 years old, wears the number seven shirt at Anfield, and cost Liverpool a British record fee of around £100 million. Florian Wirtz is not a player who arrived quietly. But behind the headlines and the price tag is a story worth understanding properly: a young man from a suburb of Cologne who became the youngest scorer in Bundesliga history, survived a career-threatening knee injury at 18, helped Bayer Leverkusen produce one of the most remarkable seasons in German football history, and then turned down Bayern Munich and Manchester City to join Liverpool. This is who Florian Wirtz is, and why the best is very likely still to come.
From Pulheim to the Bundesliga: The Early Years
Florian Richard Wirtz was born on 3 May 2003 in Pulheim, a small town just outside Cologne in western Germany. He grew up less than 20 kilometres from Bayer Leverkusen’s stadium, though his early football education took place at 1. FC Koln, the city’s biggest club, where he spent almost a decade in the youth system and won a U17 Bundesliga title in 2019. In January 2020, Leverkusen made their move, and within months the football world began to take notice.
On 18 May 2020, just a fortnight after his 17th birthday, Wirtz made his senior Bundesliga debut against Werder Bremen, becoming Leverkusen’s youngest-ever first-team player at 17 years and 15 days. It did not take long for him to go one step further. On 6 June 2020, he scored against Bayern Munich, making him the youngest goalscorer in Bundesliga history at 17 years and 34 days. That record has since been broken by Youssoufa Moukoko, but the moment set the tone for what was to follow. Here was a teenager who did not just belong at senior level: he thrived on it.
The records kept coming. He became the first player under 18 to reach five Bundesliga goals. He became the first player under 19 to reach ten. At 18 years and 223 days, he made his 50th Bundesliga appearance, becoming the youngest player to reach that milestone in the competition’s history. By any measure, this was not a normal talent.
The Injury That Could Have Ended Everything
On 13 March 2022, in a Bundesliga match against Koln of all clubs, Wirtz tore his anterior cruciate ligament. He was 18 years old, playing the best football of his young life, and suddenly he was facing the most serious injury a footballer can suffer. For many players, an ACL tear at that age changes them: the pace slows, the confidence wavers, the explosiveness never quite returns. For Wirtz, almost the opposite happened.
He missed the rest of the 2021/22 season and spent ten months in rehabilitation, returning to competitive action in January 2023. Those who watched him closely in the months after his comeback noticed something different about him. He was more deliberate, more composed, more complete. The raw brilliance was still there, but it was now wrapped in maturity and decision-making that players twice his age would envy. Leverkusen coach Xabi Alonso, who arrived at the club in October 2022, recognised immediately what he had. The rebuild had produced something better than what existed before.
The Invincible Season: Leverkusen 2023/24
The 2023/24 Bundesliga season belongs in the history books regardless of who you support. Bayer Leverkusen went the entire domestic campaign unbeaten, winning the Bundesliga title for the first time in the club’s history and completing a domestic double by adding the DFB-Pokal. They also reached the final of the UEFA Europa League, where they were beaten by Atalanta. At the centre of almost everything was Wirtz.
Across 32 Bundesliga appearances that season, he scored 11 goals and provided 11 assists, reaching double figures for both metrics for the first time in his career. His 22 goal contributions across the league campaign placed him among the best creators in Europe. He scored the title-clinching hat-trick as a second-half substitute in a 5-0 win over Werder Bremen in April 2024, a moment that captured everything about him: the composure, the timing, the ability to produce the defining moment when it mattered most. Xabi Alonso put it simply: “Flo is a good player even at 70 percent.” That year’s Bundesliga Players’ Player of the Season award was never in doubt.
It is worth pausing on one specific number from that season. Wirtz made 875 intensive runs in just ten appearances during one stretch of the campaign, more than any other player in the Bundesliga. He also attempted more take-ons than any other player in the league in 2024/25, completing 56 percent of them successfully. These are not the numbers of a luxury player who drifts in and out of games. They are the numbers of someone who works as hard as he creates.
The Transfer: Why Liverpool Won the Race
By the summer of 2025, it was clear that Wirtz was leaving Leverkusen. The question was where. Bayern Munich wanted him. Manchester City wanted him. Both clubs are bigger in terms of recent trophies and global stature than Liverpool were at that moment. Wirtz chose Liverpool anyway, and the reason matters.
Arne Slot had a specific idea for how Wirtz would fit into his Liverpool side, and he communicated that directly and convincingly. Wirtz, by all accounts, was drawn to the clarity of the plan and the identity of the club. Liverpool paid a British record initial fee of £100 million, with performance-based add-ons potentially taking the total to £116.5 million, surpassing the £115 million Chelsea paid for Moises Caicedo as the most expensive transfer in British football history. He signed a contract until June 2030 and was handed the number seven shirt, a number with significant history at Anfield.
He made his debut in the FA Community Shield against Crystal Palace on 10 August 2025, contributing an assist in a 2-2 draw. His first Premier League appearance followed five days later in a 4-2 win over Bournemouth. The transition from the Bundesliga to English football is one of the most demanding in the game: higher pace, less space, more physical duels across a longer season. Wirtz, like all new arrivals, needed time to adjust.
His First Season at Liverpool: The Numbers Tell a Nuanced Story
Across the 2025/26 Premier League season so far, Wirtz has recorded 4 goals and 2 assists in 2,015 minutes of league football, with an average FotMob rating of 7.19. Those raw numbers look modest relative to his Leverkusen output, and some observers have used them to suggest he has struggled with the transition. The reality is more interesting than that.
Context matters enormously here. In his final season at Leverkusen, Wirtz had 13 assists in all competitions across a full campaign. At Liverpool, he is operating within a different system, around different players, against different defences, and in a league that gives attacking midfielders considerably less time on the ball than the Bundesliga. His positional awareness rating of 4th in the Premier League and his attacking threat ranking of 4th in the competition tell a different story to the basic goal tally: this is a player who is creating danger, making the right runs, and influencing games in ways that do not always show up in the final statistics. He ranked 11th in the entire Premier League for expected threat, measuring how much danger he generates from midfield positions.
His most recent form has also been pointing sharply upward. He provided an assist in Liverpool’s 4-0 win over Galatasaray in the Champions League round of 16 on 18 March, the tie that sent Liverpool into the quarter-finals. Days later, playing for Germany against Switzerland in a pre-tournament friendly, he scored twice and assisted twice in a 4-3 win, earning a 9.7 FotMob rating. When the stage gets bigger, Wirtz tends to rise to meet it.
What Kind of Player Is He, Exactly?
Wirtz is listed as an attacking midfielder but that description does not fully capture what he does. He can play centrally as a number ten, wide left as an inverted winger, or as a false nine. Xabi Alonso used him in all three roles at Leverkusen. His strengths according to WhoScored data are holding the ball, passing, through balls, dribbling and key passes, all rated as strong. His weaknesses are aerial duels and crossing, which is entirely consistent with his profile as a low-centre-of-gravity, technical player who wins games on the ground.
What separates him from other technically gifted midfielders is the combination of work rate and intelligence. He drifts into half-spaces constantly, arriving late into the penalty area to finish moves rather than simply playing the final pass. He covers enormous distances per game and makes intensive runs that most creative players would consider unnecessary. Freiburg coach Christian Streich, after watching Wirtz destroy his side in the 2023/24 season, said: “You can’t defend against Florian Wirtz.” That is not a throwaway comment from a defeated manager. It is an accurate description of a player whose movement makes him almost impossible to mark.
The PSG Tie and What It Means for His Liverpool Story
On 8 April, Wirtz will walk out at the Parc des Princes for Liverpool’s Champions League quarter-final first leg against PSG. It will be one of the biggest matches of his career so far: the reigning European champions, the most hostile atmosphere in French football, and a tie with a clear revenge subplot for Liverpool after last season’s penalty shootout exit. For Wirtz specifically, it is also a chance to make a definitive statement about his place in this Liverpool side.
PSG’s midfield, built around Vitinha and Warren Zaire-Emery, will attempt to cut the supply lines between Liverpool’s defence and their attacking players. How Wirtz operates between the lines, how quickly he releases the ball under pressure, and whether he can find the pockets of space that PSG’s high defensive line will inevitably leave, could define the tie. In his best form, he is exactly the type of player who makes a PSG defensive block look porous. Liverpool will need that version of him in Paris.
He turned 22 in May 2025. He has already been the youngest scorer in Bundesliga history, survived an ACL tear, won a Bundesliga title with an unbeaten side, been voted the league’s best player twice, broken the British transfer record, and reached a Champions League quarter-final in his first season in England. Whatever happens against PSG, the story of Florian Wirtz is nowhere near its best chapter yet.

