Liverpool’s summer is no longer just about the next signing. The shape of Andoni Iraola’s staff may prove just as important as the next incoming player, because the new head coach is walking into a pre-season squeezed by World Cup absences, short integration windows and a squad that needs tactical clarity quickly.
That is why the latest coaching development matters. Reports say Tommy Elphick and Shaun Cooper have agreed deals to leave Bournemouth and are set to join Iraola at Liverpool as assistant coaches. For supporters tracking the transfer market, it is not the loudest story of the window. For Iraola, it could be one of the most practical.
Liverpool have already confirmed Iraola as their new head coach, noting his three Premier League seasons at Bournemouth and the sixth-place finish that took the Cherries into Europe for the first time. The next stage is turning that body of work into a functioning Liverpool model before the serious football starts.
We can confirm Andoni Iraola has agreed a deal to become the club’s new head coach ahead of the 2026-27 season.
— Liverpool FC (@LFC) June 4, 2026
Trusted Voices Before A Broken-Up Pre-Season
The timing is the key. Iraola is not getting a clean, six-week laboratory with every senior player on the grass. World Cup football has scattered the squad, new arrivals will land in different physical conditions, and Liverpool’s first tactical messages have to cut through quickly.
That makes familiar staff more than a comfort blanket. Elphick and Cooper know the training language, the pressing triggers, the rest-defence demands and the standards Iraola expects when sessions move at speed. They can translate details before the players have fully absorbed the manager’s patterns.
That matters because Liverpool’s early Iraola period is already being framed around rapid integration. We previously looked at how Iraola’s all-new-signings message set up Liverpool’s pre-season theme; adding trusted coaches gives that theme a practical spine.
Why Cooper And Elphick Matter On Restarts
The most obvious area is set pieces. Training Ground Guru detailed Cooper’s influence on Bournemouth’s attacking routines after Ryan Christie praised the work behind a clever corner against Arsenal in 2024. Elphick has also been part of the defensive coaching structure around Iraola’s Bournemouth staff.
Liverpool cannot treat that as a marginal department. This Is Anfield cited Opta data showing Liverpool conceded 20 set-piece goals last season, the worst total in the Premier League. Bournemouth were also vulnerable, conceding 18, so there is no case for pretending the incoming staff own a perfect record.
The difference is context. Liverpool have Virgil van Dijk, Ibrahima Konate, Alexis Mac Allister and a deeper group of aerially assertive players than Iraola had on the south coast. If Cooper brings sharper attacking choreography and Elphick helps build cleaner defensive spacing, the personnel upgrade could make the work more visible at Anfield than it was at Bournemouth.
Staff Continuity Is A Tactical Shortcut
This is not a glamour move. It is an implementation move. Liverpool are backing Iraola not only as an idea, but as a working ecosystem, and that distinction is important after a season in which the squad often looked caught between phases.
Elphick’s value is likely to be felt in communication and defensive detail. Cooper’s value should be seen in rehearsed restarts and the small automatisms that turn pressure into territory. Neither appointment guarantees a clean tactical transition, but both reduce the amount Iraola has to explain from scratch.
For Liverpool, that is the real edge. The club have hired a head coach whose Bournemouth side grew through repetition, aggression and clarity. Bringing two of the people who helped carry that message every day gives the rebuild a sharper starting point before the first serious ball is kicked. That matters immediately.





