Peter Staunton

Peter Staunton

Specialisations: Liverpool FC transfers, contracts and squad‑building strategy, with a focus on long‑term planning under changing managers. Liverpool’s tactical evolution in the Premier League and Champions League, particularly in high‑stakes matches. In‑depth features and interviews with key football figures, drawing on two decades in top‑level digital football media. Transfer‑market reporting and commentary across European football, including fee structures, clauses and contract trends. Editorial leadership for multi‑platform football coverage, from real‑time news desks to long‑form projects and podcasts. About the Author: Peter Staunton is an editor and author at Anfield Watch, where he contributes news, transfer coverage and analysis focused on Liverpool FC. He is an experienced football journalist and editor with close to two decades in digital, broadcast and print media, having worked for Goal, Footballco, Reach PLC, Planet Sport and other major publishers. At Goal and later Footballco, he progressed from international football writer to Chief Editor, Chief Correspondent and Head of News and Features, overseeing correspondents at Europe’s biggest clubs, including Liverpool. In those roles he managed coverage around major events and storylines, helping to shape how fans around the world followed the game. Expertise Description: Staunton’s core expertise is Liverpool FC as a modern super‑club: how the team is built, reshaped and managed through successive eras from Jürgen Klopp to Arne Slot. He specialises in joining up Liverpool’s transfer activity, contract decisions and tactical evolution, explaining how specific player profiles fit defined roles and what each move signals about the club’s medium‑ and long‑term planning. He is known for turning complex transfer situations into clear, high‑impact stories for supporters. His work often focuses on themes such as succession planning for key players, the balance between academy pathways and big‑fee signings, and how Liverpool compete with rivals in the transfer market. Drawing on years of covering Liverpool in European and domestic competition, he adds historical and strategic context to daily stories so that Anfield Watch’s coverage highlights the direction of the project rather than isolated headlines. Experience in the Field: Staunton has followed Liverpool closely throughout his career, both as a journalist and as a senior editor overseeing coverage of the club at Goal/Footballco and now as an editor and author at Anfield Watch. During his time at Goal he served as the on‑the‑ground reporter for the 2019 Champions League final in Madrid and covered Liverpool’s 2019/20 Premier League title campaign from close quarters. At Anfield Watch, his day‑to‑day work is led by the transfer desk, focusing on squad planning, contract situations and market movements. He has discussed Liverpool’s transfer strategy and squad building on FootballTransfers’ The Transfers Podcast and appeared on Anfield Watch’s YouTube channel, adding regular audio‑visual strands to his written work. In his current role at Anfield Watch he effectively operates as a Liverpool beat writer, tracking decision‑makers, player futures and tactical shifts and turning that ongoing monitoring into focused coverage for LFC supporters. Editorial Approach: Staunton’s editorial method is grounded in newsroom discipline developed across major digital outlets. For news and transfer stories he prioritises official club communication, established beat reporters and primary reporting from trusted networks, cross‑checking details such as fees, clauses and timelines before framing them for readers. His background in managing correspondents means he is used to weighing information from multiple territories, distinguishing between firm lines, strong indications and speculation, and making that distinction clear in how stories are presented. At Anfield Watch, this translates into Liverpool coverage that combines clear sourcing with context: transfer and squad stories are linked back to previous decisions, coaching changes and long‑term planning, while rumour‑based pieces are treated with appropriate caution and labelled accordingly. His aim is to give readers transparent, contextual coverage that explains not just what is happening around Liverpool, but why it matters to the club’s wider project.

Act fast Richard Hughes! Liverpool have golden chance to sign £50m Van Dijk successor

Liverpool can unlock £277k per week Ryan Gravenberch with one clever midfielder deal

Liverpool pushing hard to sign Arne Slot's top summer transfer target

Richard Hughes U-turn: Liverpool leader will be handed another new contract deal

Headlines continue under the video

Dominik Szoboszlai will be granted his contract wishes

Liverpool lead chase for complete £70m midfielder

Liverpool have already signed their Andy Robertson replacement

Liverpool have a confirmed dream forward in mind to replace Mo Salah

The scale of Arne Slot's rebuilding challenge laid bare by PSG defeat

Liverpool v Paris Saint-Germain team news: Has Mo Salah played his last Champions League game for the Reds?

Scouser in our team: Liverpool agree new contract with homegrown star

Liverpool in £35m fight with Bayern Munich for breakout star forward

Good news as midfielder returns after long-term injury

Liverpool suffer cruel injury blow ahead of vital PSG Champions League showdown

Talks open for Virgil van Dijk to join European giants

Jurgen Klopp bombshell as Real Madrid agreement reached

Richard Hughes prepares move for Germany international midfielder

Liverpool prepare bid to fight Arsenal for 19-year-old breakout forward

Richard Hughes can't miss deal for ideal Arne Slot successor who he knows very well

FSG back away from Xabi Alonso appointment

Andy Robertson transfer warning to Richard Hughes after Liverpool exit confirmed

£60m Brazil midfielder wants Liverpool move

Liverpool eye £39m deal to end right-back crisis

Richard Hughes has finally found his £70m Van Dijk replacement

22-year-old Liverpool midfielder lined up for Rangers move