It is perhaps a sad indictment of the world in 2024 but a quick scroll down the X timeline immediately after a big piece of news drops offers a steady barometer into the overall feeling of a fanbase.
When Jurgen Klopp's bombshell news took all by surprise, including players and Anfield staffers, in January, within minutes Liverpool fans were posting pictures of one man: Xabi Alonso. He was the Kop's chosen one.
It wasn't long before the bookmakers followed suit and instilled him as favourite for Klopp's job. But Liverpool were never confident they could tempt Alonso out of Bayer Leverkusen, which has now proven to be the Spaniard's desired place to work for the next year at least.
When this news became clear on Thursday night as noise picked up around Alonso's favoured plan of action, the general reaction from the fanbase was one of panic. The fans' favourite was out of the running and alarm bells were ringing.
Given Liverpool's internal knowledge, though, it would be wide of the mark to say those alarm bells are also ringing at Anfield. They have known for several weeks that Alonso would be likely to remain in Germany. It would also be wrong to say they have moved on to secondary options.
Xabi Alonso has turned down Liverpool to stay at Bayer Leverkusen for at least another year
The Reds' hunt for Jurgen Klopp's successor has not yet led to alarm bells ringing at Anfield
There is no hiding that this is a significant blow to Liverpool and Bayern Munich. Albeit based on just two years of evidence, Alonso looks like one of the standout coaches of this new generation and missing out on him is of course a setback.
But given the arrival of sporting director Richard Hughes and returning chief Michael Edwards, as CEO of Football at owners Fenway Sports Group, the club is in good hands and no Alonso will not detract from their mission to usher in another glory era in L4.
Ruben Amorim has now emerged as the leading candidate and it is understood the Reds like the Sporting boss, though hiring him will not be easy nor a quick process. No official offers have been made yet.
Brighton's Roberto De Zerbi is also rated and will have a chance to strengthen his case, should he want to manage Liverpool, on Sunday when his Seagulls side come to Anfield.
His history against Jurgen Klopp is played four, won two, drawn two. Few managers boast such a record.
Sporting Lisbon boss Ruben Amorim is the leading candidate but hiring him will not be easy
Brighton's Roberto De Zerbi is also rated and may have an audition for the job this weekend
Both of those candidates, plus others that will be considered, all have significant drawbacks and none will have the emotional pull of Alonso, a former midfielder idolised by Liverpool fans. But it is clear Liverpool want a young coach who, like Klopp, has a strong personality.
Data will play a key role in the hiring process and due diligence in this department has been underway since Klopp informed FSG chief Mike Gordon of his decision to step away in November.
Whoever comes in has significant shoes to fill and Liverpool need to look no further than their friends down the East Lancashire Road at Manchester United for how hard it is to replace one of the best managers in football history.
Many lessons can be learned from that and with that in mind, the Reds are not searching for a Klopp 2.0, but more someone who can assert his own authority on the job. The United comparison need not be taken any further, though.
Liverpool's squad is perfectly balanced and the new manager will find no shortage of elite talent mixed with young stars of tomorrow.
New sporting director Richard Hughes must find a new manager and tie down key players
Alonso's decision to stay at Leverkusen is a blow for Liverpool but not a knockout punch
It is full of leader-like figures - five of them captain their national teams - and the spine of the team is very stable.
There is constant noise around the contract situations of key men Trent Alexander-Arnold, Virgil van Dijk and Mohamed Salah, with all three seeing their deal expire at the end of next term, and that is a significant task for Hughes and Co but not one for immediate concern.
Whoever replaces Klopp, none will feel as natural of a fit as Alonso would have done, given his legendary status at the club and the fact he would likely have departed Leverkusen with a rare league title.
His decision to stay in Leverkusen is a blow, but not a knockout punch - the club is in stable hands regardless.