Dejan Kulusevski

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Every single negative response on this page comes from one prick.

Fuck off. If you're the only one that holds an opinion, it stands to reason you're wrong.
Calm down, doesn’t mean his wrong and if he is, so what? Be a boring forum if everyone had the same opinion!

He’s had a fantastic start (Kulu), personally I couldn’t be happier with his impact. Has everyone going for him…. For me, the most telling aspect is that Kane trusts him and gives him the ball. He doesn’t do that with many teammates
 
I'm sorry but it's not like that: Juventus had to sell him because they have other players in their role, they had to earn money, they needed a pure striker and above all they can't sell Rabiot and above all Ramsey. Especially the latter is the cross !!!!!!!!
it is just like that. he was owful at juventus because he played out of his proper role and fans have celebrated his departure. sorry for juventus fans that he is actually a very good player
 
Calm down, doesn’t mean his wrong and if he is, so what? Be a boring forum if everyone had the same opinion!

He’s had a fantastic start (Kulu), personally I couldn’t be happier with his impact. Has everyone going for him…. For me, the most telling aspect is that Kane trusts him and gives him the ball. He doesn’t do that with many teammates
It's childish trolling. There's too many of them on here spoiling it for the rest
 
it is just like that. he was owful at juventus because he played out of his proper role and fans have celebrated his departure. sorry for juventus fans that he is actually a very good player
He is an excellent player and he did good things at Juventus too, but he came at the wrong time. That fucking Ramsey is our problem, a shopping stopper and Rabiot to follow. But I am glad that Kulusevski with you is proving his worth. He can become a great player, he has the numbers.

P. S. Many Juventus fans, like all fans, have not celebrated very clearly ... the fan is like this: often he does not see the world at 360 degrees, he talks about his stomach ... personally I was not happy with his sale
 

Dejan Kulusevski talks Zlatan Ibrahimovic, Spurs chants and girlfriend's reality show​

Ibrahimovic is still scoring goals at 40 years old, and Kulusevski has thanked his idol for "opening doors" to a generation of immigrants growing up in Sweden

Tottenham’s on-loan Swede Dejan Kulusevski has hailed ‘humble’ Zlatan Ibrahimovic as his greatest inspiration and influence.
From childhood idol to teenage mentor and now international colleague, Ibrahimovic’s part in Kulusevski’s own rise cannot be underestimated. It is simply massive, as the Juventus midfielder, 21, signed by Spurs in January on an 18-month deal with the option to make it permanent, revealed ahead of Sunday's derby against West Ham.
Above all, Kulusevski, whose parents are North Macedonian, views the AC Milan legend, 40, as the ground-breaker for the next generation of immigrants growing up in Sweden. He watched on in awe as Ibrahimovic, son of a Serbian dad and Croat mum, became one of the most spectacular and charismatic figures on the football planet.
In doing so, the prolific ex-Manchester United man was blazing a trail for youngsters in the country, with similar backgrounds, to follow. Kulusevski, with 20 caps, declared: “For children like me, who come from a different country - and have blood from Macedonia, in my case - it’s amazing.

"Zlatan opened doors for us in Sweden that nobody can imagine. He really helped every young kid, kids (who were) outsiders because he showed everything is possible if you just want it. He dominated European football for many years, scored so many goals - and we really loved him.

“And, then, when I got older, he started mentioning my name and I was like a kid at Christmas. I was so happy and thankful. You don’t forget this because it’s a big thing just knowing that Zlatan likes me.

“And, now, I am his teammate in the national team and it’s different. You have to play, you have to perform, you have to help him and he has to help me. It’s lovely times!

“I listen to him a lot, taking his advice, because he knows what he’s talking about and he’s very humble and very funny. I also admire that he’s 40 and can keep scoring goals. It’s an honour to play with him.”

While the humble part might surprise a few, the rest should not - and next Thursday these unlikely pals, with 19 years between them, will link up for Sweden’s World Cup play-off against Czech Republic.

Before that, however, Kulusevski looks to maintain his impressive start - two goals in nine games - for Antonio Conte’s North Londoners. The home fans appear to approve: they already have an Abba-based song dedicated to him.

And the respect is mutual. The ex-Atalanta prodigy admitted: “I love it, of course. All my friends send it to me and think it’s really funny. I actually like the song - and like that the fans are enjoying me playing.”

If catching him on the pitch is not sufficient for his new army of N17 admirers, Kulusevski is also starring, with girlfriend Eldina Ahmic, in a new sports-themed online show featuring Swedish couples.
 
GF is a footballer, too.
Not exactly smiley.


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I’m pleased that he’s proven a lot of people wrong so far, including me. I hope he maintains this form. What I like most about him is his intelligent play, a bit like Bale and I think that is making up for the lack of pace, which is his biggest weakness.
 


Dejan Kulusevski: ‘When you are good in your mind, you play good football’​

David Hytner
Spurs will count on their versatile midfielder against West Ham before he bids to lead Sweden to the World Cup finals

https://www.theguardian.com/footbal...-in-your-mind-you-play-good-football#comments
Dejan Kulusevski is reflecting on his latest life adventure and there is certainly a richness to the back story. A ballsy and controversial move from his native Sweden to Italy before he was 16. Experience in Serie A with Atalanta, Parma and Juventus. An explosive start to his career at Tottenham, where he went in January. A billing as the great hope of the Sweden team, who he hopes to drive to the World Cup finals over the next week and a half.
It is hard to believe that Kulusevski is only 21 as he speaks with an easy confidence in English – one of the four languages in which he is fluent.

The others are Swedish, Italian and Macedonian; his family’s roots are in North Macedonia. Kulusevski can understand some German and he is starting to do likewise with Spanish. But there is something else for him now.


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Kulusevski can call himself a reality TV star. Maybe that is pushing it a bit. Kulusevski sees Playmakers – which is made by TV4 in Sweden – as “something very small … it’s not even on television, it’s on an app on the internet”. The show, which entered its fifth series on Thursday, follows women who are together with sporting personalities and lead glamorous lives. But if Kulusevski’s girlfriend, Eldina Ahmic, who has played football at a good level, is one of the principal subjects, it is not as if he is not in it, too.
“They follow her life more,” Kulusevski says, explaining that Eldina shoots the footage on her own phone. “There’s no cameras. We’d have never done it with cameras. I’m just there maybe acting a little bit funny, sometimes.” Kulusevski mentions a Carpool Karaoke-type scene. “It was me and my girl singing together in the car, like everybody does … we love music.” But it is when he is asked whether they were nervous about opening their private lives to the public that his character shines through.
“She was nervous, absolutely,” Kulusevski says. “Me less. Because I know for some years that everything I do comes out in a way or another. Yeah, you have to be very careful with what you show to people because they cannot wait to bring you down. But I am maturing a lot and the more the time goes, the more comfortable I feel in who I am. So here I am. I don’t care what will happen and what I say. I just love being myself.” Kulusevski came to feel stifled at Juventus. After Max Allegri replaced Andrea Pirlo as the manager last summer, he found that his playing time decreased.
“It was hard,” Kulusevski says. “You really have to be strong when things are not going the way you think they should be going and there are things you can’t control. It’s very frustrating when you love something and you cannot show it. I knew I needed a change.” Kulusevski looks reborn at Spurs and it is a mark of the impact he has made since his move on an initial 18-month loan from Juventus that the supporters already have a chant for him. “Gimme, gimme, gimme a ginger from Sweden,” they sing to the Abba classic. Kulusevski is heavily into his hip-hop so Abba? Really? “They’re quite good … I can’t say anything bad about them,” he says, laughing. “I love the chant. All my friends send it to me all the time and think it’s really funny.”


Kulusevski has been energised by the trust that the Spurs manager, Antonio Conte, has placed in him. He gave a powerhouse performance in his first start – the 3-2 Premier League win at Manchester City, in which he scored one and set up another – and he has kept his place for the six games that have followed. Conte has used him as the right-sided No 10 in his 3-4-2-1 system and he will count on him again in Sunday’s home derby with West Ham.
“It’s especially the coach and the staff who are helping me a lot, letting me make mistakes and be me, letting me play without pressure,” Kulusevski says. “When you are good in your mind, you usually play good football.
“About my best position, it’s hard to say because football is evolving and I am a guy who cannot stand still and I want to move in big, big spaces. The coach has helped me a lot because I really find my space right now. I like where I’m playing and every game I have had chances to score.”
Kulusevski’s football journey was fired when he left his first club, Brommapojkarna or BP – in the west of Stockholm – for Atalanta. Considered a prodigy, BP did not want him to go and their director, Ola Danhard, infamously said it was “almost kidnapping” by Atalanta. Kulusevski and his family did not see it that way. They wanted the move, no matter the challenges it would present.
“I went when I was 15-and-a-half, without parents … going to school in a language that I did not understand,” Kulusevski says. “I did a lot of hard things but it helped me a lot. I learned so many new things.” These days, Kulusevski can learn from one of his heroes – Zlatan Ibrahimovic, who came out of retirement for Sweden last March. The 40-year-old is in the squad for the World Cup play-offs; Sweden face the Czech Republic on Thursday and, if they win, they will play Poland on Tuesday week for a place at the finals.



Kulusevski talks reverentially about Ibrahimovic, who was born in Sweden to a Bosnian father and Croatian mother. Kulusevski was also born in Sweden, as was his father, Stefan, although his parents were from North Macedonia. Kulusevski’s mother, Katica, was born and raised in North Macedonia, moving to Sweden as an adult.
“Zlatan opened doors to us people in Sweden that nobody can imagine,” Kulusevski says. “He really helped every young kid … kids who were outsiders, showing them that everything is possible. When he started mentioning my name as a player, I was like a kid at Christmas.
“For me and my family, Macedonia is very important. Like my mum says, we will never forget where we come from. I go there every summer and I love it.
“I’ve always said that if I could play for Sweden and Macedonia I would. But I had to choose and I chose Sweden because I am from there. Now we have the West Ham game and, after that, I will be ready to bring my country to the World Cup. It’s where we belong.”
 
As I've said before. When he play with confidence he is outstanding. But sometimes he has a bad day, and when he has it becomes very apparent. Kulu's time in Juve was more of the latter.
 
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