Erling Braut Haaland - The future of football

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In Catalonia, they have high hopes that he ends up there, i.e. at Barca. Sport.es have even photoshopped 2 front site photos of him in the Barca shirt


 
In Catalonia, they have high hopes that he ends up there, i.e. at Barca. Sport.es have even photoshopped 2 front site photos of him in the Barca shirt


Ain't Barca bankrupt?
 
They recently got a €500m loan from Goldman Sachs. I have no idea how that works out regarding the FFP rules...
Wage cap is likely to be less next year, they just gave umtiti a 4 year extension (hasn't played this year nor likely to play again) to fudge a way to sign Torres.

500m loan doesn't change this - they need to save €4 off the bill for every €1 they give Haarland.
 
Wage cap is likely to be less next year, they just gave umtiti a 4 year extension (hasn't played this year nor likely to play again) to fudge a way to sign Torres.

500m loan doesn't change this - they need to save €4 off the bill for every €1 they give Haarland.
The reason they extended the contract of Umtiti was that he was unwilling to leave (there were many offers for him) so they could either cancel his contract or extend it if he lowered his salary (which he did) and they hope to be able to sell him later. Umtiti is also part of the mess, and he is very unpopular among the Barca fans - and it hasn't helped that he's always out injured
It's a mess...
 
The reason they extended the contract of Umtiti was that he was unwilling to leave (there were many offers for him) so they could either cancel his contract or extend it if he lowered his salary (which he did) and they hope to be able to sell him later. Umtiti is also part of the mess, and he is very unpopular among the Barca fans - and it hasn't helped that he's always out injured
It's a mess...
They gave him a 4 year extension on a lower wage so their wage bill for this year was less, this allowed them to register Torres.

Creative accounting to get around their wage cap.
 
The reason they extended the contract of Umtiti was that he was unwilling to leave (there were many offers for him) so they could either cancel his contract or extend it if he lowered his salary (which he did) and they hope to be able to sell him later. Umtiti is also part of the mess, and he is very unpopular among the Barca fans - and it hasn't helped that he's always out injured
It's a mess...
Fyi


Quote tweeting the renewal, they said: “Through this contract extension FC Barcelona will be able to increase its ‘financial fair play’ quota and thus register Ferran Torres.”
 
I'm yet to be entirely convinced by him. You can't argue with his record but he's yet to be truly tested. He has all the physical tools and is decent technically, so I have non doubts he'll become a wonderful player. But do believe he gets hyped a little too much, too soon.
 
He's getting a wooden statue put up in his hometown.

It looks to follow in the proud tradition of Ronaldo's statue.

qlDUBKNc5rCMN-RQ4reRDAE3N9Z6p2FQ1jmzP-8TbGAw.jpg
 
MARTIN SAMUEL: Levy has worked out that Conte is different to the rest

How Haaland was too big for Everton​

Once Erling Haaland starts getting the goals for Manchester City, expect howls from Everton fans who have heard the story of how they could have signed him at the age of 15, for £60,000.

It's true. The recruitment department thought Haaland was so big for his age that as he got older he would lose his effectiveness, as other youngsters grew up, too.

It happens. Chelsea didn't rate Declan Rice and he was released to go to West Ham. Kenny Dalglish was rejected by West Ham and Liverpool before signing for Celtic.

Ruud Gullit, Paul Gascoigne and John Barnes all had unsuccessful trials at Ipswich, and Newcastle invited a young Alan Shearer to train, then played him in goal.

In 1978, Harry Haslam, the manager of Sheffield United, saw an outstanding 17-year-old Argentine and arranged a £200,000 transfer. The board wouldn't pay the whole fee so Haslam bought Alex Sabella for £160,000 instead. The player he had tried to sign was Diego Maradona.
 
MARTIN SAMUEL: Levy has worked out that Conte is different to the rest

How Haaland was too big for Everton​

Once Erling Haaland starts getting the goals for Manchester City, expect howls from Everton fans who have heard the story of how they could have signed him at the age of 15, for £60,000.

It's true. The recruitment department thought Haaland was so big for his age that as he got older he would lose his effectiveness, as other youngsters grew up, too.

It happens. Chelsea didn't rate Declan Rice and he was released to go to West Ham. Kenny Dalglish was rejected by West Ham and Liverpool before signing for Celtic.

Ruud Gullit, Paul Gascoigne and John Barnes all had unsuccessful trials at Ipswich, and Newcastle invited a young Alan Shearer to train, then played him in goal.

In 1978, Harry Haslam, the manager of Sheffield United, saw an outstanding 17-year-old Argentine and arranged a £200,000 transfer. The board wouldn't pay the whole fee so Haslam bought Alex Sabella for £160,000 instead. The player he had tried to sign was Diego Maradona.

Lol misleading headline
 

SPECIAL REPORT: Erling Haaland was already a monster... and he's still GROWING! Having put on 10 kilos in muscle to transform from boy to man at Dortmund, Man City are staggered to find he's become even taller since signing for them​

  • It took Erling Haaland just 12 minutes into his Manchester City debut to score
  • The Norwegian striker joined City from Borussia Dortmund for £51m this summer
  • Haaland, 22, had already put on 10 kilos in muscle to transform from boy to man
  • Despite already being a monster, City were shocked to see him grow even taller
By JACK GAUGHAN FOR THE DAILY MAIL

PUBLISHED: 22:30 BST, 2 August 2022 | UPDATED: 00:07 BST, 3 August 2022

Erling Haaland stood outside NASA when a drone came flying straight for his head. Modelling Manchester City's new away kit at the Johnson Space Center in Houston, Haaland had to remain still as the club shot footage with Apollo's Little Joe II rocket as a backdrop.

The drone briefly looked like veering off course. Haaland took evasive action, nonchalantly swaying clear. Hopefully someone present relayed the hulking figure's aptitude for instinct in small spaces to Pep Guardiola.

City, meanwhile, will not expect Haaland and Little Joe II's journeys to collide: the rocket, built in the 1960s, was designed to test abort modes in space. The Norwegian should not be reaching for his parachute any time soon.

The 22-year-old's City career had lift off five days later during a short pre-season tour, in the crazed electrical storms of Wisconsin. It took him 12 minutes to score against Bayern Munich on his first appearance.

The hoopla around him, the screaming thousands at the home of the Green Bay Packers, evidenced why he is arguably the most anticipated Premier League signing since Paul Pogba re-joined Manchester United in 2016. Wildly different fortunes are promised.

City waited patiently, knowing Borussia Dortmund would not entertain bids of any amount last summer. And, as Real Madrid focused on an ultimately doomed pursuit of Kylian Mbappe, they got their man.

'The dominos fell in the right place,' Uwe Rosler tells Sportsmail. 'I really wish he makes a big impact for our football club.'

As a family friend and someone who covered his every move as a TV reporter in Germany, Rosler is well-placed to discuss Haaland. He also enjoys cult status at City after a four-year spell.

'Nobody has ever seen anything like this,' he said. 'He hardly misses a one-on-one. All angles, different speeds. Players become inaccurate with their final ball at top speed but not him.

'Look at Messi and Ronaldo. They didn't develop like this. They didn't have the goals per game at this age. In terms of that, there is nobody who can match him - especially when we talk about the Champions League.'

Haaland has 23 goals in that competition, for Dortmund and Red Bull Salzburg, at a rate of one every 64 minutes. And we all know City's recent history in Europe.

'Such an intelligent player,' Rosler adds. 'Dortmund played vertically, looking for runs from Erling in behind and his timing is a very strong attribute. He is hardly ever offside - I've never seen that in someone so young.'

Norway head coach Stale Solbakken, who has seen him score a goal a game, agrees. 'Never offside. Amazing, amazing.'

Expectation has forever followed Haaland, from learning under Ole Gunnar Solskjaer at Molde to a whirlwind 12 months at Salzburg initially with Marco Rose - later to become his manager in Germany - and Jesse Marsch, who oversaw a stunning goal return.

'In winter 2020, I saw a small guy - the muscles weren't so big, baby face, short hair - and now he is like a monster I'd estimate he has put on 10 kilos more in muscle,' one source says.

Still growing, too, with suggestions around City that he may have become slightly taller since signing two months ago. Often in the gym, Haaland might give fanatic Ruben Dias a run for his money.

Those who know him say there is a purpose to everything. John Haddad, his Lebanese personal trainer, worked him hard at the Marbella football centre over the summer as the family vacationed at their second home on the Costa del Sol.

He has thrown himself into yoga. There is the strict regime of refusing to use any technology two hours before he sleeps and, once the sun sets, on go orange-tinted blue-light filtering glasses, contributing to a restful night.

Haaland admitted last week that he is 'not perfect' fitness-wise, with City holding him back from the first few days of pre-season training to work individually. He missed 16 matches through various problems last term.

Another question mark is around Guardiola's defensive shape, but Solbakken offered an insight into how Haaland can manage relentless pressing.

'I've made his defensive duties very concrete - specialised and specific,' he tells Sportsmail. 'We don't let him off because Norway will never be good enough to defend with 10 men.

'He has tremendous speed. I tell him that if he does six or seven quick yards against the goalkeeper or defenders, it makes a big difference. He doesn't have to work over 20 or 30 yards if the distances are right in the team behind him and he can put pressure on quickly.'

Short, sharp bursts are what we saw against Bayern, aggressive running in the opposition's third and City regularly turning over possession - often to the benefit of Kevin De Bruyne.

At his unveiling, Haaland maintained that he can improve 'everywhere', a definitive answer from someone eager to learn under Guardiola. At Dortmund, they have seen proof of his desire to better himself, with Rose playing a major role last term.

'When you are 1.95m (6ft 4in), your head can be a really strong weapon,' Rosler says.

'I spoke to Marco Rose and they focused on that. You can see the success. Last season he made a big step with his presence in the box.'

Rose's assistant, former Bayern striker Alexander Zickler, spent hours at the Brackel training ground with Haaland. Movement was key, as well as honing his ability to strike off his weaker right foot.

'Alex was someone who Erling looked up to,' a source reveals. 'He said, "I haven't won the championship a single time and he has won it multiple times".

'Alex worked on the right foot, headers and so on. If you take a look at how he scored his goals in year one, then 80 or 90 per cent come from the left foot. In year two there were far more goals by headers and with the right foot.'

In significantly fewer games, headed goals went from one to five, right-footed strikes from three to four. Some work is still required, however, after Haaland missed when going with his preferred left peg rather than simply heading home during the Community Shield defeat by Liverpool.



His career trajectory has been meticulously planned.

'Team Haaland' are a small but dedicated group who have, without fail, perfectly chosen each destination since the striker left the small south- western farming town of Bryne, with a population of 12,000, five years ago.

Molde was a 13-hour drive north. Not exactly nearby.

His father, former City captain Alfie, felt that the life lessons learned away from home comforts would be equally as valuable as working with fellow striker Solskjaer.

Juventus were rejected when they came calling in 2019, with Salzburg offering a more obvious pathway.

Rose made him wait for his chance in Austria but he soon exploded under Marsch and Dortmund saw the benefits of landing him with a £51million release clause inserted. There is at least one release clause in his City contract too, with suggestions of at least three times that price.

Alfie, believed to have been an Woolwich fan as a child, is aided by lawyer Rafaela Pimenta, who worked with agent Mino Raiola before his death in April.

Friend Ivar Eggja, who Haaland calls his uncle, was also present at his City unveiling. Former Southampton, Blackburn and Norway striker Egil Ostenstad went into banking and is thought to advise on Haaland's finances.

Bryne is fiercely proud of his achievements and there are murals of him around the town. Only 22 earlier this month, here stands a national icon.

'We have Olympic champions in the 1,500m and 5,000m but it is fair to say that he is the most famous athlete that Norway has ever had,' Solbakken said. 'We have to take a little bit of extra care of him with the national team.

'But at the same time, he has to take more responsibility because he is our key player. We treat him normally - it is something he enjoys. He is part of the jokes and the everyday life. There is always an extra eye on him and we try not to make it a circus.'

Zlatan Ibrahimovic is a name which continually crops up when discussing Haaland. The style, the persona in front of the cameras. 'Sometimes I felt he wanted to be a bit like his idol, Zlatan, a little bit cool,' a source says. 'But everyone in the dressing room liked him.'

Haaland, close friends with Jude Bellingham, gifted every player and backroom staff member a £5,000 Rolex when he bid farewell to Dortmund in May. He asked the club to give him one final day in the city to 'create memories' and say goodbye. The emotional exit was described as 'spectacular'.

The Haaland Song - written by Dortmund supporters and including the line 'a superboy from outer space' - has followed him to Manchester. City's players, who really took to their new No 9 on tour, serenaded him with it before he gave a short speech at dinner in Houston.

His initiation song, Hero by Enrique Iglesias, went down a storm - although Kalvin Phillips ultimately took the plaudits with George Ezra's Budapest.

The esteem in which Haaland is held was also evident inside the Norway dressing room after they beat Sweden in a competitive match for the first time since 1977. He scored both goals in a 2-1 win in June and captain Martin Odegaard reached for the speakers, blasting out the Haaland tune.

Solbakken says Haaland, one of his vice-captains, is a popular player. 'What I like most with him is that he measures himself in goals but he really enjoys playing the assist,' he said.

'He enjoys putting team-mates into a better position and you will never ever see him shoot when he should pass. He always takes the better option. His joy for his team-mates when they score is very real, it is not acting. It makes him likeable.

'When you have a physique like one of the best galloping horses, this hair and natural charisma…he is a team player when everyone else is screaming for goals. You see that on his face.'

There was an immediate connection with Jack Grealish, the pair 'buzzing' with each other down the Lambeau Field tunnel after combining for the only goal against Bayern. Guardiola cannot fail to have taken note of the link-up and camaraderie.

'His physique is unique in that his first metres are very quick, then the height - it's a big advantage,' Solbakken adds. 'Especially with counter attacks. And then when City play their small passes around the box he can explode in the small areas.'

Haaland has a special place in his heart for Leeds United, the place of his birth, but City has felt like his destiny for some time. He was even in a Norwegian City supporters' page on Facebook until his silent participation leaked out beyond the private group.

He was initially invited in by Halvor Hoevring, a City fan who first saw Haaland live when facing his brother's team, Akra, in a second division fixture in 2016. He came on as a half-time substitute and changed the game that day.

'We've always known he was a City fan,' Hoevring says. 'Some liked him more over here when he played for Dortmund because a lot of people don't like City. There are so many Manchester United and Liverpool supporters.

'A lot of people were surprised how quickly he became a superstar but everyone knows now that he is one of the greatest in the world.

'When he played for Molde, I remember the club chef said that Erling always ate more than the others. That will continue at City! He has already told the cooks that they will be his best friends.'

Guardiola invited all of City's travelling party to Texas seafood restaurant Willie G's as a bonding exercise. Who knows how much Haaland ate that night, but the smorgasbord of chances that are coming his way ought to have him salivating.
 
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