Connect with us

EPL

Erling Haaland admits Man City signed him for one reason

Published

on

SportVectru Ad

Erling Haaland has opened up on why Manchester City fought so hard to secure his signing last summer.

The Norwegian striker opted to join the Premier League champions from Borussia Dortmund at the end of the 2021/22 season after years of speculation regarding his next move.

Advertisement

Haaland has been phenomenal in his debut season at the Etihad Stadium. Speaking to CBS Sports after scoring five of Man City’s goals in a 7-0 win against RB Leipzig in the last 16 of the Champions League, he was asked whether he felt pressure to be the man to deliver the club a first European crown.

“It’s a difficult question because I can easily make headlines with this answer!” Haaland replied.

Advertisement

“But of course, the club wants to win the Champions League. They want to still win trophies. They won the Premier League four times out of the last five years. So they didn’t bring me to win the Premier League, they know how to win the Premier League.

“So you can read between the lines but I’m here to try to help the club develop even more, to try to win the Champions League for the first time.”

Advertisement

Regarding the sensation of becoming the first player since Lionel Messi to score five goals in a Champions League knockout game, Haaland said: “The feeling is amazing. First of all to win 7-0, and then to give a ‘statement’ in this tournament, in the Champions League, which is a tournament I love. To give a kind of statement that we can actually score seven goals because it’s not easy to score seven goals. So it’s an amazing feeling, yeah.

“In the first half I could have scored more, I had a one-on-one with the goalkeeper. It’s true! I had the goalkeeper with the pass from Nath [Ake], I had the rebound from Gundo [Ilkay Gundogan], I thought he was going to play the ball and that’s why I went a bit more, and if I dropped down two metres I would have scored because he shot at the keeper.

Advertisement

“So I could have had two more goals in the first half. And there were also crosses from Kevin [De Bruyne] I could have been at. So there was possibilities, but if I stayed on the pitch, no one knows what will happen.

“But in my mind, I think I always have to look for the next one and try to always reach more to stay hungry because maybe if someone scored five goals they would be happy. You have to be happy but you have to want more, of course.

Advertisement

“I knew I was going to score goals, because how many did City score last season? Maybe 100? So to be a striker in this team, when I saw them last season without a striker, I was thinking when they were crossing the ball in, ‘oh I’d love to be there’!” Haaland added.

“So I kind of knew I would score a lot of goals. In the end, there’s so much potential in this team. I think we can still improve a lot, in the game and how we play. It’s an easy thing to say but I could have scored more goals. I missed a lot of chances, but the most important thing is to come to chances because if you come to chances that’s what you want as a striker.”

Advertisement

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

EPL

Arsenal 4-1 Leeds: Player ratings as Gunners restore eight-point lead at Premier League summit

Published

on

SportVectru Ad


Arsenal restored their eight-point lead at the Premier League summit with an ultimately commanding 4-1 victory at home to Leeds United on Saturday afternoon.

Advertisement

The Gunners will have watched Manchester City close the gap with a second-half dismantling of Liverpool earlier in the day – the match was shown on the Emirates’ big screens – and began their game in a fog of hesitancy. Although, their visitors warrant some credit for that.

Javi Gracia had lost all three of his previous meetings with Arsenal by an aggregate score of 0-6 but arrived in north London with a plan to frustrate. Jack Harrison on the left and Rasmus Kristensen, a right-back shunted into midfield, were tasked with plugging the gaps between Leeds’ full-backs and centre-backs, the half-spaces from which Arsenal have wreaked so much havoc this season.

Advertisement

With Arsenal’s regular avenues to goal protected by a military blockade of neon camouflage kits, the hosts had to rely upon a returning weapon of their own. On his first Premier League start since the World Cup, Gabriel Jesus roamed around in constant search of space. The Brazilian nodded a header over the bar after ten minutes before wriggling into the box with the ball at his blurring feet.

Chopping away from Kristensen, Jesus sent Luke Ayling to the turf but soon joined him on the grass when the Leeds skipper carelessly left his studs dangling. Jesus dusted himself off and cooly slotted the spot kick he had worked so hard to win down the middle of the goal, finding the net for the first time since the opening day of October.

Advertisement

Leeds had enjoyed the better of the opening half-hour but their stubborn resolve melted in the wake of Arsenal’s opener. Jesus soon launched a counter-attack which culminated with Gabriel Martinelli watching his 40-yard lob hurriedly scrambled off the line by Ayling. Within two minutes of the restart, Leeds’ beleaguered captain couldn’t stop Martinelli’s cross from bouncing along the box for Ben White to crash in at the back post.

The tight stitching in Leeds’ rearguard was well and truly frayed thereafter. Jesus, who had spotted whispers of room throughout, revelled in the newfound patches of green grass. Arsenal’s number nine picked out Leandro Trossard in the box, surging beyond a trailing pack of disheartened visiting players to receive a return pass and stuff it past Illan Meslier after 55 minutes.

Advertisement

Just as the final 15 minutes threatened to meander towards a tame conclusion, Kristensen exploited his advanced positioning with a thumped shot from the D. Aaron Ramsdale was unsighted by a wicked deflection from Oleksandr Zinchenko and gave up yet another clean sheet; Arsenal have conceded in seven of their last eight home games.

Granit Xhaka restored Arsenal’s three-goal advantage within ten minutes, bursting into a scantily-clad box and guiding Martin Odegaard’s feathered cross into the corner. A matter of hours after City underlined their title credentials against Liverpool, Arsenal responded with a 4-1 win of their own, the club’s seventh consecutive top-flight victory – the longest run of any team at any point of the season.

Advertisement
Mikel Arteta

Arsenal had their lead at the Premier League summit cut before kick-off by Manchester City’s victory against Liverpool / Julian Finney/GettyImages

GK: Aaron Ramsdale – 4/10 – Alert right from the opening whistle, making a save inside the first ten seconds but very shaky with the ball at his feet.

RB: Ben White – 7/10 – No punches were pulled against his former club with a spiky, stud-filled showing.

Advertisement

CB: Rob Holding – 6/10 – Rarely ventured away from a safe pass but managed to clear most of the danger that fell his way.

CB: Gabriel – 7/10 – Commanding on and off the ball.

Advertisement

LB: Oleksandr Zinchenko – 5/10 – Struggled when lured into a one-on-one out wide but limited those scenarios as he spent much of his time in midfield.

CM: Martin Odegaard – 6/10 – Grew into the game as space opened up between the lines.

Advertisement

CM: Thomas Partey – 7/10 – Exerted a sense of reassuring serenity in possession.

CM: Granit Xhaka – 7/10 – Readjusted well when faced with the initial obdurate shape but continued to crash the box when space opened up.

Advertisement

RW: Leandro Trossard – 8/10 – Starting on his unfavoured right flank, Trossard was brilliantly disciplined when counter-pressing and set up Jesus’ second.

ST: Gabriel Jesus – 9/10 – Breezing around the final third, Jesus was back to his untameable best.

Advertisement

LW: Gabriel Martinelli – 8/10 – The Brazilian’s unwavering directness helped pierce Leeds’ stubborn resolve.

Substitutes

Bukayo Saka (60′ for Jesus) – 5/10

Advertisement

Jorginho (60′ for Partey) – 5/10

Emile Smith Rowe (85′ for Odegaard) – N/A

Advertisement

Fabio Vieira (86′ for Xhaka) – N/A

Kieran Tierney (86′ for Zinchenko) – N/a

Advertisement

Manager

Mikel Arteta – 7/10 – Watched on as his players unpicked the problem in front of them with admirable cunning and creativity.

FBL-ENG-PR-ARSENAL-LEEDS

Javi Gracia was a player for Real Sociedad when Mikel Arteta grew up supporting the club / GLYN KIRK/GettyImages

GK: Illan Meslier – 5/10 – Sharp off his line but not always so decisive.

Advertisement

RB: Luke Ayling – 2/10 – The former Arsenal academy graduate played as though he was still harbouring north London leanings.

CB: Robin Koch – 4/10 – Rash when robbed of the extra security provided by so many extra players flooding into Leeds’ backline.

Advertisement

CB: Pascal Struijk – 6/10 – Safe and sturdy on the left of Leeds’ rearguard.

LB: Junior Firpo – 5/10 – Curbed his natural attacking instincts as Leeds were reluctant to commit more than the front three forward.

Advertisement

CM: Rasmus Kristensen – 6/10 – Despite nominally starting further forward, Kristensen’s defensive discipline was integral to tracking Xhaka’s roaming.

CM: Marc Roca – 5/10 – Sweeping up at the base of midfield, Roca sometimes slipped in the backline himself as well.

Advertisement

CM: Jack Harrison – 6/10 – Dropping as deep – and sometimes deeper – than Leeds’ left-back Firpo.

RW: Luis Sinisterra – 5/10 – Skirting around the fringes of the contest.

Advertisement

ST: Brenden Aaronson – 4/10 – A striker in name only, the flitting attacking midfielder drifted in and mainly out of the contest.

LW: Crysencio Summerville – 7/10 – A wriggling menace as Leeds swept forward in transition.

Advertisement

Substitutes

Weston McKennie (66′ for Aaronson) – 5/10

Rodrigo (66′ for Sinisterra) – 5/10

Advertisement

Liam Cooper (74′ for Koch) – N/A

Georginio Rutter (74′ for Summerville) – N/A

Advertisement

Patrick Bamford (85′ for Harrison) – N/A

Manager

Javi Gracia – 5/10 – Deployed his side in a compact shape that also threatened in transition until the opening goal.

Advertisement

Player of the match – Gabriel Jesus (Arsenal)



Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

EPL

LAFC sign midfielder Mateusz Bogusz from Leeds United 

Published

on

SportVectru Ad


LAFC finally signed Polish youth international midfielder Mateusz Bogusz from English Premier League side Leeds United

Advertisement

He joins on a three-year contract through the 2026 Major League Soccer season, with an additional option for 2027. 

“Mateusz is a talented young player with great ability who will provide another quality piece to our club,” LAFC co-president & general manager John Thorrington said in a release. “He is a dynamic and exciting attacker who has the ability to help our group in our ambitions to win more trophies. I am excited to welcome Mateusz to Los Angeles.”

Advertisement

Bogusz arrives after spending much of his Leeds United tenure on loan in the Spanish second tier, accumulating seven goals and eight assists across 65 appearances for UD Ibiza and UD Logroñés. 

Internationally, he’s become an integral part of Poland’s U-21 team. 

Advertisement

He now joins the likes of Ilie Sanchez, Kellyn Acosta and Jose Cifuentes in LAFC’s midfield as the reigning MLS champions defend the title. Head coach Steve Cherundolo also brought in Timothy Tillman during the Primary Transfer Window, adding to the competition after hitting the ground running when arriving from 2. Bundesliga side Greuther Fürth.

Though the options are not limited for Cherundolo, Bogusz offers an offensive component on the wings that the team could certainly use. And depth will be much-needed as the Western Conference giants balance the regular MLS season, Concacaf Champions League and Leagues Cup before even thinking about the redesigned, extensive playoff format in the winter. 

Advertisement

LAFC currently sit in third place of the Western Conference table with 10 points in four games, and a record of 3W-0L-1D.



Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

EPL

Jurgen Klopp explains why Liverpool were ‘lucky’ in Man City defeat

Published

on

SportVectru Ad


Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp has confessed that his side were fortunate not to be on the receiving end of a truly humiliating scoreline in Saturday’s defeat to Manchester City.

Advertisement

An early Mohamed Salah goal proved to be a false dawn for Liverpool, who watched on as Julian Alvarez, Kevin De Bruyne, Ilkay Gundogan and Jack Grealish scored in a dominant response to seal a 4-1 victory.

After the game, Klopp admitted his side were expertly dismantled, conceding Liverpool ‘may not even have won against ten men’.

Advertisement

He told BT Sport: “I think we saw a first half which you would expect. A dominant City side with us well organised, having our moments. We caused problems and scored a wonderful goal and had another big counter-attacking moment.

“So, 1-1 at half-time, it’s clear, you can show the boys what we have to do and where we have to defend them. We concede the first goal, an open ball in midfield where we don’t even have a challenge, then we are too deep and the counter-attack happens.

Advertisement

READ NEXT

“After that, 3-1, where we have a massive overload on one side. We should win the ball but don’t even have the challenge. These kinds of things cannot happen but they happened.

Advertisement

“After that, we were just open. Wow. They could whatever they wanted and we were lucky they weren’t in the most greedy mood. They scored a fourth one but then they were happy. Apart from that, there is nothing good to say about this game.

“It’s a game we have to use, unfortunately, to make clear which things cannot happen. We cannot no have challenges in key areas. We cannot be that kind of open. It’s not possible. But it happened. I have to explain it but I can’t. I can only describe it.”

Advertisement

The defeat – the first time Liverpool have lost three straight games in over two years – was their eighth away loss in the Premier League this season and their fifth at any venue in 2023, having lost just four across the entirety of 2022.

Klopp must now pick Liverpool up and prepare for a trip to Stamford Bridge to face fellow European outsiders Chelsea on Tuesday, seeking to avoid a fourth straight loss – something Liverpool have not experienced since November 2014.

Advertisement

LISTEN NOW

On this edition of Talking Transfers, part of the 90min podcast network, Scott SaundersGraeme Bailey & Toby Cudworth discuss Julian Nagelsmann’s future and links to the vacant Tottenham head coach role, Barcelona’s ambition to bring Lionel Messi ‘home’, Brighton teenager Evan Ferguson, Florian Wirtz, Kalvin Phillips and more!

Advertisement

If you can’t see this embed, click here to listen to the podcast!





Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Trending

Home
Live Scores
Use App
Live TV
Predictions