Erling Haaland is rarely happy nowadays, Jeremy Doku has said. This is coming after Manchester City ended their dismal run of results by beating Nottingham Forest.
According to him, Haaland is a striker who wants to constantly score goals, so his current drought was always going to make his sad on and off the pitch.
Doku added that Erling was unlucky to not score vs Forest, but his teammates will keep creating the chances to make it happen.
His words, “Yeah, we were waiting for this win. We know it’s difficult as a team. We are used to winning so when we had some difficulties to win a game it’s difficult. We didn’t listen to the noise of the outside. We just kept working and grinding. Today was a good game. We recover tomorrow and hope to continue this.
He just said congrats. Obviously it’s normal. He’s an attacker, he wants the ball. I try to look for him, this action I shot, maybe it was a goal or a miss. Today was a goal. Erling is not a striker who is happy. He’s knows he can’t get every ball so just wants to be in the best position. It’s unlucky he didn’t pick up a goal but you saw how important he was today
On criticism, “No, we just don’t listen. At the end of the day when everything goes well they’re going to hype you up. When everything goes bad you’re the worst. We don’t listen, we concentrate on ourselves in our bubble. We know together we’ll be stronger.
They can say whatever they wan. We just stay in our bubble and we’re still in December. If they think it’s over, let them think it’s over. We are going to look game by game, try to win as much as possible, and we will see at the end.”
WOW.
Erling Braut Haaland is a Norwegian professional footballer who plays as a striker for Premier League club Manchester City and the Norway national team. Considered one of the best players in the world, he is known for his speed, strength, positioning, and finishing inside the box. Haaland holds the record for the most goals scored by a player in a single Premier League season, with 36.
Haaland was born on 21 July 2000 in Leeds, West Yorkshire, England, as his father Alfie Haaland was playing for Leeds United in the Premier League at the time. In 2004, at the age of three, he moved to Bryne, his parents’ hometown in Norway.
Along with playing football from an early age, Haaland took part in various other sports as a child, including handball, golf, and track and field. He also reportedly achieved a world record in his age category for the standing long jump when he was five, with a recorded distance of 1.63 metres in 2006.
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