Manchester City striker, Erling Haaland has come out to say that goal-line technology should be used across the entire pitch. He recently had his say while speaking to the press, and fans have been reacting.
According to him, he believes goal line technology should be installed all over the pitch so that referees can always know when the ball is out of play.

Haaland added that he also hates the rules surrounding throw-ins because he feels as long as you have two hands on the ball, there should be nothing like a foul throw.
His words, “The first is to introduce goal line technology all over the pitch, so that you always know when the ball is out of play. But what annoys me is throw-ins.
If you throw this way or that way, it doesn’t matter. Just make sure you have two hands on the ball. I don’t even know the rules, and if I’m going to make a throw, I’ll probably do it wrong. But it doesn’t matter if you throw the ball straight down, straight up or whatever. I would change that.
And you can’t steal too many meters, there should be a limit to how far you can go and a limit to how long you can take. I think it will be like that in the future.”
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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