Rampant Haaland set to show Dortmund what they are missing
Borussia
Dortmund know only too well of Erling Haaland's ability to destroy defences in
the Champions League, but the German giants may die by the sword they
previously lived by when they visit Manchester City on Wednesday.
Borussia
Dortmund know only too well of Erling Haaland's ability to destroy defences in
the Champions League, but the German giants may die by the sword they
previously lived by when they visit Manchester City on Wednesday.
Haaland
blossomed into one of the world's most feared strikers during two-and-a-half
years in Germany, scoring 86 goals in 89 games for Dortmund.
Eight
games into his City career, the giant Norway striker with a devastating turn of
speed has already scored 12 times for the English champions.
"His
numbers in all his career, not just here but when he was in previous teams, is
quite similar," said City boss Pep Guardiola after Haaland struck twice in
a 4-0 win at Sevilla to kick off City's latest quest to break their Champions
League duck.
"He
has an incredible sense of goal."
Haaland's
bargain 60 million euro (£51 million, $63 million) buyout clause meant he had
his choice of clubs after he had outgrown his surroundings in the Bundesliga.
Dortmund
may provide the perfect breeding ground for Europe's top talents to develop in
the early years of their career, but they cannot compete financially with the
continent's wealthiest clubs, nor satisfy the ambitions of the world's best
players in the long term.
Haaland
followed in the footsteps of Jadon Sancho, Christian Pulisic, Ousmane Dembele,
Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang, Robert Lewandowski and Mario Goetze as stars of the
future to fly the nest after briefly leaving their mark in western Germany.
However,
losing Haaland may prove the biggest loss of all with the 22-year-old
threatening to rewrite records set by Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi that
many believed would remain intact for generations.
Haaland's
double against Sevilla took his tally in the Champions League to 25 goals in 20
games.
At
the same stage of their careers, Ronaldo, the competition's all-time top
goalscorer with 140, was yet to score, while Messi struck eight times in his
first 20 matches in Europe's elite club competition.
"I
love the Champions League. I have to say this, it's a big dream for me,"
Haaland told Telemundo Deportes this week as he revealed the competition's
anthem is the ringtone on his phone.
"When
I wake up every morning, I listen to this song. It's my favourite
competition."
Haaland's
haul in the Champions League was also why City were so desperate to sign him as
the successor to the club's all-time top goalscorer Sergio Aguero.
Under
Guardiola, City have won four Premier League titles in the past five years and
six in total stretching back over the past decade.
Yet,
the billions invested in the club from Abu Dhabi since 2008 have so far fallen
short when it comes to winning the Champions League.
The
past two seasons they have come agonisingly close, losing their first ever
final to Chelsea in 2021 before blowing a two-goal lead in stoppage time of
their semi-final against eventual winners Real Madrid in May.
Any
doubts that the recruitment of a superstar could destabilise the collective
effort that has characterised City's success under Guardiola have been blown
away within weeks.
"This
fella is going to break virtually every goalscoring record there is,"
tweeted former England striker Michael Owen.
"He's
too big, too quick, clinical in front of goal and he's playing in a team that
create dozens of chances."
Dortmund
know what is coming. Halting the momentum of the man mountain they used to call
their own is another matter.
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