Erling Haaland: Man City
striker is moving the boundaries around what is possible in the Premier League
Erling Haaland scored his
third hat-trick of the season as Man City beat Man Utd 6-3 at the Etihad
Stadium; Norwegian striker has scored 14 goals in eight Premier League games
since his £51m arrival from Borussia Dortmund
Manchester City
didn't have a holding midfielder, a late injury causing Rodri to join Kalvin
Phillips on the sidelines. Their centre-backs, Nathan Ake and Manuel Akanji,
had never played a Premier League game together. Right-back Kyle Walker had to
be withdrawn with an injury in the first half.
All that matters for
Manchester City right now is that Erling Haaland plays. Because when he does,
he scores.
With his demolition of
Manchester United at the Etihad Stadium, the Norwegian became the first player
in Premier League history to score hat-tricks in three consecutive home games.
The numbers are extraordinary.
In the first eight Premier League games of the season, he has
scored more goals than 14 teams, his total of 14 twice
as high as any other player. Harry Kane is averaging roughly a goal a game for
Spurs and yet he is fading from view in Haaland's wing mirrors.
With 30 games of the campaign still to play, Haaland only needs
to score nine more goals to match the tally that clinched Mohamed Salah and
Heung-Min Son the Golden Boot last year.
At his current rate, he will do it before the end of October.
Salah's 32-goal Premier League record will fall in early January - and that's
with a six-week break for the World Cup factored in. By the end of the season,
he will have scored 71.
Of course, it would be fanciful in the extreme to expect him to
continue quite like this until then but what is already clear is that he is
moving the boundaries around what is possible in this division.
Haaland has scored as many hat-tricks in eight Premier League
games as Cristiano Ronaldo has managed in 232; as many as Jamie Vardy has
managed in 277; as many as Frank Lampard managed in 609.
Manchester United simply had no answer on Sunday and, as against
Crystal Palace and Nottingham Forest before them, Haaland administered most of
the damage in a short but devastating spell.
His first goal, a bullet header from Kevin De Bruyne's corner
which flew over the line before Tyrell Malacia could hook it clear, arrived on
34 minutes. His second came just three minutes later.
"I think that is what they now have with him, an ability to
take games away from the opposition in a short period of time," said Gary
Neville on co-commentary. "The word is devastating, it really is."
The hat-trick goal was classic Haaland too, a powerful finish
from the centre of the penalty area once again dispatched first-time. He is
averaging a goal every 14 touches and a shot every six. Thirty-one per cent of
his total touches have come in the opposition box.
It is a level of ruthlessness which has never been seen in the
Premier League. "You watch him and you think, 'What the hell is that? It's
a freak,'" added Neville. "There are very few players like
this."
In fact, there aren't any. The devastation wrought by his speed
and movement could be seen throughout at the Etihad Stadium - "once he
makes the run, he's almost unplayable," added Neville as he raced onto a
Bernardo Silva through-ball in the second half - but it is inside the width of
the goalposts that he truly comes alive.
All 14 of his Premier League goals have come from there. More
than half of them, including the header for his first on Sunday, have come from
inside the six-yard box.
A predatory presence in that area is the one thing City could be
accused of lacking last season but what makes Haaland even more scary for their
opponents is that he is contributing in other ways too. His efficiency can be
seen in practically every action.
Against United, as well as scoring three goals, he set up two of
Phil Foden's, his perfectly-weighted pass allowing his team-mate to add City's
fourth moments before half-time. He then produced another pass in behind
United's beleaguered defence for the sixth.
If there is some way of stopping him, then Premier League sides
are yet to figure it out. Manchester United are just his latest victim. Expect
Haaland to subject City's next opponents, Southampton, Liverpool and Brighton,
to something similar.


