Haaland's appetite for goals fuels Man City's title triumph
TOPSHOT - Manchester City's Belgian midfielder Kevin De Bruyne (L) and Manchester City's Norwegian striker Erling Haaland react during the English Premier League football match between Manchester City and Southampton at the Etihad Stadium in Manchester, north west England, on October 8, 2022. (Photo by Oli SCARFF / AFP)
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Erling
Haaland inspired Manchester City's Premier League title triumph with a
record-breaking goal spree fuelled by his voracious appetite for success.
Haaland has
taken the Premier League by storm since arriving from Borussia Dortmund last
year in a £51 million ($63 million) deal that already looks a bargain.
After
scoring twice on his top-flight debut at West Ham in August, the 22-year-old
striker maintained an astonishing goal pace that left a trail of broken records
in his wake en route to clinching the title on Saturday.
He shattered
the Premier League's single-season goal record, netting 36 times in 33 matches
to move beyond the 34 scored by Alan Shearer and Andy Cole in the 1990s.
"If you
were building a centre-forward from the ground up, Erling is what you would be
left with. He's a goal machine," Shearer said.
The
Norwegian has scored 52 times in all competitions, including one five-goal haul
and five other hat-tricks.
While rival
managers endure sleepless nights at the prospect of trying to subdue him,
Haaland leaves no stone unturned in the pursuit of excellence.
Obsessed
with staying in peak physical condition, Haaland claims his daily diet of
heart, liver, milk and lasagne amounts to a whopping 6,000 calories.
Haaland even
wolfed down a tray of nutrition-rich beef liver after scoring in City's recent
win at Everton, declaring the meal "bloody lovely" after fans reacted
with surprise to an Instagram post of his dinner.
"People
say meat is bad for you but which? The meat you get at McDonald's? Or the local
cow eating grass right over there? I eat the heart and the liver," Haaland
said in a documentary about his move to Manchester.
Haaland has
also created a "magic potion" milk smoothie, featuring kale and
spinach, that forms a key part of his diet.
Haaland's
father Alfie helps by milking cows back home in Norway and delivering the pints
to the striker in Manchester.
There is no
detail too small for Haaland to control as he aims to maximise his natural
talent.
He installed
a cryotherapy chamber in his house to help recover after matches and wears
special glasses to reduce the sleep-depriving effects of screens.
'Best
professional'
Despite his
blistering form, there was speculation earlier in the season that Haaland might
not be entirely happy after City coach Pep Guardiola admitted the striker was
still adapting to the Spaniard's tactics during an inconsistent spell for his
side.
Guardiola's
men won successive league titles playing largely without an attacking focal
point and when Arsenal stormed ahead in the title race, there were claims City
had been thrown off course by Haaland's arrival.
But
Guardiola soon found the solution to balance the side as Haaland's deluge of
goals never stopped.
"I love
to play under Pep. I'm enjoying every single game," Haaland said.
"It's
hard, he demands a lot, but I try to do my best to develop."
Haaland's
impact on City has been felt not just in the goal charts but also in the
dressing room, where teammates have embraced his single-minded dedication to
his craft -- even if it means missing a night out with Jack Grealish.
"He is
the best professional I have ever seen," Grealish said.
"He
does everything. Recovers. In the gym. Ten hours of treatment a day. Ice baths.
Diet. I swear I couldn't be like that.
"We
have a great friendship but he will point at me after a game and say: 'Hey.
Don't you go out tonight partying'.
"I just
tell him to shut up and go and sit in his ice bath."
Although he
relishes rewriting the record books, Haaland has made clear his desire is for
trophies rather than personal milestones.
Having
secured the Premier League title in his debut season, Haaland has his sights
set on firing City to the treble.
They face
Manchester United in the FA Cup final at Wembley on June 3 before heading to
Istanbul to meet Inter Milan in the Champions League final seven days later.
City are looking
to win the Champions League for the first time.
Yet even
leading City to their European holy grail would be unlikely to sate Haaland's
hunger to feast on opposing defences for years to come.


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