Don’t let Haaland deceive you, acclimatising to the Premier League isn’t easy

By Kyle Robbins / Roar Rookie

We’ve had some truly remarkable individual seasons in Premier League history.

Luis Suarez and Yaya Toure electrified in the mid-2010s; Mohamed Salah established himself as world-class in 2017-18. Thierry Henry, Alan Shearer, Eden Hazard, Cristiano Ronaldo, and Wayne Rooney are among a ton of stars to grace and alight the English top-flight.

Erling Haaland is on track to out-do them all. He is the fastest man to three Premier League hat-tricks, topped off with a final treble in his first Manchester Derby, smashing the record previously held by Michael Owen by 40 games, and is on track to score a ridiculous 60-plus goals this season after an early-season flurry has the Norwegian at 14 scalps in eight games.

Truly remarkable.

However, don’t let this anomalous dawn of his Premier League career fool you into thinking adaptation to the English top-flight is a walk in the park. It is anything but that.

Haaland is an outlier of a footballer. Not only is he physically one of the most dominant players in the world, fast as anything and strong as an ox with movement that occurs as if he’s on autopilot, he is the focal point of arguably one of the finest squads ever assembled in English football, overseen by the greatest manager of all time, and with a plethora of creative talents supplying him.

Granted, no one expected the Norwegian to surge as he has done, but anyone in their right mind should’ve seen success coming.

(Photo by James Gill – Danehouse/Getty Images)

Even Salah in his record-breaking goal-scoring season managed four goals after eight games. The aforementioned Luis Suarez nabbed 11 goals in his first full season in the Premier League.

The point being adjustment takes time. Morphing into a successful player takes time. Learning a new language and living in a new country takes time.

It’s an important factor to note when making early calls on the success of a player’s transfer. There are numerous conditions that dictate how swiftly a player can replicate the form that saw them signed.

Notably I raise this to discuss Darwin Nunez’s early season struggles in a rational manner without unfairly comparing him to Haaland in a manner that is, respectfully, akin to comparing a Formula One car to a V8 Supercar: both are powerful in their own right, but there are levels to it.

The Uruguayan’s game time has been hindered, initially for three games due to a red card in his side’s 1-1 home draw against Palace, and a minor hamstring injury accrued on international duty, which saw the striker play one minute in Liverpool’s draw against Brighton at the weekend.

Adding to his woes is the fact that, unlike Haaland, he finds himself as the hypothetical focal point of a side that is struggling for form this season. Mohamed Salah looks lost, Trent Alexander-Arnold is the subject of much conjecture related to his widely-known and previously accepted defensive deficiencies, and even the previously unflappable Virgil Van Dijk has returned to mortality this year.

He has not fallen into a well-oiled creativity machine placing balls on a platter for him. The Liverpool player capable of producing anything like Kevin De Bruyne’s inch-perfect curled ball behind United for Haaland’s second is Trent.

Aleksandar Mitrovic, who is third in goal scoring ranks this season, needed multiple cracks at the English top flight to establish himself and showcase his ability in the division.

Elsewhere in the league, Kalidou Koulibaly has had a mixed beginning to his life at Chelsea. The same can be said for Haaland’s adversaries at the weekend, Lisandro Martinez, and Raphael Varane. Gianluca Scamacca, Lucas Paqueta, and Alexander Isak have all started slowly for their own reasons.

Nunez is adjusting not just to a new system of play and new living arrangements, but also to a momentous shift in life and only having a limited ability to communicate with Jurgen Klopp and some of his other non-Portuguese speaking teammates. I’m sure there are plenty of examples where this remains true.

The modern world is one of instance. Everything is delivered at the click of the fingers: food, information, weather reports. The process of discovery has been sucked out of all facets of life; football included.

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Don’t let Erling Haaland fool you – in this day and age, good things still take time. The process needs to be adhered to. Very few incidents occur where success, by whatever definition, is achieved as swiftly as the Norwegian has.

Things, of course, may not work out for Nunez and the host of other stars who have joined the English top flight in the last 18 months, but the reality is only time will tell.

The Crowd Says:

AUTHOR

2022-10-06T03:36:53+00:00

Kyle Robbins

Roar Rookie


100% - few strikers in the world would've got on the end of that De Bruyne ball at the weekend like he did.

2022-10-05T23:28:26+00:00

Aiden

Guest


People forget that for some of those close range tap ins be burst out of nowhere between two defenders flung himself into the air and hit the ball with the side of his boot. Amazing timing. Not too many long range shots so far but his team know that ball in the box he can score when others don’t.

2022-10-05T19:17:23+00:00

Punter

Roar Rookie


7th minute in the CL & Haaland has scored again. His 27th CL goal in 22 games. My stat above is wrong.

2022-10-05T14:04:04+00:00

Brainstrust

Roar Rookie


This business about the premier league scoring record , should be the top division scoring record. Shearer had Slater as a teammate , the better the team the more a player will score. Nunez why would you pay so much money for someone playing in Portugal with a top team where its so easy to score.

2022-10-05T13:05:20+00:00

Buddy

Roar Rookie


Can’t always be right. Someone at MU thought Maguire was worth similar money to Van Dijk.

2022-10-05T13:03:58+00:00

Buddy

Roar Rookie


Punter - the fee was only 50 million so I heard. While that is no trifling amount it wouldn’t have been beyond the reach of between 6-10,EPL clubs - cheap at that price relly for what he is delivering.

2022-10-05T12:11:01+00:00

Igor Oligarchov

Guest


Out of his comfort zone.

2022-10-05T07:05:57+00:00

mushi

Roar Guru


I’m a casual football watcher but to me he’s like Soccer Shaq, he’s just too big to be that fast and agile.

2022-10-05T07:01:53+00:00

mushi

Roar Guru


To be fair being an athletic freak certainly makes any settling in period easier.

2022-10-05T06:03:21+00:00

Simoc

Roar Rookie


This guy has to the most incredible player currently playing. Hitting the back of the net regularly is always a problem but not for this guy. If Oz could get him on loan for the World Cup we'de be half a chance to win a game.

2022-10-05T03:04:17+00:00

Punter

Roar Rookie


The hardest job in football is to put the ball into the back of the net. If it was so easy to be a tab in merchant, why don't more people do it? I totally agree with your post on his ability. He is out of this world.

2022-10-05T01:03:40+00:00

At work

Roar Rookie


I think some have tried to downplay Haaland as a tap in merchant, which is really short-sighted. Yes the majority of his goals are in the box, but some of the balls het gets a foot to and scores couldn't be done by anyone else. His pace and timing to make a run are second to none, with his goal to shot conversions freakishly good. Put another top striker up front and they'd be lucky to get half the goals he as scored.

2022-10-04T23:47:03+00:00

Lionheart

Roar Rookie


I watched the Community Shield match City v Liverpool and thought Liverpool had their measure, Haaland a failure and Nunez would be much the better of the two. That's not worked out well.

2022-10-04T21:57:25+00:00

Coastyboi

Guest


A four game, guest stint at Melbourne City would be nice.

2022-10-04T21:29:48+00:00

Punter

Roar Rookie


The reason Haaland is at a super rich club is because he is the hottest property (with Mbappe) in world football right now. He was scoring for fun for Dortmund & only a super rich club like Man City could afford him. He is a superstar & a goalscorer we have never seen the like. He already has 26 goals in 25 games in the CL.

AUTHOR

2022-10-04T21:10:29+00:00

Kyle Robbins

Roar Rookie


I think most people are happy to concede that he won't be involved much in the game outside scoring because A) he doesn't have to be and B) it's not his job. The UCL will be the big test for him and City - they'd be the favourites and have a target on their back, interesting to see if he can finally deliver European glory for them.

2022-10-04T20:54:52+00:00

Buddy

Roar Rookie


As you stated, he is at a club where money grows on trees and he is surrounded by top players, a highly rated manager and an army of support staff that will help him settle very quickly. In the Manchester derby there were a few comments about his lack of overall involvement in the game but when you score a hat trick and lay on a superb opportunity for a team mate to score, I guess most things are forgiven or ignored. Haarland has had a dream start and is making it look so easy. Maybe it is when you are a cashed up fully resourced outfit full of star quality. Maybe the real test will be the champions league? Shame we won’t be seeing him in Qatar though.

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