A year ago
Although Erling Haaland tops the top scorer in Europe's top five leagues this season, after scoring his 46th goal in all competitions for Man City this season, the Norwegian striker may still not be more productive than Messi , Ronaldo and Neymar. . Indeed, the goals and assists statistics of these 3 players at the age of 30 are quite funny.
It is amazing that at the age of 30, Messi has scored 565 goals, Ronaldo 463 goals and Neymar 401 goals. While Haaland, now 22, has scored 203 goals for club and country. Can the Norwegian striker surpass Messi, Ronaldo and Neymar at the age of 30? The answer to this question will be given as you read on.
From every metric, the Norwegian forward could surpass Neymar's scoring before he turns 30. He's just 198 goals away and eight years left on the game, which shows technically Technically, he will need to average 25 goals each over the next eight years to surpass Neymar's scoring record. He also needs to average 33 goals over the next eight years to break Ronaldo's scoring record at the age of 30.
However, Messi has scored a lot of goals during his prime and for Haaland to cross the 565-goal mark at the age of 30, he will need to score an average of 46 goals each over the next eight years, which could mean It can be very difficult for him. that he plays in the toughest league in the world. Moreover, at the age of 30, Messi has 231 assists, Ronaldo 154 assists and Neymar 225 assists. While Haaland has only 45 assists for clubs and national teams. Considering the Norwegian striker's low assist stats, it's probably going to be difficult for him to hit 150 assists at the age of 30. It shows he can break Ronaldo's goalscoring record and Neymar but he probably won't break their assists record. . Indeed, Haaland has always been more of a goalscorer than a playmaker.
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LONDON STADIUM - After 25 minutes of play at London Stadium, everything seemed to be under the control of Arsenal and Mikel Arteta.
For all intents and purposes, they finished the game against West Ham United in just ten minutes, taking a 2-0 lead thanks to goals from Gabriel Jesus and Martin Odegaard. Saw last Sunday when the Gunners were just a few goals away from Liverpool, but not so soon.
Arsenal's fluid movement, sharp passes and confidence seemed to be at an all-time high against a team that had been beaten 5-1 by Newcastle on this very ground 11 days earlier. Everything was too easy. Securing a win would restore Arsenal's six-point lead over Manchester City at the top of the Premier League table, setting the stage for an intriguing heavyweight clash on April 26 at the Etihad Stadium.
But for the second week in a row, Arteta's team has yet to read the winning script. Instead, they shrank into their shells and made individual and collective mistakes, allowing West Ham, with the support of their home crowd, to take the lead. In the end, they struggled to get a draw from the winning jaw.
Perhaps the most devastating thing for Arteta was that Arsenal's decline was their fault. The weight of Kieran Tierney's pass on Thomas Partey was rather timid, the Ghanaian's reaction to the pass was said to be equally indifferent. Declan Rice pocketed and within 10 seconds Gabriel had his foot on Lucas Paqueta's shin for a penalty.
"We started off extremely well, controlled the game, dominated the pitch and scored two beautiful goals. Then we made a huge mistake. We stopped playing for one goal," said Arteta. in the post-match press conference. Indeed, they had.
Said Benrahma took the aforementioned penalty to shorten the score to 2-1, after which Arsenal seemed to sit down and easily equalized.
"We needed that ruthless mindset at the time to kill a team, when a team is there for them, you have to end the game and we don't," the manager added. control.
Arsenal had even the greatest golden chances to restore their two-goal lead, when Michail Antonio clumsily reached out to concede a goal early in the second half. But instead of taking advantage, Bukayo Saka - one of the best players in the Premier League this season - sent the ball wide of Lukasz Fabianski's post. With overcrowding due to Saka's fault, Arsenal then made the fatal mistake of following that mistake after another. Aaron Cresswell's corner was cleared to Thilo Kehrer in the middle of the field, the German returned the ball diagonally into the box.
Arsenal didn't go out of the box at the same time, which meant that Jarrod Bowen was comfortable in attack as he turned towards Aaron Ramsdale's goal and darted into the box. The England winger's shot in itself was technically excellent, but Arsenal's point of view was completely unavoidable.
Mikel Arteta disappointed Arsenal failed to kill West Ham / Chloe Knott - Danehouse/GettyImages
"I was worried that after leading 2-0 we made this huge mistake and didn't understand what the game was asking for at the time," admitted Arteta again, before adding "we made things slower” for the first half hour. Game. In attack, Arsenal only had three more shots on target after Odegaard's tenth-minute goal, each shot by Fabianski. Gabriel Martinelli passes out after fasting
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